Inside is a picture wallet, so in each slot I put an animal. It’s wooden, bright red, and about 9 inches tall. While out shopping a while back, I found this wonderful picture frame and immediately thought of this story. Stick a piece of velcro behind the door, and the matching piece on the back of the animals.) (This is how I made the animals stick behind the door: the magic of velcro. Here’s the door that I use, but there could be any number of ways to make this work.Ĭontinue with as many animals as you like. Here are some of mine–just an assortment of hand colored and clip art animal shapes cut out of paper. You get the idea.įirst, find some flannel animal pieces. When an animal is at the door, the reader makes the correct animal noise. In this book, a little girl imagines what it would like to have various animals deliver her family’s pizza. For my first flannel Friday, I’m doing an extention activity for the book Hi, Pizza Man! by Virginia Walter. The pieces are mostly very informal (meaning basic at best), but they work. I have in storage several envelopes full of my version of flannel board stories–I can’t cut felt very well, so I use paper pictures with felt or velcro backing. The main reason I wanted to begin blogging again? Flannel Friday, of course! Thanks to Mel and the Flannel Friday crew, I have gotten excited about storytelling again.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |