
Leading up to Thanksgiving--pretty much ever since Halloween--we've been talking with R about the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday and what it means to be thankful for things. One of my favorite things to do this month has been Thanksgiving crafts with R, not least because they've made absolutely perfect decorations for our kitchen windows.
Looking at our windows, you see R's Thankful Wreath right in the center. To make this, we traced her hand on construction paper and cut out about 15 or 20 of them. Then, on each hand we wrote something she was thankful for (click on the picture to enlarge it so you can read the hands). We then glued each hand to a paper plate with the middle cut out.
Immediately to the left of the wreath is a pair of turkeys R and I made--actually the very first Thanksgiving craft we did. We cut out big circles for the bodies (R drew hers, the blue one, and I drew mine, the orange one). Then I cut out feather shapes. She helped me sort them into piles of large and small feathers: large ones for my large turkey and small ones for her small turkey. Then she and I cut notches into our feathers and glued them to our turkey bodies. I cut out wattles, beaks, and feet and we glued those on too. She brought home some beads from day care that she wanted to put on her turkey, so we added those, too.
Then J helped R make the very large turkey to the right of her Thankful Wreath. We put some paint on a paper plate for her, let her mix it up with her hands, and then make handprints on construction paper. Then I cut out the handprints and R and J glued them to a paper plate, along with a turkey body. They drew on the turkey's neck and eyes, and glued on a beak, wattle, and feet.
And then in the bottom row, starting on the left, R drew a turkey for RUS on a painted paper plate; she decorated a turkey at school saying she was thankful for "my mommy," and she drew--totally on her own--at school, the turkey in the middle. Then we've got an assortment of Thanksgiving cards the kids received from Grandma and Grandpa and Grammie and Grampie.
Speaking of Thanksgiving cards, we had a LOT of fun making these! R and I colored on two pieces of white paper and then watercolor painted over the crayon markings. Then we traced her hand and cut out enough hands for all our cards, glued them onto orange construction paper, drew feet and glued on tiny beaks and wattles, and signed the backs. They came out so great!!!

