ekatiel
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2008
- Messages
- 2,003
We always took pictures of our kids creations. So Maybe he could keep the stuff up for 3 or 4 weeks then you could take pictures and he can take it down and start over again. You could print the pictures for him or run them on the computer so he could still have them.
They are very cute.![]()
Very cute! I'm an art teacher so I love to see things like this. My kids did a few things like this when they were younger, too. I can see how it can get hazardous though! Buy some creative things at Micheal's. They have some cheap things there that only cost a dollar and will channel his inner creativity. You can get things for him like foam door hangers too decorate with glitter glue and foamies. (foam stickers!) You can also get things like little boxes and picture frames and get him colors to paint with that will match his room. You can get a How To Train Your Pet Dragon coloring back and he could color a few pictures and then you can get a frame to frame them in his room. All of these a range from 1-4$ and they have coupons in the Sunday paper for 40% any item.
It will help him be creative and he can still help in decorating his room but not be hazardous.
BTW, the magnetic paint totally bombed for us. I had visions of my pre-teen son being able to put up posters to do some non-permanent decorating, but three coats of the special paint ($$) on one wall didn't hold much. The small magnets barely held themselves up, much less anything bigger than a scrap of paper. The hefty magnets I bought slid right down the wall. I think pushpins and little spackling occasionally would have been a better plan.
For my younger DS6, who loves to "paper" his room much like the OP, I have given up some creative control, but we also got him a magnetic bulletin board for Christmas for him to hang up things he likes or creates. If you wanted something bigger you could get a big piece of thin metal and mount it (might look good with the castle/dragon motif).
PHXscuba
I have a child like that, although he's 11 now. He loves to build "contraptions" and make tents and crafts. He has a portfolio that he uses for his paper crafts. He has a variety of throw blankets, pillows, stuffed animals and a beanbag chair in his room to build with (and he sometimes "borrows" them from other rooms).
He will also build intricate cities, contraptions, and other scenarios out of Legos, wooden blocks, a marble run, Little People (when he was younger), and Geotrax. When we buy him toys we buy them geared toward open-ended play. We don't buy Lego models because he wants to make up his own things, same with race tracks and k'nex. Anything he can build with we get things that use his creativity. He likes working with wood as well, but has to follow blueprints for that and Snap Circuits so he has learned to follow a plan, he just prefers his own plans.
So I guess my advice would be to buy your son toys geared toward open-ended play. And give him plenty of blankets, sheets and clothespins to build tents with. Those cushiony tiles that go together like puzzle pieces might be good for him to use on the floor, too, so he could make it an "island" or "water" or whatever he is pretending that day. When he has an idea like that encourage him to tell you about it while you write it down, or make up a story around the idea for you to write down.
Thanks for the advice, guys. Perhaps I overreacted at Marrionette's post, I prickeld more at the WAY she said to paint the walls, than at the fact she said to paint the walls. She's responded with this same tone in more than one of my threads (including stalking my posts on occasion), so today I was just done with it. Thanks again, to everyone else who offered suggestions. --Katie