Five fun fall crafts plus projects

Fall is here, and helparticles education offers a wide variety of enjoyable and educational autumn activities to help you enjoy the season. The following are five types of projects that are suitable for families and are straightforward to undertake in your homes or neighborhoods.

Sketchbook of natural settings

The inspiration for this sketchbook is autumn, aiming to spark creativity in children. Print the pages, bind them, and take a pencil on a fall hike. While walking, encourage your child to use the sketchbook prompts to draw and write about their observations. The end result will be a sketchbook brimming with artwork inspired by the natural beauty of the season.

The falling of leaves is occurring. 

I have a lesson plan for teaching children about color mixing using the changing fall colors theme. Students will begin by making predictions and then experiment with blending different paint colors to observe the new colors created by those combinations. This plan provides detailed instructions for introduction, differentiation, review, and other components, making it suitable for both traditional classrooms and homeschooling settings.

DIY feeder for the bird.

Autumn provides an excellent opportunity for observing birds as many of them migrate during this season. You can easily attract new birds to your garden by installing a bird feeder. With these instructions, you can repurpose a slinky and some common household items to create a DIY bird feeder that can be suspended from a tree or pole. This feeder takes advantage of the slinky's coiled structure to hold nuts, forming a circular arrangement of food for birds to enjoy.

Pumpkins that explode.

What do you think of the idea of incorporating a pumpkin that explodes into the traditional erupting volcano experiment? This enjoyable activity includes making a jack-o'-lantern that foams from its mouth by combining baking soda and vinegar. Carve different patterns into pumpkins with your child, then customize your baking soda and vinegar with various food dye colors and glitter for extra enjoyment.

Working with scratch art entails manipulating leaves.

Here is an artistic kind of project that do incorporate just a simple science teaching. Color a piece of paper with fall shades using yellow, orange, and red crayons, and then layer it with green tempera paint. Afterward, cut out leaf shapes from the paper and etch veins or patterns into them to expose the crayon colors beneath. This emulates the process behind real leaves changing color: the color always exists but is concealed by the leaves' green chlorophyll. During fall, the chlorophyll diminishes, unveiling the leaves' vibrant golden hues.

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