Category: Flannels

Flannel Friday: Ouch

It’s another inspired by Flannel Friday post today. This time, I took a page out of Cate at Storytiming’s book and recreated her version of “Ouch.”

I am particularly in love with the adorable hedgehog and his home.

And I am also partial to raccoon. As for the goat in the story, I am planning on using a goat puppet to eat the flannel pieces off of hedgehog. I am trying to use more interactive flannels this fall, and this one was just perfect for a “fall animals” theme.

Tracey has today’s round-up; check her blog for more info later on!

Flannel Friday: Family Knock Knock

Inspired by Katie at Story Time Secrets, I made my own set of family members to do the “Knock Knock” flannel she showed us here. (I used the clipart that Katie linked from Kizclub.)

The story goes as such:

Knock, knock.
Who’s there?
Grandma Jennie.
All the other relatives show up and then:
Knock, knock
Who’s there?
Pizza! Party!

I’m sure the kids will be tickled pink. I hope the appreciate the little details in this board though.


Shoelaces! I sewed this week.


And painted ducks.


And managed to bend a paperclip to make Grandma’s glasses!

I’m super excited to use this board in storytime this fall and even more excited to be back doing some Flannel Friday posts! Cate is hosting this week, so be sure to stop by for the round-up!

Flannel Friday: 7/8 Round-Up

Welcome to the Flannel Friday round-up for this week! It’s another wonderful selection of flannelboards and flannelboard ideas for everyone to borrow/steal and make their own! And now, on to the participants:

Flannel: Colour Fish
from Andrea at Rovingfiddlehead Kidlit

Flannel: Lunch by Denise Fleming
from Anne at So Tomorrow

Flannel: Ouch!
from Cate at Storytiming

Flannel: Three Melting Popsicles
from Katie at Storytime Secrets

Flannel: Matching Mittens
from Mary at Miss Mary Liberry

Flannel: Blue Is the Sky
from Melissa at Mel’s Desk

Flannel: Campfire Pokey
from Mollie at What Happens In Storytime

Flannel: Little Mouse, Little Mouse
from Moxie at Storytimes With Moxie

Flannel (Folder Story): Scat the Cat
from Nicole at Narrating Tales of Preschool Storytime

Flannel: Little Boy Blue
From Sarah at Read Rabbit Read

Flannel: Sam’s Sandwich
from Sharon at Rain Makes Applesauce

Flannel: Cat’s Midsummer Jamboree
from Tracey at 1234 More Storytimes

And I posted my version of “The Three Little Kittens” here.

If I missed you this week, leave a comment on this entry or tweet me with your link. Next week, I believe that Andrea is hosting Flannel Friday, and as always you can look up all past Flannel Fridays at Anne’s blog, So Tomorrow.

Flannel Friday: Three Little Kittens

[Check back later for the round-up because I’m hosting this week!]

I have no idea where this set came from — it was here when I started working at the library, but somehow, we lost two of the kittens. I wound up remaking it from the original (and the cat clip-art from DLTK’s farm pack) because nothing matched. It drove me CRAZY. So, I do not have a pattern for this one, but it was fairly easy to make (and would probably be SUPER easy to find some clip art)!

Obviously, this uses the traditional rhyme:

Three little kittens,
They lost their mittens,
And they began to cry,
Oh, mother dear,
We sadly fear
Our mittens we have lost.
What! Lost your mittens,
You naughty kittens!
Then you shall have no pie.
Mee-ow, mee-ow, mee-ow, mee-ow.
You shall have no pie.

The three little kittens,
They found their mittens,
And they began to cry,
Oh, mother dear,
See here, see here,
Our mittens we have found.
What! Found your mittens,
You darling kittens!
Then you shall have some pie.
Mee-ow, mee-ow, mee-ow, mee-ow.
You shall have some pie.

(I only go to the second verse; I know there are more — you could make the mittens double sided so that they could get soiled and then clean all over again!)

Flannel Friday: Help This Pigeon!

[Edited: Ultimately, I used pipe cleaners for the legs and puffy paint for the lettering. And I’ve changed the picture, but have left the text as it originally was.]

I am a huge GIANT fan of Mo Willems. I love every single one of his books, but mostly, I must pledge my undying love for the pigeon books! Obviously if you love a book that much, you eventually want to make a flannelboard out of it. (Templates do not exist. I think I used a coloring page as my guidelines.)

So, I had this great idea to make two pigeons — one calm and one melting-down — and then however many times the audience has an opportunity to say “no!” to this pigeon, to make a bubble with the word “NO!” on it. Then, I could pass out the bubbles and this flannel could become participatory.

Then, I hit a minor roadblock. I tried felt for the pigeon’s feet and I tried ribbon and neither looked right. I like the idea of pipe cleaners, but haven’t actually tried it.

And then, I absolutely do NOT want to individually letter all the word bubbles. I suppose I could just scrap the ones I made out of felt and print out bubbles, laminate, and use sticky back felt.

#Flannelfriday friends, any suggestions?

Flannel Friday: Summer Shapes

This week, I did a flannel from Melissa at Mel’s Desk! She did this super cute shape game and I repeated it with my 3-7 year old storytime group.

To start, I had all the shapes turned over, so that they were just shapes. (The kite string and popsicle stick just got tucked under their pieces.) Then, I asked the kids what they thought the shapes could be if they were summer items. My kids guessed the sun, the ice cream cone, and the kite without prompting. The beach towel and popsicle were easier after a bit of discussion — ie “What do we need to go to the beach?”

The pinwheel STUMPED them. I put all four triangles up and finally someone said, “FIREWORKS!” I congratulated them (because we had just read a book with fireworks in it, and my little girl was trying to draw connections between what we read and what we did on the board, and she’s only three!) and then I moved on.

All in all, this was a GREAT flannel, and one that the kids enjoyed and I felt made me a better librarian (for having a discussion with them instead of just saying a rhyme)!

And we’re back at Mel’s Desk this week for the round-up! Look for it there!

Flannel Friday: Ten Teddy Bears

This week’s flannelboard was from last January when I did “Bears” storytime. Since this was before Flannel Friday was created, I didn’t save the clipart files that I found for this one. Pretty sure that I just googled “teddy bear” and “bed” and went from there.

“Ten Teddy Bears Sleeping in the Bed”
Ten little teddy bears sleeping in the bed,
Five at the foot and five at the head.
One little teddy said, “This bed is TOO full!”
So he grabbed the blanket and started to pull.
He pulled and he pulled and he pulled some more,
Until two little teddies went BOOM to the floor!
(Make pulling motions with PULL and clap with the BOOM)

(Count down until…)

One little teddy bear sleeping in the bed,
Zero at the foot and one at the head.
This little teddy said, “This is not right!
I don’t want to sleep alone tonight!”

So…
One little teddy bear sleeping in the bed,
Zero at the foot and one at the head.
This teddy said, “This bed is NOT full!”
So he put out his paw and started to pull.
He pulled and he pulled and he pulled some more,
Until four little teddies climbed up from the floor!

(Count up until…)

Ten little teddy bears sleeping in the bed,
Five at the foot and five at the head.
One little teddy said, “This is JUST right!”
So ten little teddy bears said, “Good Night!”
Susan Pflug, Copyright 1990
Credit: I found this rhyme here: SurLaLune Storytime.

Enjoy!

Flannel Friday: Pretty Ladybugs

This is one that Mollie at Miss Mollie’s Storytime Fun did during one of the first weeks of Flannel Friday. I immediately bookmarked it because I’ve got a counting storytime coming up this summer, where this will be perfect!

For the ladybug, I just blew up Mollie’s picture and used that as a straight template. And for the numbers, I used our Ellison die-cut machine for the first time with felt! It worked pretty good as far as I’m concerned. The only number I had to correct out of the machine was the six. (Also, our Ellison is pretty old — it’s the LetterMachine XL. I don’t know how cutting felt would work on any other Ellison so I wanted to make sure you knew which one I had.)

Here’s the rhyme from Mollie:

“Pretty Ladybug” (Sung to: “The Muffin Man”)
Ladybug has 1 black spot,
1 black spot, 1 black spot;
Ladybug has 1 black spot,
Pretty ladybug!
Continue until there are 6 spots.
— Which she got from PreschoolEducation.com

See you guys next week for another #flannelfriday!

Flannel Friday Round-Up (5/20)

Welcome to Flannel Friday!

Hooray, we had a new participant this week! We had TWO new, amazing participants in Flannel Friday this week!

Andrea from Rovingfiddlehead Kidlit posted her first Flannel Friday: Five Little Rabbits. And I have to say, if those rabbits don’t melt your heart and inspire you to try sewing on your flannels, I don’t know what will!

And Anna from Future Librarian Superhero posted her first Flannel Friday: Hello, Robots. I am in love with all of the robots in this set, but pay special attention to Anna’s mop piece — to die for!

On to the rest of the participants:

Flannel: Five Little Rabbits
from Andrea at Rovingfiddlehead Kidlit

Flannel: Hello, Robots
from Anna at Future Librarian Superhero

Flannel: 5 Little Fire Trucks
from Anne at So Tomorrow

Flannel: Questions and Observations
from Bridget at What Is Bridget Reading?

Flannel: The Green Grew All Around
from Mary at Miss Mary Liberry

Flannel: 5 Strawberries
from Melissa at Mel’s Desk

Flannel: What Will I Wear?
from Mollie at Miss Mollie’s Storytime Fun

Flannel: I Took My Frog to the Library
from Nicole at Narrating Tales of Preschool Storytime

Flannel: Where’s Spot?
From Sarah at Read Rabbit Read

Flannel: 10 Little Hot Dogs
from Sharon at Rain Makes Applesauce

Flannel: 2 Red Apples
from Tracey at 1234 More Storytimes

And I posted my version of “Harold and the Purple Crayon” here.

Thanks for participating! Past Round Ups are here! If I missed you, please feel free to link to your post in the comments, and I will make sure to edit the post on my blog to include you. Next week, Sharon is hosting, so make sure to catch the round-up on Rain Makes Applesauce.

Flannel Friday: Harold and the Purple Crayon

[I am hosting Flannel Friday this week, so check back later today for the round-up post!]

Do you know how hard it is to plan a storytime around the color purple? It’s ridiculous! And to boot, my favorite book about purple — “Harold and the Purple Crayon” naturally — was a wee bit smaller than I remembered it. Of course, I was also smaller back then!

So I set to working on making it into a flannelboard.

I decided that the best way to do this was by trying to simulate the lines that Harold draws and to kind of kid-up the pieces so that they looked like they could be drawn with a crayon. (Also, it meant I didn’t have to be perfect since Harold was the one drawing!)

I started by taping down the clip art, painting around piece, waiting for the paint to dry, and cutting the piece out while making sure to leave a border of purple paint.

You can see just how gloppy I put on the paint in this picture:

A picture of one of the pieces of felt. I think I used about four sheets of white felt. I should have kept better track of that!

And my very messy hand after painting!

And finally….the finished set!

When I was planning for this flannel, I had a co-worker purchase felt by the yard at Joann’s so that I had a piece of white felt to cover the board. It made the story much more authentic than our normal red background.

I also took some liberties with the book. Harold’s hot air balloon become a regular balloon. I skipped having a cityscape and just told that part of the story. I cut his nine types of pie down to four, etc.

This was the best part of purple storytime (post coming Monday, I swear!), and I cannot wait to use it again!

If you want to try and make Harold, here’s my clip art file: Harold Clip Art. And if you don’t have access to the book, I can email you my sheet, so that I’m not breaking copyright on the blog. 😀