Thursday 29 December 2011

Where are Sponge Tree in 2012, we hear you ask??

Due to other Sponge Tree exciting projects and work demands, Nicola + Paula have now ceased delivering Under Fives colour sessions.
We have recruited 1 workshop provider and are currently recruiting another workshop provider so the fabulous colour sessions can carry on, in the Leeds and Bradford area.

*Please contact us if you run or work for a children's centre/family learning centre in the Bradford + Leeds area and you would like us to deliver these workshops for you!     spongetree@live.com

Ongoing Under Fives colour sessions will be taking place through out 2012.
Tuesdays 10-11am at Menston + Burley Children's Centre
Wednesdays 10-11am at Baildon Community Link


MORE SESSIONS TO COME AFTER FEBRUARY HALF TERM!!

Nicola + Paula will be working on the following:
JAN/FEB 
South Craven School Recycled sculpture commission - South Craven School have asked us to design + build a sculpture for their sixth form outdoor area.

JAN 
Applying for funding with Hoyle Court P.T.A to deliver workshops in
Hoyle Court Primary School.
This will be a community arts project MORE DETAILS TO COME!

JAN/FEB 
Craft + Chat sessions.

JAN/MARCH/MAY 
Ongoing Careworkers Activities Co ordinator Course at BACS Training Centre in Shipley.

MARCH 
Designing + building an outdoor area at Menston Primary School TBC

MAY  
Saltaire Arts Trail Childrens Art project for Saturday 5th + Sunday 6th May.
BACS training
Sponge Tree would like to wish everyone 
a fantastically creative 2012

Craft kits

Felted corsages


Clay tiles
Candles

Blue painting

Hedgehog

Green man

Fire wand

Blossom threading

Blackberry painting

Leaf rubbing

Moth printing

Felting

Choosing wool

Chalk painted pebble

Withy lantern

Felted butterfly

Natural jewels

Spice grinding

Knight shields

Peg dragonflies

Wheel weaving

Teepee building

Wreath making

Willow weaving

Living willow weaving

Learn, make + sell

Natural play

Sunday 13 November 2011

Christmas Crafting!!

Hi everyone
More buff willow just ordered for our exciting workshop with The Baildon Belles WI. Sponge Tree will be delivering a fab session on how to make greener Christmas decorations!! Recycling and upcyling doesn't have to be drab, especially when you can pick up fantastic materials from SCRAP Leeds' finest scrap store.

We love this toy wreath by Amy Locurto perfect recycling!


We have also discovered a new fantastic eco friendly online store, for all your greener art and craft materials.
The little green paintbox stock the fab GLOB natural paints!
Wreath making at BACS Sensory Activity Co-ordinators Course

Monday 5 September 2011

The Colours of Autumn

BROWN, brown scrummy brown. Brown cacoa, coffee, chocolate, worms, soil, compost, autumn leaves but most of all lovely shiny conkers!! I love each shiny jewel when it has just dropped from the horse chesnut tree and split out of it's spiky shell. I can't help but collect them and I love to feel their smoothness in my hands.



Conkers, conkers on the ground 

(twinkle, twinkle little star)

Conkers conkers on the ground
Shiny conkers brown and round
Falling conkers from the tree
Some for you and some for me
Conkers conkers on the ground
Shiny conkers brown and round




Here is my favourite colour GREEN. Green is just fantastic as it appears in every season. During the Autumn topic we have related it to green apples, as apples are ripe for harvesting at this time of the year. The majority of green apples we grow in this country are cooking apples, epecially the good old 'Bramley'. We believe the 'Bramley' apple makes the best apple pie + crumble ever!


 Bramley Apple Pie

Preparation Time
Preparation time:
Cooking Time
Cooking time:
Serves
Serves: 4-6
Ingredients
Ingredients
For the filling
675g Bramley apples
75-100g soft brown sugar
grated rind and juice of 1 orange
1 teaspoon of mixed spice
1tbsp plain white flour
25g butter

For the crust
175g prepared shortcrust pastry
1-2 tsp caster sugar
  1. Preheat the oven to 200°C, 400°F, Gas Mark 6, 15 minutes before baking the pie.
  2. Peel and core the apples and then cut into thick slices and reserve.  Mix together the sugar, grated orange rind, mixed spice and flour.
  3. Place a third of the apple slices in the base of a 1.2 litre deep pie dish and sprinkle with half the sugar mixture.  Cover with half the remaining apples and sugar then arrange the rest of the apples on top.  Pour the orange juice over.
  4. Cut the butter into small pieces and dot over the apples.
  5. Roll the pasty out to an oblong on a lightly floured surface about 4cm larger than the pie dish.  Cut out a 1.25cm strip.  Dampen edges of pie dish with a little water then place the thin strip on the pie dish edge.  Dampen the pastry edge then place the pastry lid in position.  Press edges firmly together and using the back of a knife flake the edges together.  If liked, any pastry trimming can be used to decorate the top.
  6. Brush pastry with a little water and sprinkle with the caster sugar.  Bake in a preheated oven for 15 minutes then reduce oven temperature to 180°C, 350oF, Gas Mark 4 and continue to cook for 30 minutes or until the pastry is golden brown.  If liked the pie can be sprinkled with a little more sugar after baking.
  7. Serve warm with cream, custard or ice cream.
Variations
  1. Replace the grated orange rind with 2tsp of ground cinnamon, add to the soft brown sugar and flour.
  2. Add about 2-3 whole cloves to each layer of apples in the pie dish.
  3. Add 75g cut mixed peel to the apple layer.
"To the best of my knowledge, the recipe for traditional Bramley Apple Pie filling has not changed: Bramley apples, sugar, cornflour and a preservative, such as lemon juice and water. Nor should it - let's keep it this way! The Bramley is rightly recognised as being the best apple for cooking. Indigenous to Britain, the apple's unique qualities, such as higher acid and lower sugar levels, produce a strong apple flavour even when cooked, and a superb texture once cooked.
From the time when in 1809 the first Bramley tree grew from pips planted by a young girl, Mary Ann Brailsford, in her garden in Southwell, Nottinghamshire, to 2010 with Bramleys being used innovatively in savoury stir fries by top of their game international chefs - it's always been a winner in my eyes."
Antony Worrall Thompson MOGB
April 2010


YELLOW is the colour we will focus on next, for the children Under 5 years. Yellow relates to harvest time and corn dollies come to mind. Corn dollies are wonderful plaits of golden wheat, barley, corn or rye. They are then traditionally tied with a coloured ribbon.


Salt dough corn dollies


"In Britain a corn dolly is created by plaiting the wheat stalks to create a straw figure. The corn dolly is kept until the spring. This was done as people believed that the corn spirit lived in the wheat and as the wheat was harvested, the spirit fled to the wheat which remained. By creating the dolly the spirit is kept alive for the next year and for the new crop. Sometimes these dollies are hung up in the barn or sometimes in the farmhouse or even in the church. In spring the dolly would be ploughed back into the soil. There are many types of corn dolly." harvestfestivals.net


The yorkshire corn dolly




How to make a Corn Dolly: 

Any coloured ribbons used to bind the dollies had meanings attached to the colours: 
yellow - sun, red - sacrifice, blue - love, green - wisdom, white - strength.
 
Equipment:   5 - 8 inch hollow straws
                   4 - 4 inch hollow straws
                   Raffin
 
Tie the 8" straws together in the middle. 
Fold in half and tie near the top of the fold making a head.  
Using the 4" straws, tie the ends leaving a small portion beyond the ties to make "hands".  
Slide the 4" straws into the "body" of the 8" straws forming arms.  
Separate the lower section of the 8" straws into two and tie forming legs and feet.  Decorate as desired.
Afterwards hang in the kitchen until spring when it may be buried in the garden.



Corn dollies
(Lavender’s Blue)

Corn dollies yellow,
Corn dollies neat
Help us to harvest
The food that we eat






The farmer cuts the crops

(The farmers in his den)

The farmer cuts the corn,
The farmer cuts the corn
Harvest time is here again.
The farmer cuts the corn

The farmer cuts the wheat,
The farmer cuts the wheat.
Lots of lovely bread to eat.
The farmer cuts the wheat.



The next Autumn colour we will focus on with the Under 5's is RED. Some leaves are already starting to turn beautiful shades of burnt reds. We think Autumn leaves are amazing natural colours and their colour range is so dramatic.


Leaf rubbings



Red leaves falling

Red leaves falling, red leaves falling.
On the ground, on the ground.
Autumn time is coming, 
Autumn time is coming.
All around, all around.






The first colour we will look at with the Under 5 years this week is PURPLE.
Wonderful blackberries and elderberries make fantastic paint. The Under 5's just love this messy fun and they can eat the blackberries too!


Blackberry + elderberry painting


Get outside and find hedgrows full of purple gems. Blackberry picking is one of my all time favourite past times.




Blackberry picking
 by - Seamus Heaney 


Late August, given heavy rain and sun
For a full week, the blackberries would ripen.
At first, just one, a glossy purple clot
Among others, red, green, hard as a knot.
You ate that first one and its flesh was sweet
Like thickened wine: summer's blood was in it
Leaving stains upon the tongue and lust for
Picking. Then red ones inked up and that hunger
Sent us out with milk cans, pea tins, jam-pots
Where briars scratched and wet grass bleached our boots.
Round hayfields, cornfields and potato-drills
We trekked and picked until the cans were full,
Until the tinkling bottom had been covered
With green ones, and on top big dark blobs burned
Like a plate of eyes. Our hands were peppered
With thorn pricks, our palms sticky as Bluebeard's.

We hoarded the fresh berries in the byre.
But when the bath was filled we found a fur,
A rat-grey fungus, glutting on our cache.
The juice was stinking too. Once off the bush
The fruit fermented, the sweet flesh would turn sour.
I always felt like crying. It wasn't fair
That all the lovely canfuls smelt of rot.
Each year I hoped they'd keep, knew they would not.

Monday 29 August 2011

COME ALONG TO OUR UNDER FIVES SESSIONS

WHITE - WOOL CARDING




Sponge Tree Under 5's sessions are colour themed. 
Each week we focus on a different colour because young children relate well to this concept. 
Colour also links to seasonal activities and introduces children to the natural world and environment around them.
Each session is tailored and prepared to suit children of 5 years old and under. 
It is also designed for carers to interact with their children and to learn new skills along the way.

As well as being educational, each colour allows children to explore using all 5 senses and to develop their natural ability to create and connect with the world outside.

The sessions last for 1 hour and every week we have themed arts and crafts, stories and music time.

BROWN - CONKER NECKLACE

CLAY TILES

PURPLE - BLACKBERRIES








WHITE - FLOUR PLAY

RED - LEAF RUBBINGS

NATURAL + RECYCLED BRACLETS

FELTED BUTTERFLIES

NATURAL INKS + DYES

GREEN - GOO











  




THESE SESSIONS HAVE A CHARGE OF £1 OR £2 PER SESSION PLEASE CONTACT THE CHILDREN'S CENTRES TO BOOK YOUR PLACE NOW!!

ORANGE - SENSORY PLAY

To ensure correct supervision at the sessions we ask people to attend on a 1 adult : 2 children ratio. 
This also gives more children and carers the opportunity to take part.

INFORMATION FOR ORGANISATIONS
Sponge Tree run sessions specifically designed for children under 5 years old. We deliver these weekly at Bradford based children centres, community centres and church halls.
The programme runs weekly, focusing on a colour and links to the seasons and the changes in nature. Each week the children learn about a colour, create a piece of artwork to take home and a record sheet highlighting what they have learnt that week. The children leave with a mission to help them connect with the natural world around them.
We have written the sessions to include activities that develop, creative, social, fine motor skills, decision making, sensory stimulation and also a school ready element which also includes brain gym. We also play a range of music linked to the chosen colour of the week.
These session have a maximum number of 15 children and a strict ratio of 1 adult to 2 children.
The sessions last 1 hour. The cost is £70 this includes all materials.
We also run family days and targeted Father’s with their children workshops for the children centres at weekends. We design activities specifically for these sessions.
The cost of these sessions are £70 per hour.  Materials are included , unless
you require a specific project and materials are costly.

PLEASE CONTACT US spongetree@live.com