Unique ideas for a Disney Princess Party?

disneyfan551

Focusing on the FIGHT and not the FRIGHT! 🟠🙏
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Jan 17, 2002
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It's time to plan my 3yo's birthday party, and I know that my DISer friends will have lots of advice for me re: princess parties! We usually have pretty big parties, with about 40 people or so, and I have plenty of time to make things. So, if you've got a different idea that you've used before, I would love to hear it!!

Thanks for any help!! :wave:
 
Haven't done one but here's an idea...

How about having the little ones make their own crowns? DD is 5 and she LOVES doing things like that. Have lots of them cut out - find a pattern and trace it on cardboard and have them decorate. Crayons, markers, stickers, glitter, sequins, etc. The messier the better! :)

Bracelets and necklaces made out of beads,,,wands that can be decorated like the crowns..maybe put together a packet of different Princess crafts that they can do.

Treasure hunt with a real treasure box at the end filled with trinkets to share. (you know, all thos plastic rings and things little ones like)

If you want to make your own party invitations I can tell you what I did for DD's 3rd bd. I stamped a crown on the front and decorated it with markers and glitter glue. Inside it read something like ......Princess Grace is turning 3 and you are invited to her party... It was only for family so I did not do the whole Princess theming.

I'll try to think of more things....

Jill
 
when dd was 3 and 4 we did the princess party thing. It was a lot of fun. I think when she turned 4 we made them all drop a shoe at the door to put the candy in for the treasure hunt. I cut out a shoe pattern from tinfoil and they had to follow them around the house, yard, etc until they found their shoe. That was the year I made them princess dresses (very easy, I just folded that tulle stuff in half and cut a hole in the top for their heads) and tied them around the waist with ribbon. The boys got sashes. For the cake I made a castle cake (check the family fun website for that one). I'll have to go find the pictures from that party to see if anything else comes to mind. :D maggie
 
Great ideas! I would love to see photos! Thanks for sharing everyone!

Keep 'em coming!
 

do you have a digital camera???

Can you make a 'castle' with BIG carboard boxes paint - glitter and all that
or even just a 'royal chair' and take each quests picture with the birthday girl -

print them out

and then put them in those wooden picture frames the kids can 'make' themselves ( www.orientaltrading.com ) you could have them paint them, add jewles, ribbons, etc...
 
There is a book out called Disney Princess Crafts by Laura Torres it has 40 crafts related to Ariel, Cinderella, Jasmine, Aurora, Belle and Snow White. There are some really cute ideas in there.
 
My older dd had a princess party when she was 5 - it was precious! It was just a party for her friends and little cousins (the adult family party was separate, and there were no boys involved - even all the cousins there were girls). We asked all the girls to come in their dress-up clothes and they were adorable! I had extras for those who didn't have a princess costume. I printed invitations on the computer that said something like, Her Royal Highness Princess Elizabeth requests the honor of your presence at her birthday party, date, time, place, and a note about wearing a costume. I cut out crowns from pink poster paper and let them decorate them with markers, stickers, fake jewels - these were a big hit. Then they wore them for the rest of the party (I stapled them together into a circle when they were through decorating, but you could use tape or whatever :)) I made a castle cake, which was very easy. I made a regular cake in two square pans instead of two round ones. Then I iced it all pink and decorated it with those little sugar wafer cookies (the strawberry ones). I made a door and windows from the sugar cookies :) Also you could use any kids of candy for embellishments. I think I used those little bitty M&M's. I used sugar cones turned upside down for the turrets. I iced them to match the cake. It turned out really cute.

An added bonus was that the kids were REALLY well-behaved! Apparently there was some magic in being dressed up like a princess and being treated like royalty (We really played up that all the guests were princesses and said things like, "Would your highness care for ice cream with her cake?" etc). They all acted like dainty little ladies. This was a bunch of 4, 5, and 6 year olds! I was waaaayy impressed :teeth: Also, the pictures of the party are really pretty :)

I can't remember what else we did, but there's so much you can do with this theme!!

Laurie :)
 
At my daughter's 4th birthday, we did much of the already mentioned events. I bought gold, paper crowns at Party City and the kids (girls AND boys) decorated them with plastic jewels and glitter etc. I bought wands at the Dollar Tree, as well as lots of cheap necklaces, bracelets, rings etc. so that the kids could "dress" for lunch. After lunch I read them the Cinderella book and then we played "Find Cinderella's glass slipper". I bought a box of plastic (glass looking) slippers in the wedding dept of WalMart and each child got to find one in the back yard. We have a fenced in back yard and I made castle-like flags out of pink and purple felt, glued onto dowels. My husband drilled small holes into the main posts and with the flags in them our backyard looked like a castle!

It was lots of fun!

Pam
Mother of two princess: princess:
 
For my daughters b'day party. I ordered a cardboad castle from Stumps Prom.com and painted it. We also had Cinderella come and entertain the kids they sang and danced. There were boys there and they dressed as their favorite prince (buzz lightyear, woody whoever one came as a frog)
 
Thought you might enjoy this

Party's over for all those poor piñatas

DAVE BARRY


Apparently I am the only journalist in America who is not afraid to speak out against birthday-party piñatas. Apparently all the other so-called ''journalists'' -- and, yes, Mr. Bob Woodward, I am talking to you -- are scared to take on the powerful international piñata industry.

Fine. I will courageously ''take the heat'' on this, knowing I could wind up hanging in a dark alley, being beaten with sticks until my flesh ruptures and my body hemorrhages candies and small cheesy toys. But I cannot sit idly by, not after the horrifying incident I witnessed recently at the birthday party of one of my daughter's friends.

Our daughter, who is 4, has WAY more friends than we do. There are thousands of them, and they were all, at some point, born. So pretty much all we do is attend birthday parties. We always take a toy, and I always feel pity for the wretched parent who will have to try to remove this toy from its packaging.

In recent years the toy industry, after consulting its lawyers, decided it was too dangerous to allow children to come into contact with toys. So the industry went to the Institute of Defensive Packaging, which is the outfit that made it impossible to open an aspirin bottle without a hammer.

For toys, the Institute came up with a vicious system that involves attaching the toy to the package with dozens of nearly invisible twisted titanium wires, which are then covered with powerful adhesive tape, after which everything is encased in thick, weapons-grade plastic that, when you try to cut it with a knife -- and, trust me, you eventually will -- defends itself by turning into lethal shards that can slice through your arm like a machete through a Twinkie. And of course while you're grappling with this packaging, cursing and bleeding, your child is in your ear asking ``When can I play with it when when whenwhenwhenwhenWHENWHENWHEN?''

Such is the power of child nagging that some parents are, incredibly, still getting through to the toys. So the Institute of Defensive Packaging is working on a new system: Soon, toys will be immobilized inside Lucite blocks, like giant paperweights, so the child can only look at them and cry while the parent checks the Yellow Pages under ''Acetylene Torch Rental.'' Homes will burn down; people will die. But that is the price a society pays for safe packaging.

Anyway, at the party for my daughter's friend, the theme was Cinderella. The Birthday Girl was dressed as Cinderella, and the Birthday Mom had ordered a Cinderella piñata. It was the largest piñata I have ever seen: four feet tall, with a smiling blond head on top of a blue-gowned body. She was too heavy to hang by a rope, so she just stood there throughout the party, looking almost like a real princess, smiling, unaware of her fate.

When each child had ingested enough sugar to decay all the teeth in Asia, it was time. Everybody gathered around Cinderella. This was when the adults began to realize, with a growing sense of horror, what was about to happen.

Nobody was more horrified than the Birthday Mom, who, I suspect, had not thought through the concept of a life-size fairy-tale princess piñata. But at that point, with small children clamoring for loot, she had no choice but to hand a stick to the Birthday Girl. And thus we experienced the surreal sight of a small Cinderella whacking the bejabbers out of a larger Cinderella.

Except the bejabbers refused to come out. As I have noted, modern piñatas are built like Volvo sedans, only stronger: The piñata took several blows directly to the face from the Birthday Girl, and Cinderella kept right on smiling. So the Birthday Mom shoved Cinderella over onto the ground, thus enabling the Birthday Girl to whack straight down on her, but she STILL wouldn't open. Finally the Birthday Mom, growing desperate, handed the stick to a teenaged boy, who raised it high over his head and brought it down on Cinderella with a mighty WHOMP that caused all the adults to cringe violently. But it worked: There was a deep dent in Cinderella, and WHOMP now there was a hole, and WHOMP it was bigger, and WHOMP now loot was pouring out, and children were swarming over Cinderella's mutilated body, which was nearly detached now from her head, which was still smiling happily, as though she believed that at any moment her prince piñata would come.

It was awful. Even now, weeks later, I feel guilty for having watched it happen, and doing nothing. I have promised myself that, next time, I will not stand idly by.

Next time, I will videotape it.

princess:
 
My daughter is 13 so it's been a few years since we did the princess thing. I took cone-shaped party hats and added a piece of sheer fabric to the point to make princess hats. Another year we took pink wire garland with stars on it and wound it into crowns.

Both of these parties I also used ideas from The Disney Party Handbook. It has ideas for invitations, foods, cake, games, etc. If my DH ever gets my scanner up and running I'd be glad to share some of it with you if you can't find a copy. If you don't see one at a book store you might check on ebay. I made a castle cake from that book one year and it turned out so cute.
 
I made priness bingo cards...it was a little more work than I had anticipated, but the girls loved it and my DD still plays it. I took a bunch of stickers from Michaels and made a bingo board on the computer. I think I had enough stickers to do 4 full cards. I scanned those onto photopaper (thicker). Then I moved a few stickers around, scanned those. Moved some more stickers around, scanned, etc. so that I ended up w/12 cards that were a little bit different. We used Cheerios as markers and I had a bowl of cheap prizes for kids to pick from when they got bingo.

The other thing I did was a cupcake walk. We played Disney music and the kids loved that as well.

We also did the crown making craft.
 
The M&Ms webpage had some party ideas, and one was for princess parties. They showed a picture of a crown cake made with M&Ms for the jewels. Anyway, you might give them a try...
 












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