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By The Educators Spin On It

Adorable Handprint Reindeer Craft Frame for the Holidays

Reindeer handprint photo frame for a Handmade Gift Idea

Create this adorable holiday gift idea with your child’s handprints. This Reindeer Craft Frame is sure to be a keepsake for years with loved ones!

Sleigh bells ring and children craft! Parenting during the holiday season is a must in my opinion. With all the hustle and bustle of the holiday preparations, children still need their daily routine, creative outlets, and learning opportunities.

We must make time to interact with our children a priority. No time for activities during the week? Prepare a bunch of activities to do together on the weekend.

What is great about December is that most of these holiday crafts can also double as hand-made gifts for family members! Who wouldn’t want a collection of your child’s cute crafts?

Reindeer handprint photo frame for a Handmade Gift Idea

Disclosure: Amazon Associate Links included in this post.

I often find that we take traditional holiday crafts and put our own spin on them, making those every day parenting moments, learning opportunities.

Reindeer Craft Frame

This one is a twist of the hand print reindeer. The original creator – unknown. As teachers, we do a lot of sharing great ideas. This is one of them. Whomever you are that thought of this – you rock! Thank you!

Materials for Reindeer Frame:

  • White card stock
  • brown tempera paint
  • Paint brush
  • Wooden picture frame
  • 2 large google eyes
  • 1 large red pom pom
  • Ribbon
  • All Purpose Glue

Directions for Handprint Reindeer Frame: 

  1. Paint your kid’s hands and press them on white paper.
  2. Cut their hand prints out when dry
  3. Have them paint the wooden frame
  4. When the wooden frame is dry, glue on the bow, eyes, and nose.
Preschool Reindeer Crafts and Learning Activities

Activity: Reindeer Reading 

Materials:

  • Paper strips
  • Marker
  • Scissors (if you plan on cutting up your sentences)

Directions:

I love this activity because there are so many ways to use it. I am focusing on teaching the sight word can, that words can be different sizes, and the action words.  Your focus will be different depending on your child.

1. Introduce the word reindeer. We counted how many letters were in the word and what it looks like; one tall, capital letter followed by 3 short letters, another tall letter and 3 more short letters. Some kids respond well to learning to read by the shapes of words.

I also reviewed the [r] sound and that it is found at the beginning of the word reindeer.

2. Then I showed my preschooler the word can.  This is a sight word that also is a cvc word (consonant vowel consonant) that can be sounded out.  We are just memorizing this one.   So now our sentence looked like this…

Reindeer can _________.

3. Fill in what reindeer can do.  I let him tell me what words to write.

He chose run, jump, and walk.

4. Then I read each sentence. Afterward, we read them together. He did NOT want to read them on his own, but that would be the next step. (maybe tomorrow) You could have your child read them to another family member or teddy bear as well. (the more you read the better you get!)

5. If you want, you can cut the sentence apart into words and have your child re-build them.

Reindeer art with spool snowflakes on blue paper

Activity: Reindeer Habitat 

Materials

  • Construction paper
  • White Paper
  • Brown crayon
  • White paint
  • Empty spool of thread
  • Glue
  • A reindeer sticker (you can draw it too)

Directions:

Talk about a reindeer’s habitat (where they live) with your child and then have them do the following. Let them do as much of it on their own as possible.  If you want to make one – go ahead and sit beside them and start another one. (this can be lots of fun for both of you!)

  1. Draw a tree on the blue paper.
  2. Rip white paper and glue it to make the snow on the ground.
  3. Stamp a bunch of snow flakes (this is great for fine motor)
  4. Add the deer!

You can also make your own adorable reindeer with this easy and fun reindeer craft to decorate the house or to give away and spread some Christmas cheer!

Handprint Reindeer Frame for Kids #christmas #handprintcraft

Activity: Reindeer Handprint Pillow

Materials:

  • Fabric
  • Fabric Paint

Directions:

This one is an oldie, but a goodie

1. Paint your kids foot and press it on the fabric.
2. Paint their hands and stamp it on the fabric.
3. Add details!

Educator’s Tip: Honestly, we do cute little crafts too that don’t always have a “learning goal” rather are ways that we can positively interact with our kids. This is a pillow that my daughter and I made a while back. Every year she pulls it out and gives it a hug. It is a great reminder that she will always be my little fawn!

Activity: Read Reindeer Books

Here are a few more of our favorite reindeer-themed books to read with your child as you get ready for Christmas!  Have you checked out our 100 Christmas Books every child should read before they turn 10?  Books make a great Christmas gift!  

The Littlest Reindeer
The Wild Christmas Reindeer by Jan Brett
The Little Reindeer
The Reindeer Wish
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
Olive the Other Reindeer
The Grumpy Reindeer
Dasher
How to Catch a Reindeer

If you enjoyed these Reindeer Ideas you might also enjoy one of these Reindeer Posts… 

reindeer learning activities for preschoolers
101+ Reindeer Activities for Kids
Flying Reindeer STEM Challenge for Kids

Like this idea? Pin for later or share now with a friend!

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Filed Under: Arts Tagged With: Amanda, Art projects, Christmas, Creative Crafting, grade school, Hand Print Crafts, Playful Preschool, Preschool, reindeer

« 24 Random Acts of Christmas Kindness Advent Calendar
Fingerprint Reindeer Ornament »

Comments

  1. Karen says

    December 9, 2018 at 2:08 pm

    Since most of what I see online for holiday art is crafts, and very little process art, we should try to do our best to not put all the creative restrictions on the project that are involved in crafts. Let your child do ALL of the project. If you don’t like the look of it, too bad, keep your hands off THEIR work and your opinions about the end product to yourself. Talk about their process. “I see you are pressing hard here and lightly here with that stamp. How do those marks look different?” Open-ended questions support language and critical thinking development. If you help or “fix” your child’s art, you are telling them what they did was not good enough. Also, when you do art alongside your child, be very careful that you are not setting a standard for them and that they feel they must follow you. Often doing art with children says, this is the gold standard and if yours doesn’t look like mine, it’s not good. The same goes for showing samples of “the correct” finished product. I read some of the comments and had to comment myself. Our students are falling behind academically in our country and stifling their creativity isn’t doing them any good.

  2. Maria says

    December 7, 2013 at 10:37 pm

    Thanks for linking to our Hand-Printed Gift Bags, Angela! Hope the holiday season is full of happiness and warmth for you!!

  3. Amanda Boyarshinov says

    December 6, 2013 at 10:38 am

    They are simply adorable!

  4. Meredith @ Homegrown Friends says

    December 5, 2013 at 9:16 pm

    Thanks so much for mentioning our Twinkly Light Caves. So glad you like them!

  5. Kim Vij says

    December 5, 2013 at 8:28 am

    We are in LOVE with Jessica's artwork and can't say thanks enough! More to come!

  6. Amanda Boyarshinov says

    December 4, 2013 at 10:49 pm

    Awe – you make me blush Kim! Thanks for such kind words!

  7. Amanda Boyarshinov says

    December 4, 2013 at 10:49 pm

    It looks sooo yummy! You always have such great ideas!!! And thank you on the header – Jessica Butler is AMAZING!

  8. Kim Vij says

    December 4, 2013 at 10:44 pm

    Amanda thank you for planning next week's activities for me, these are ADORABLE! So thrilled to see all the great activities shared on our Facebook Page today too! Excited to watch Playful Preschool grow this next year!

  9. Amanda Boyarshinov says

    December 4, 2013 at 10:44 pm

    You are welcome – it is such a great DIY ornament for our kids!

  10. Growing Book by Book says

    December 4, 2013 at 10:00 pm

    Thanks for sharing our fruit salad post with a literacy twist. And, how did I miss the redesign of the header? Looks great!

  11. Melissa Lennig says

    December 4, 2013 at 9:48 pm

    Thank you for mentioning our Snowflake Ornaments from FB Share Day!

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Kim Vij

Early childhood teacher, author, speaker and mom of 3. Kim Vij shares ways to make learning fun and parenting an adventure by sharing all kinds of easy kid crafts, activities, recipes and even travel ideas for families!
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