We just finished reading Roald Dahl's BFG over here, and I wanted to come up with something fun to go along with the book. I saw these cute little juice bottles in the store, and something just clicked...I would make Dream Bottles. I made 3, and only 2 are true to what is really described in the book, but the third was fun too.
The first one I made was our trogglehumper (nightmare). I used water with a bit of glycerin then added some red food coloring and silver glitter with some star confetti. The book talks about how violently this dream moves when caught, and if shook the contents of this bottle can move quite violently like a snow globe.
The second one is our golden phizzwizard (best dream). Here I used the girls apple scented shampoo with just a bit of water, so it would move a little. Then I added the same silver glitter and stars. This resulted in a very calm bottle where the glitter and stars take a great deal of time to settle to the bottom.
Our third dream bottle was just for fun. maybe it was similar to what would have happened when the Big Friendly Giant mixed up all the dreams. It included water with blue food coloring a layer of oil and the same glitter and stars. The glitter stayed in the oil layer, and when this bottle is shook it travels back to the top in oily bubbles. Fun to play with; hard to photograph.
I showed them to the girls, and Nadia's initial reaction was to put on a pouty face and say, "I already have a calm down jar!" (If only the calm down jar worked for her; she just throws it instead of looking at it). I explained the bottles to them, and then they got busy shaking.
In fact they played with them on and off most of the day. Pretending to sleep and giving each other dreams. They made them all into good dreams though mostly about becoming fairies which resulted in the dream giver placing fairy wings on the sleeping child.
To be honest I was a little concerned with the girls being frightened by this book, but after the first part, once they realized Sophie would not be eaten, they were fine. In the end they told me "I like the Queen, and Sophie and the Friendly Giant, but not those other Giants that eat people!"








You are one creative mama - love it! ....also really enjoyed the girls quote at the end ;)
ReplyDeleteThanks Erika; I guess I just feel like activities help cement the story sometimes!
DeleteWe will be reading the BFG next month so will definitely pin this for then! Love Roald Dahl's books!
ReplyDeleteI hope your girls enjoy it! Mine are big fans of Roald Dahl too!
Deletethose look cool!!! my kids would love those lol
ReplyDeletestopping in from the fun friday blog hop and following! :)
The 5th Level of Motherhood
Thanks for visiting; I will come return the love!
DeleteWhat a fun and creative idea! Your girls are adorable :)
ReplyDeleteI wanted to invite you to come join in our weekly Meet & Greet Blog Hop! It starts Friday nights and runs till the end of Monday, come link up if you have some time this weekend :)
http://createdbylaurie.blogspot.com/2013/02/weekend-meet-greet-blog-hop-14.html
Thanks for visiting Laurie! I will try to stop by! :)
DeleteThis is such a wonderful activity-- very thoughtful.
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting!
DeleteThat's a great tie in to the book! I think children remember and enjoy stories better when you can make in more engaging. Good Job Momma! :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing at Sharing Saturday!
Thanks for visiting and hosting!
DeleteWhat a cute idea. We have not read that book yet. I am pinning this so when we do we can do this activity as well.
ReplyDeleteThanks for coming to link up at Pinterest Tuesday!
Thank you Erica for hosting and visiting!
DeleteThat is neat. This could be a great way to capture their attention. Thanks for linking up at Family Fun Friday at http://happyandblessedhome.com/category/family-fun/ Please stop by this Friday to see if your post was featured.
ReplyDeleteBest Wishes, Monica
http://HappyandBlessedHome.com
What a neat way to extend the book!
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting!
DeleteGorgeous. Love the idea of them being "dream" bottles! :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing on Kids Get Crafty!
Maggy
Thanks for visiting and hosting Maggy!
DeleteSuch pretty and fun bottles! Clever idea! Thanks for linking up at TGIF! Hope to see you linked up again tomorrow =)
ReplyDeleteBeth
Thanks for visiting and hosting Beth! I'm sure I will be there! :)
DeleteWhat a fun way to encourage pretend play. Thanks for linking up with Hobbies and Handicrafts.
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting and visiting! The girls are still playing with them!
DeleteFun activity!! Thanks for sharing this at my Pin Me Linky Party.
ReplyDeleteThank you Diana for hosting, visiting, and sharing!
DeleteThese are so creative! I love that you used thicker fluid for the good dream bottle to make the glitter move less violently. Thanks for sharing this awesome activity with the Kid Lit Blog Hop!
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting Katie! We have had a lot of fun with these bottles and of course with the book!
DeleteOh this looks so pretty and fun!
ReplyDeleteThanks for linking to the Sunday showcase. I've pinned this to our board.
Thanks Rebecca!
DeleteHi, I'm stopping by as part of the Kid Lit Blog Hop. How creative of you, this is great! I'm a big fan of Roald Dahl, too. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting! So far my kids are big fans too!
DeleteAwww...your girls are so adorable. I love reading posts about how a book inspired an activity or craft. Roald Dahl is one of my childhood favorites, but I have to admit, I'm not sure I've read ANY to my kids. I have one of his books from the library sitting on the coffee table. Hmmm....
ReplyDeleteThanks for linking into the Kid Lit Blog Hop! :)
Thank you! My girls are big fans! We read half of George's Marvelous Medicine in one sitting! I bet your kids would enjoy them too!
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