Celebrating 50 years of the Doctor with crafts galore!
This Saturday is the special 50th anniversary episode of Dr. Who and I have some pretty serious teen fans of Dr. Who in my neighborhood, so we gathered together for some Whovian crafts. Here's what we made:
Nov 21, 2013
Nov 20, 2013
Guest Post: How to make a short table
Do you wish you had short tables for toddler programs like Toddler Art
Class or WonderWorks, but it's just not in the budget right now or
you're not yet ready to commit to such a large purchase? Yesterday, I
got an e-mail from Laura Polak, Youth Services Specialist at the Oak
Bend Branch of the St. Louis County Library, sharing her suggestion for
making your own (temporarily) short tables. She writes:
"I took our circa 1986 library benches, put tables on top of them with the legs folded up, and duct taped the two together. Wrapping the tape around two or three times is enough to hold it in place, and they come in at about 16 inches tall.
I only have three of these benches, though, so I made one more table with delivery tubs.
This one takes a bit more time to create, but it also makes a very sturdy table. I made this one by putting a table upside down on the floor, stacking delivery tubs on top of it and duct taping the two together. That's it!"
Brilliant idea, Laura! What a great engineering solution. Thanks so much for sharing your idea and allowing me to post it here on LibraryMakers. Anyone else have a great idea to share?
"I took our circa 1986 library benches, put tables on top of them with the legs folded up, and duct taped the two together. Wrapping the tape around two or three times is enough to hold it in place, and they come in at about 16 inches tall.
This one takes a bit more time to create, but it also makes a very sturdy table. I made this one by putting a table upside down on the floor, stacking delivery tubs on top of it and duct taping the two together. That's it!"
Brilliant idea, Laura! What a great engineering solution. Thanks so much for sharing your idea and allowing me to post it here on LibraryMakers. Anyone else have a great idea to share?
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