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Baby food jar: You may have to buy a "Stage 3"-size food jar if your trinket is too tall to fit in the Stage 1 or 2 jars. |
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Light vegetable oil: Save your fancy imported Italian olive oil for the endive salad. |
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Glitter: Otherwise known as "Vegas Snow." |
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Trinket: Something small and waterproof to put inside the snow globe, like a small glass animal figurine or even a plastic toy soldier from the dollar store. |
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Hot-glue gun and glue sticks: Remember, kids and hot glue don't mix, so make sure you do the gluing! |
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Funnel: Optional, but may save your dining room chair upholstery. |
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Hair dryer: Remember that old thing from the days when you actually had time to primp? |
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Have your child help you rinse out the baby food jar and lid really well.
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Remove the label from the jar. Scrubbing it off with hot water may do the trick. If not, blow-dry the label with your hair dryer to melt the adhesive, and then pull the label off.
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Have your child select a trinket to be featured in the snow globe.
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Then, while your kid watches, hot-glue the trinket to the inside of the jar lid.
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Help your child fill the jar with vegetable oil. If your preschooler insists on doing the pouring herself, grab the paper towels and enlist the aid of a funnel. (Don't attempt this while wearing silk!)
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Have your child pour enough glitter into the jar to make the scene really sparkle, but not so much that it doesn't flow nicely.
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Screw the top on the jar, flip it over and you've got a Winter Wonderland, Gerber-style!
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If you can pry it out of her hands, have your child wrap the snow globe and she's got herself a lovely handmade holiday gift for someone special.
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Love it!! What a great craft!!
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THANKS FOR THE SNOW GLOBE RECEIPE. I LOVE THEM. I WILL MAKE SOME AND MAYBE POST PHOTOS BACK TO YOU.
THANKS
SARAH
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