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Preschool Plant Activity – Pressed Flowers and Leaves Holiday Cards

Grandparent FriendlyDifficulty Rating: One out of FiveWith this preschool plant activity, your preschooler can actually create homemade holiday cards. By pressing your own flowers and leaves and then creating holiday cards out of them, your preschooler can make a wonderful homemade holiday gift. You will also be creating an educational moment for your preschooler with this preschool plant activity.

What your Preschooler will Learn by Pressing Flowers and Leaves:

  1. The various parts of leaves
  2. The various parts of flowers
  3. How to dry flowers and leaves to preserve them for always

What you will Need for these Holiday Cards:

  1. Leaves and flowers
  2. A phone book or another heavy book
  3. Tissue paper or parchment paper
  4. Construction paper
  5. Glue
  6. Decorative items such as markers, glitter, crayons, paint, chalk etc.

What To Do:

Buy at Art.comStep one: Go for a walk with your preschooler and have them collect attractive leaves and flowers. If you’re snowed in, go to a local indoor garden, hothouse or arboretum.
As your preschooler collects the flowers, point out the different parts—the petals, the anthers (the inside fuzzy looking bits,) the stigma (the vase shaped inside), the stem and any pollen. Point out that flowers start off as buds and over time gradually open into flowers. Teach your preschooler that flowers contain the tiny seeds that will grow new plants.
Explain the different parts of a leaf. Point out the blade (the main part of the leaf) and the veins. Teach your preschooler that leaves help the plant get sunlight and air that they need to grow big and strong.

Step two: After you and your preschooler have collected enough leaves and flowers, you’ll want to press them between two pieces of tissue paper or parchment paper. You can put several leaves and flowers together to use the same piece of tissue paper, but try not to let the flowers and leaves touch.

Step three: Put your tissue paper between the pages of your heavy book. Leave your book alone for a week to ten days.

Buy at Art.comStep four: After a week or ten days, take your tissue paper out of the book. Your flowers and leaves should be perfectly dried out and ready for your holiday cards.

Step five: Have your preschooler glue the flowers and leaves onto your construction paper to make holiday cards. Have your preschooler decorate the homemade holiday cards with glitter, markers, crayons and whatever else your child wants.

Variations:

Don't feel you're limited to just pressing flowers and leaves to make holiday cards. Have your preschooler create homemade holiday gift tags for all those holiday presents you're handing out.






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