Straw Shooter Jets. By the editors
of Klutz. Klutz. $16.99.
Air Power: Rocket Science Made
Simple. By Pat Murphy and the scientists of Klutz Labs. Klutz. $16.99.
Tissue Paper Crafts. By April
Chorba. Klutz. $19.99.
My Style Studio. By the editors
of Klutz. Klutz. $21.99.
Make Your Own Washi Tape
Stickers. By Anne Akers Johnson. Klutz. $16.99.
Felted Friends: Create Your Own
Soft, Fuzzy Animals. By Kaitlyn Nichols. Klutz. $19.99.
Although no longer going
entirely its own way as an independent company, Klutz, which is now distributed
by Scholastic, continues to produce books unlike any others – because they are
not books but “books-plus” products, crafts projects in book form with clear
instructions and all the materials needed to do the things those instructions
describe. Whether created by committee (usually listed as “the editors of
Klutz”) or by individual people under the Klutz aegis, these books are
consistent winners, mostly for kids ages eight and up – although occasionally
for older preteens and even young teenagers who enjoy staying in touch with
hands-on crafts. The latest Klutz crop –
these offerings do seem to grow organically rather than simply being
“published” – includes two “books-plus” likely to be particularly appealing to
boys, two likely to attract girls, and one for slightly older preteens.
Straw Shooter Jets and Air
Power are both about making things that zoom, fly, dip and eventually crash
(or land smoothly, if possible). The cover of Straw Shooter Jets invites kids to “make your own mini air force,”
which in this case means using 14 custom straws (did you know “custom straws”
existed?), 10 nose weights (for the planes’ noses, not the kids’), 30 “Fleet Sheets”
of specific plane designs, and a stencil showing the exact shape that a plane
needs to be in order to work with the straws and nose weights. There are two
planes per “Fleet Sheet,” making 60 jets in all, and there are five different
plane designs with names such as “Viper” and “Strawhawk.” But as usual with
Klutz, there is more here than instructional material – Klutz shows kids where
the ideas for these constructions came from (there are great photos of the
real-world planes that inspired the crafts projects), and the book details all
the capabilities of the projects. That means not only flying the planes for distance
but also learning how to make them bank, loop, boomerang, corkscrew and more. Easy?
Well, not always – the instructions are very clear and very well illustrated,
but they do have to be followed quite carefully, and some of the more-advanced
maneuvers require enough time for some trial-and-error experimentation. But one
of the neat things about Klutz is that it does not make things too simple – just simple enough so kids
who follow the directions will get the expected (and highly pleasing) outcomes
shown. The best thing about a Klutz “books-plus” project is the sense of
accomplishment that comes with it at no extra charge.
The accomplishment in Air Power is the creation of four
“rocket-powered” vehicles: a hot rod, hovercraft, helicopter and, yes, a
rocket. This Klutz project pack says it exists “because rocket science is way
too much fun to leave to scientists,” which is a pretty neat way to put things.
The enclosed crafts items here are specific to the four projects: rocket fins
and tube for the rocket, for example, and – for the hovercraft – cockpit, body,
thrust vent and sticker sheet. Straw
Shooter Jets offers multiple variations on a theme; Air Power presents four different themes, although all are related through
their use of, well, air power. And that power comes from – balloons. Yes, the
box attached to the back of the instruction book includes color-coded balloons
in two sizes: the red ones are small and the others (blue, green and purple)
are large. Matching the right-size balloon to the appropriate project is
important; but, as always, Klutz clearly explains what to do and how to get
things “rolling,” “floating,” “spinning” or “blasting.” There’s even a little
science background here – another frequent feature in Klutz offerings. For
example, there is some information on Sir Isaac Newton (shown,
anachronistically but amusingly, holding a modern orange balloon), and there is
an explanation of why rocket-engine functions resemble what happens when you
fill a balloon with air and then let it go to fly away, out of control. (“Go find the balloon. You’ll need it again
later,” Klutz advises.) Here as in Straw
Shooter Jets, the projects are fun, there is solid science behind them, and
kids who take the time to follow the directions will be learning a bit about
how things work while creating action items that are involving as well as
amusing.
Klutz also offers
“books-plus” projects involving inaction
items, things made to be put on display rather than to toss or fly about. These
projects have such titles as Tissue Paper
Crafts and My Style Studio. They
are pretty much what they sound like: cute and stylish, respectively. Tissue Paper Crafts includes 100 sheets
of tissue paper in multiple colors, a stencil to make multiple shapes, wire,
string, bead eyes, a small tube of glue, and even a cute punch-out birdcage to
hold any adorable little birdies that kids may choose to make to decorate a
room or locker. The “Tips & Techniques” section that opens the instructions
is particularly important here for anyone not accustomed to working with tissue
paper, and the projects themselves vary significantly in difficulty, giving
kids a chance to become accustomed to handling the materials before they try
any of the more-complex undertakings. Most of the projects are flowers of one
sort or another, but the book eventually shows how to make “pretty potted
plants” and then several different birds – any of which looks cute in the
little cage. As for My Style Studio, this is a fashion instruction kit, providing
figure art to trace, eight colored pencils, a drawing pencil, a pencil
sharpener (a nice touch), an artist’s eraser, a fine-line pen and more. There
are some interesting real-world connections here, for instance in the
description of the basic model with “a longer neck, a shorter torso, and
thinner limbs than you see on most people. Do you know anyone who looks like
this? We don’t. But this is a book about fashion, not real life. Fashion
designers like to exaggerate the long, lean lines of their looks.” In addition
to the fashions themselves, kids can use the instructions here to create accessories,
embellishments, custom fabrics, and more; and there are specific designs and
colors for each of the four seasons. Intended for budding fashion designers, My Style Studio even suggests that “it’s
time to create a label for your looks” after completing the instructions – a
bit of exaggeration, to be sure, but one that kids who enjoy the way Klutz
handles this topic may seriously consider.
Designer clothes need
designer labels, of course, so how about making some from washi tape? This is
patterned paper tape that, like masking tape, sticks just about anywhere and
peels off easily. Unlike typical masking tape, though, it is brightly colored
and patterned, and Klutz provides more than 100 feet of it in Make Your Own Washi Tape Stickers. Of
course, there is more: a fine-line felt-tip pen to use for tracing the
abundance of art in the book, and peel-off backing paper onto which to trace
the art. This project takes a little getting used to: you trace the art onto
the backing paper, cover the traced shape with pieces of one or more of the six
provided rolls of washi tape, cut the sticker out, peel it, and put it just
about anywhere – binders, cards, windows, mirrors, lockers, and so on. There
are a few tricks here, though, so following the instruction book carefully is important.
For example, there are folds in the backing paper, and the placement of the
tape is important: if the fold and tape run in the same direction, the sticker
is more likely to tear when removed from the backing. The book shows how to prevent
that – and also, typically for a Klutz offering, shows what to do if the
sticker does tear. When the traced
art is small, the ease or difficulty of peeling also depends on whether the
folded section of backing paper runs inside the art. Illustrations show both
the better and less-good way to do things, and paying close attention to the
pictures is important to ensure that these projects are as enjoyable as they
can be. Washi tape, which originated in Japan, will likely be less familiar to
kids than many other Klutz crafts items, but Make Your Own Washi Tape Stickers is still quite appropriate for
ages eight and up – it just requires a little more attentiveness than some
other Klutz “books-plus” productions, and may have a slightly steeper learning
curve.
Klutz does have some
“books-plus” offerings that are somewhat more complicated and therefore are
intended for older crafts fanciers. Felted
Friends is one of them: a set of instructions for kids ages 10 and up to
use in creating five “super-cute critters” that really are adorable and that
are made with the included materials – natural wool roving, a needle-felting
tool, a foam work surface, and the usual clear, step-by-step instructions. The
five little “animal friends” are a cat, rabbit, squirrel, fox and mouse, the
last of which can alternatively be a hedgehog. Felting is likely to be less
familiar to most kids than drawing or using tissue paper, so the explanatory
material here is particularly important; and it is, as usual with Klutz, quite
well done, showing how loose wool is transformed into felt with a simple
needle-containing tool that is held like a pencil. There are clear instructions
on measuring and tearing wool, picking out just a pinch or a skinny strand, and
making round or flat shapes – and putting the various techniques together to
produce adorable little felt animals as cute as anything you will find in a
gift shop. But they are self-produced,
not mass produced, and that is really
the whole point of Felted Friends and
the other Klutz “books-plus” crafts projects: yes, you can buy many of the
things Klutz shows how to make, but creating something with one’s own hands has
benefits that go well beyond those of simply getting something at a store or
online. Just deciding whether to give your felt kitten spots or stripes – and
then making those details on your own – is a delightful experience, and Klutz
makes it easy in this book, just as it makes it step-by-step simple to create straw-powered
jets, balloon-powered vehicles, tissue-paper birds, high-fashion designs or
washi-tape stickers in its other new offerings.
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