How-To: Blinged Out Cardboard Cat Fort
Instructables user joejoetheclown augments a salvaged cardboard cat fort with fancy laser cut architectural features.
Origami, letterpress, linocuts, laser-cuts, pepakura, pop-ups, flip-books, silhouettes, maché, and more.
Instructables user joejoetheclown augments a salvaged cardboard cat fort with fancy laser cut architectural features.
Zine-making is also a fantastic activity for kids. Not only are zines a fun means of creative expression, making them gives kids a little insight into how published books and magazines are made, and may help them think more critically about what goes into those mainstream publications.
Customize your ice cream cone experience with these handy origami sleeves from Anna Hezel over at Food52.
Brighten up any festive occasion by using some common household materials with this flashy paper fan garland tutorial from The House That Lars Built.
Artist Brian Reedy employs woodcut techniques from multiple printmaking traditions to create these quirky illustrations of characters from contemporary science-fiction, TV, and movies.
Artist Laurence Vallières creates charming animal mask sculptures from salvaged cardboard that cleverly utilize the printed surface of the packaging materials in order to depict the animal imagery.
“When kids put this on, you see their former self just kind of melt away, and they become this heroic self.”