Number 3: Walking Blocks
Walking blocks are a bit like really low stilts except they are easier for younger kids to manage. They're a really simple and easy to make gift that are a lot of fun for kids to use. Solid walnut.
[Broadcaster]Welcome. This site is a space for sharing photographs, links and other things of relative interest. Check it out and feel free to leave a comment (click "comments" below each post to do so). In the meantime, thanks for visiting.Filed under: christmas 2010Number 3: Walking BlocksWalking blocks are a bit like really low stilts except they are easier for younger kids to manage. They're a really simple and easy to make gift that are a lot of fun for kids to use. Solid walnut. Play Stand ArchesThe elves crank out some more Christmas product; I made Waldorf style wooden play stands for the kids last Christmas. This year Bridget asked me to make up a set of arches that could be easily attached to a pair of stands and draped with silks or other fabric to create private play space and/or forts. She'll be dying some silk fabric for this purpose. They're made of maple veneered plywood. Ferry BoatsI've been especially busy over the last month or so building a bunch of wooden toys for the kids. These were by far the most complicated of the bunch. They are a pair of wooden ferry boats meant to transport matchbox cars, zhu zhu pets, and miniature playthings of all sorts from one fantastical side of the living room to the other. I built them according to plans found in a book about making heirloom wooden toys. The materials are all left-over scraps from around the shop and are a mixture of sapele, walnut, poplar, and baltic birch. Though I work with wood for a living, I don't usually work on this scale and making the boats ended up being a nice little challenge and change of pace. I'm pretty pleased with how they came out.
I took a bunch of pictures cataloging my progress as I built them. Here are a few. 1. Finished boats Plans courtesy of Making Heirloom Toys by Jim Makowocki, 1996. Taunton Press. |
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