I love this idea of using a colored pencil outline to give your kids some guidance to make really incredible cards! Skooks Playground shows you this amazing idea!

Ideas and resources
I love this idea of using a colored pencil outline to give your kids some guidance to make really incredible cards! Skooks Playground shows you this amazing idea!


When my daughter was younger I would spend a lot of time trying to come up with activities she could do in the car on long road trips and things to entertain her when we were waiting at restaurants and things that didn’t involve screens.
But it turns out there are a lot of great activities you can do with just a piece of paper and a pen.
What Do We Do All Day has a great collection of pen and paper games, including some that can be done with just one person, though they’re all more fun if you have at least two.
There are some classics on here like hangman and dots and boxes, but there are also quite a few I hadn’t heard of before.
I don’t want to spoil the whole list for you because you should definitely click over there and look around, but I will share about the one that you see pictured above.
This game is called Bridges, and you start by making the big random shape and the dividing it into a bunch of sections (the post says 30-50 sections is ideal but I think this one is smaller than that).
Each player gets their own color marker and you take turns drawing bridges from one space to another, crossing a third. Once there’s a bridge, no other bridges can start, end or cross in those spaces. Keep going until no more bridges can be built, and the person who makes the last bridge wins.
Check out the post over at What We Do All Day for more great ideas for no or almost-no prep games you can play with your kids or that kids can play together. I’d love to know if you have a favorite paper and pen game, whether it’s on this list or a different one.
[Photo: What We Do All Day]
When my son was in 1st grade, I received a note from his teacher regarding the fact that he could not color “within the lines.” The next day, I sent a note to the teacher indicating that we had NEVER purchased a coloring book for our son, and it was not a requirement for him to stay “within the lines.” This type of activity stunts children’s creativity. Give them a blank piece of paper and let them draw whatever they want!
I’m so excited to see my posting on your site! The link is directing to another posting for someone else’s duct tape wallet.
Here’s the link: http://www.skooksplayground.com/2010/04/getting-creative-with-kids-watercolor.html