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History Resources

Bring History To Life With Historical Costumes: Fun, Fashion and Unforgettable

May 12, 2014 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Bringing history to life with historical costumes is about fun, fashion and making memories that are unforgettable.  There is an element of stepping back in time and soaking up the time period that sometimes just reading about it can’t do.

(Warning: History Costume Picture Overload)

 History Costumes

Too, if dressing up is just for young kids, then why do so many adults do it?  Because it is fun!  Besides fun though, dressing up or studying about the fashion or accessories of a time period is one way to spark a love of history that will last into adulthood.

I have many friends that are in historical reenactments and I have a new profound respect for them after I learned about the time they put into learning about a time period.  My sister is one of those persons.  Besides the fact I love her to pieces, we share kindred spirits over our fondness for history.  I could count on her to bring a historically accurate costume or two and tell us about a time period we are studying about.

She use to be in a lot of American history time period reenactments.

American Civil War Costume westward ho costume my sis

(My sweet sis shares a love of history with me.)

She had more time then than she does now to reenact, but I remember the hours and hours of research she pored into finding out about every detail of that time period to be sure her costume was historically accurate.

When she and her family would camp out at the rendezvous (meet ups to reenact a history event)  as they are called, they would only eat food from that time period prepared like they did and wear only clothes from that time period.  They would stay in character the whole weekend.  It truly was as if they stepped back in time.

The history books she collected and shared with me made me pine over wanting to join her.  Instead of doing that though because I was already homeschooling, I did the next best thing and made sure I included history costumes for my boys as we have learned about each history period.

I can’t really sew anything but a straight line and have basic sewing skills, but a lot of things nowadays can be hot glued.  Love that hot glue gun when you are crafty deficient in a hurry.

Sharing a few easy peazy tips today for a history costume, whether you hire it out to be hand made or use a handy hot glue gun, can make studying history go from boring to bustling.

Bible Character

{Our study of Ancient history by studying some of the Kings in the Bible.}

Material Matters

I have found that by looking both at Walmart and at JoAnn’s fabrics when they discount material, it kept the cost of making the costumes affordable.

In the picture above you can also see that when I found cheap inexpensive material and there was a lot of it, I used some of it on each kid instead of all of it with one kid.  Unless one kid wanted all of it of course.  This allowed me to use up a bolt or two of material that was discounted. {Notice the gold on each costume.}

Fringe came off an old curtain and the purple material on their costumes came from an old housecoat turned cape.

Things like beards are easy enough to find, batons decorated make great scepters for a king, cardboard paper is your friend for making crowns.

Key also to making historically accurate costumes is finding a picture your children like.  The internet is full of ideas.  That is part of the study of history too and they don’t realize that by studying and reading about the weapons, cooking and everyday life that you have just folded in an interactive history lesson.

group bible costumes

In our group picture above, you can see that laundry baskets, makeup, sandals and brown flip flops make great accessories too for Pharaoh’s daughter, and we had a few Sarah and Abrahams in our group which used wigs, and material around the house.

Westward Ho! dress-up field trip - 2 little Indian girls explorers and westward ho

When we studied about explorers, Westward Ho and Native Americans, I did find that at times it was a bit harder to find things for boys.  The moms of girls in our group found things their girls would wear and that boys won’t tolerate, but I did have a few tricks up my sleeve.

Native American costumes

Of course making our own leather Native American costumes and moccasins were a must on this unit.  Tiny is wearing a shirt which is a chamois rag from the automotive section at Walmart, which are used for drying cars.  A few leather strings with some beads and we are in business.  For the older boys, I bought leather at Tandy Leather because I knew we would have several years out of wearing them.  With a leather hole punch, and leather we hand sewed the costumes, mine included.  Of course, my dear sister was the one spear heading this as we learned.  I encourage you to have a highly crafty girlfriend or two around.  Even some dads are great for ideas too.

Another trick I have learned is that a big man’s linen shirt works for a lot of time periods and works in the Westward Ho period too.  Khaki jeans imitate that time period too.  A few rugged looking accessories like some fake wolf skin, canteens and hats spice up the costume and are something that would be used in that time period.

renaissance costume

When we studied the Renaissance period, I actually did hire a local lady to sew the costumes because this was a huge co-op for us.  Even at that though, I still had to pick out all the period material.

We hired part of the actors from the local Renaissance Fest to come and reenact for us and the kids did some reenacting.  Too, our kids acted out part of Romeo and Juliet as well as Robin Hood.  So historically accurate period costumes were important.

Tiny was Robin Hood and I found that using grommets for his cape was cheaper than using what I found in the craft store.  Again, linen shirts worked well for this time period, even for girls too.

Romeo and Juliet Balcony robin hood

In the picture above and right, Tiny’s life long friend was “King John” and he had his shirt sewn too.  Part of history is also about the accessories.  Cardboard is your friend I am telling you.  Some cardboard, pieces of leather and jewels from the craft store and you have a sword worthy of carrying.

An easy cardboard balcony made the telling of Romeo and Juliet come alive by our older high school kids.

early american history American History

Kelley and I won’t easily forget our fun trips to the local Goodwill to pick up table decorations when studying about early American history.  Have to love that place when preparing for our co-ops.  We wanted to mimic for the kids what a colonial or early American history table might look like.

Planning ahead is key and taking advantage of seasonal sales too.  So buy things this year for next year.  For example, the black candles I got on sale after the Halloween stuff went on sale.  We didn’t use the candles until later November.  The tea pot and tea cups to act out the Boston Tea Party event were just pennies at the Goodwill and all the kids got to take their cups home.

Some plastic fruit brought after Thanksgiving clearance and inexpensive colored beans made our decorations pop.

One side point, you will see that not each year did I make my kids dress up.  They had choices each year, though I did make it fun when they did.

More History Costume Ideas You’ll Love

I am not the only one that sees the value of history costumes.  Look at some of these links by my fellow bloggers that love it as much as we do and grab some ideas for yourself too.

Bible-costume-2 Bible-costume-5

(Pics Attribution: Susan Evans)

You’ll love the ideas Susan has over on her blog for Bible Costumes in 5 minutes.

MIraHatshepsut

(Pics Attribution: Teaching Stars)

I love the ideas that Kristen over at Teaching Stars has for Egyptian female pharaoh Hatshepsut.

StellaEleanor_900x900

(Pics Attribution: Teaching Stars)

And she has some great ideas as Queen Eleanor strolls the grounds of one of her summer palaces.

History is Fashionable

And, I also love what Heather’s daughter has been doing over at Blog, She Wrote about history fashion.patterns_

(Pic. Attribution: Blog, She Wrote)

Along with an author study, she is studying about the fashion of a period too.  Her daughter created her own pattern and introduced us to steam punk fashion.  Like Heather notes, be sure you look over all fashion pictures and content.  Sometimes, like anything else in this world, you want to be sure your daughter is looking at fashion pictures you approve of.  Some things in fashion can be downright dicey.

details-1 details-3

(Pic. Attribution: Blog, She Wrote)

Be sure to check out this post too at her blog: Project: Steampunk Fashion Design & Drafting

ducttape-weapons

(Pic. Attribution: Layered Soul)

You have to check out Stacey’s post at Layered Soul too.  I agree, maybe her post should be Boys, Duct Tape and Weapons.  She shares some fun and easy tips on the Greco Roman period for easy history costumes. renaissance costumes

Pirates, scoundrels, kings, queens, thieves and Robin Hood are all part of the fun of making history memorable.  Give life to the characters and events of the time by dressing up.  There is an endless list of characters to study about and mimic and endless ways of making history come alive through fashion and accessories of any time period.

Your children won’t easily forget your history lessons!

Do you have links to share of your kids dressing up or studying about historical fashion?

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature

Did you miss these posts about other things to make to bring history alive?

  • Hands-On Ancient Greece Activities for Middle School
  • Ancient Rome Paint a Jester Activity
  • Ancient Mesopotamia Sebutu Rolls Baking
  • Ancient Egypt Narmer Crown Salt Dough Project

And also check out some fun resources! History Costumes & Fashion

8 CommentsFiled Under: Ancient Civilizations, Hands-On Activities, History Resources Tagged With: ancient civilizations, hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, historycostumes

50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

November 23, 2013 | 6 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I have 50 winter activities for homeschooling. Grab more ideas on my page winter season unit study.

Hoping to have a few activities to pull of out my bag when the kids are bored and the days are long and cold, I rounded up some activities to keep us learning.

50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

Some of them are easy and don’t take quite as long and others a little more involved.

We always keep back some chalk pastels too and our easy books for doing seasonal pastels.

Whether you want art, some reading or hands-on ideas, you’ll love this roundup of 50 learning activities.

Types of Frost Minibook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Winter Lapbook Cover @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Pluswhat are the winter months minibook @ Tiina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Grab these fun minibooks on my Winter Unit Study and free lapbook page.

Bird Video Art Course for All Ages

Winter Activities for All Ages

Besides the fun hands-on globe to make below, there are many crafts too.

12 side globe about Antarctica

Construct a 12 sided globe to display facts about Antarctica @ Crayola.Com

Design a winter landscape with long shadows @ Crayola.Com

CP439 

CP snow-mosaic-winter-craft-photo

Create a snowy self-portrait mosaic @ Family Fun Crafts.

Grab some free easy winter worksheets @ All Kids Network

CP winter-worksheet-handwriting-small

Snowman Pack Get your FREE activity bundle!

virtual snowman

Virtual Build a Snowman

  Have a snow date @ Martha Stewart

Have a Snow date 
 polkadotmasonjars

Do a glitter polka dot mason jar @ A Bubbly Life

Grab a free frosty blend sorting game @ Heather’s Heart.

CP Frosty Blend Fun
Homeschool Geography - DIY Lava Lamp @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus-1

DIY Lava Lamp

Hands-on Learning Activities

Grab a Free Winter Ecology Teacher’s Guide Nice.

Glacier Winter Educator Guide @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool PlusGlacier Winter Educator Guide 2 @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus
candy

Make candy crystals @ Science Sparks

 

In addition, add a fun unit study on the history of science with beautiful literature.

winter globes

Make a DIY ice globe lantern

50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

Make frozen watercolor ice cubes @ Learn Play Imagine

Frozen Watercolor Ice Art (1)-1

3 Fun Cocoa Winter Hands on Science Activities

Make toilet roll snowman using tiny sock for hats @ Red Ted Art

toilet roll snowman craft

 

 

Furthermore, winter is a great time to do art. Pair art with history in this fun study.

Chocolate-Snow-Balls

Make chocolate snowball cookies @ tasteofhome

DIY Handwarmers

 hand-warmer-

Also, learning music is fun to do this time of the year. I love all these choices for learning about music at home by this homeschool mom.

Just what we need for teaching multiple children.

cookie-envelopes

Printable Cookie Envelopes

Make DIY Snow Globes @ Refresh Renew

snow.globe1

 Milk tags

Milk Tag Snowman

Easy paper straw snowflakes @ Echoes of Laughter

 Paper Straw Snowflakes

CP pine-needle-instructions craft

Easy Pine Needle Craft @ Live Craft Eat

Make Pinecone Fire Starters

pine cone fire starter
Medieval Video Art Course Semester 1

Your kids will also love learning about Medieval History through art.

Crayon-Art

Crayon Art

Coffee Filter Snowflakes @ The Pink Couch

CP snowflakes coffee filters

Finally, add a movie and a book from another one of my favorite providers Literary Adventures for Kids.

https://www.literaryadventuresforkids.com/p/the-little-prince-online-book-club?affcode=168584_izgghx15
https://www.literaryadventuresforkids.com/p/there-are-rocks-in-my-socks-said-the-ox-to-the-fox-online-nature-book-club?affcode=168584_izgghx15
https://www.literaryadventuresforkids.com/p/the-rocket-that-flew-to-mars-online-nature-book-club?affcode=168584_izgghx15

Cp Making Snow Dough

Making Snow Dough

How to Explore Melting Ice

 make your own snow paint

Make Your Own Snow Paint @ One Little Project

Ice Sculptures @ Not Just Cute

CP Ice Sculptures

 gold-glitter-dipped-jars-diy

DIY Gold Dipped Jars

Snowman in a match box

 Snowman in a Match Box

snowmanpizza

Snowman Pizza. And you have supper made!

Make an iceberg

 Do an Iceberg Experiment

gemstonetitle

Create an indoor gemstone nature table

DIY Fingerless Gloves by Shop Ruby Jean @ The 36th Avenue

 DIY fingerless gloves

blue-nature-notebook-graphic

Grab some more free nature printables for your notebook @ Our Journey Westward

Winter Nature Scavenger Hunt Exploration & Printable @ Teach Beside Me

Winder Nature Scavenger Hunt Printable

Winter-Fun-Chalk-Pastel-Tutoriale

Winter Fun with Pastels

Make snow ice cream

make snow ice cream

diy_winter-wonderland-art

Family Handprints Winter Wonderland @  Lisa Leonard Blog

Make an ice sun catcher

ice sun catcher

family bingo printable

Family Bingo

Edible Winter Snowman

Edible Winter Snowman

Flowers Printable Lesson

When you are tired of winter, use this free educator’s guide about flowers & birds

DIY Winter Diorama @ Bloesem Kids

winter forest diy diorama DIY Winter Diorama @ Bloesem Kids

Long WinterLapbook by Laura Ingalls Wilder

The Long Winter Lapbook/Little House Series @ Marine Corps Nomads

Do some Folk Art Lessons and here for lessons.

Four-Season-Landscapes-
mitten wreath

Mitten Wreath

       

Free Penguins Lapbook

Free Penguin Lapbook

Also, check out:

Free Unit Study: Inuit/Arctic

Winter Craft Ideas for Middle School

Winter Season Unit Study

 50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Hugs and enjoy,

Save

6 CommentsFiled Under: Free Homeschool Resources, Hands-On Activities, History Resources, Look Alive: Winter Homeschooling Ideas & Free Downloads Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolinginwinter, middleschool

Hands On History Kit–South America Unit Study

October 31, 2013 | 35 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

SP @  Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Art In History Kit

When I was planning our hands on activities for our South America unit study, I realized that not so many were fun and age appropriate.  So I was tickled when we got a chance to play with review a fun hands on history kit from Art in History. We chose the Incan empire food vessel kit.

So you know how Tiny got his mom’s lack of art creativity, but it has never hindered us from schooling on the wild side when we set out for an art adventure. The Incan Empire Food Storage Vessel kit helps all novice and expert art adventurers alike because it contains everything you need in one sweet box for each child.

Here is what came in our kit:

  • A replica of a jar from the Incan Empire.
  • Paintbrush, sponge, paint pallet, acrylic paint pods AND
  • FREE lesson plan with background information on the Incan Empire.
World History Ancient Egypt - King Tutankhamun Tomb Frieze (1333- 1324 BC) Middle Eastern Studies - Omani Majmar (100-Present) French Revolution - Limoges Style Tabatiere (1769-1324)
American History Mission of San Antonio De Valero - Alamo Fresco Tiles (1718-1793) American Revolution - Colonial Teapot (1763-1788) English Colonial - Slipware Plate (1650-1800)

 

With so many choices of art projects for world history and American history plus the fact that we can have another excuse to study history longer made us excited about this craft.

We spent several days poring over the lesson plan and tying it in to what we learned so far on our South America unit study.  It is hard to focus on the background information with all the art and craft supplies waiting for Tiny’s itching little hands.

Even though the lesson plan didn’t come with questions and answers or vocabulary words, I am glad because the teacher in me would have been tempted to have him complete all of that before we started.  If you tend to be relaxed on the days you do hands on projects like I am, then you will like the background information provided in the lesson plan and can use it as a read through.

We did an oral narration after we read through it because I wanted our focus to stay on the delight of doing something hands on. After we read it together, I made sure too that Tiny had some kind of idea of how to plan his design which is geometrical for the Incans. Hands on History Kit - Incan Empire South America

The 12 page free lesson plan (wow) has an ample amount of information in it including a color map and color samples (thank you) of how to paint the jar.  Next time when I get a kit, I will hold back the art part of the kit and use the free lesson plan to build our unit study so Tiny doesn’t know about about the art. We stalked our mail man on this one, but I will keep it a secret next time because I didn’t know the free information would be so very helpful in building my unit study.

Discovery Through Creativity

If you wanted to build a more in depth unit study from the free lesson plan received with your kit, you could use the information in several ways:

  • locate the Incan Empire on the map for geography;
  • prepare a vocabulary word puzzle with some of the terms for language arts;
  • create more hands on activities like a quipu (a special knotted string) for art history;
  • focus on understanding the areas like Cuzco and Machu Picchu for history;
  • include some science on understanding the spread of disease like small pox which was introduced to the Incans from the Europeans; and
  • I could see some nature sketches because the Incan people liked to use natural landscapes and simple forms on their pottery.

Regarding the art part of this kit, I loved the fact that the kit comes with the acrylic paint colors that would be used in that time period. Each pod is just the right amount to complete the project and believe me Tiny had to paint it several times or just so until his standard was met.

Warm tones of brown and sepia make up this kit and if you look  at the website, for Art in History you can see that other appropriate colors for that time in history are matched up to to each product.

Of course, you can never go wrong with step by step painting directions too. We need them at our house, but you are probably more artsy than we are.

Hands on History Kit  for Unit Study History Kit

I do like the fact that I was not scrambling to locate all of our art products or pulling buckets tubes of paint that have either gone bad or having to buy new ones because I didn’t have the “right” color in the house at the moment. Just a dab will do you on paint as we have learned over the years so the paint pods are just the right amount and size.

Incan Food Storage Incan Food Storage

The tips such as using a rubber band around your jar and sketching your design first on paper, I found very helpful.

Tiny made his own pattern on paper first too, which consisted of diamonds, circles and lines. Then instead of line drawing on the jar, he painted free hand onto his jar. He didn’t want to use the rubber band or pencil lightly on the jar because it “it might mess it up” according to him.

Our children have different standards for their work at different ages.  And, I have found that the delight is in the process of learning, creating and doing it his way.

But isn’t that what counts? When they are delighted with the end project. (Don’t tell anybody, but Tiny actually put some food in there to see if he could get it out.)

Interdisciplinary Learning – What?

I have to let you know one more thing which has the unit study loving teacher in me excited and that is Art in History has expansive teacher’s guides for unit studies. You know unit study providers which has content laid out can be limited at times. It can be daunting to plan and why reinvent the wheel when we can spend our time doing something else we enjoy. So that is why I am tickled about this new company because their unit studies are laid out in a 4 – 5 day lesson format.

Check out the teacher’s guides at Art in History that are for an in-depth unit study.

This project is a big hands on hit in our home.  Here are some of our other hands on projects too.

Negrinho a Dessert From Brazil

Salt Dough Map

How to Make an Easy Roman Shield & Free Set of Wings

Product Facts a Glance

PLEASE NOTE: All historically correct paint colors are included with purchase of
Artifact(s). Paint colors may vary depending on monitor variations.

Product Name: Incan Empire Food Storage Vessel

Website: Art in History

Prices: $9.95. Plus shipping/handling

Type of Product: Physical Art project kit for one child.

Customer Service: I had a question about their products and my question was quickly answered  by customer service.

Social Media Links:

Facebook

Twitter @artinhistory

Pinterest

YouTube

Hugs and love you

2012Tinasignature Should Homeschool History Be Covered in Chronological Order?

 

 

 

35 CommentsFiled Under: Giveaways, Hands-On Activities, History Resources, Product Review, Sponsored Posts Tagged With: hands-on, review

Review of What Every Child Needs to Know About Western Civilization

August 26, 2013 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I loved doing a review of what every child needs to know about Western Civilization.

My obsession with wanting to teach history creatively stems from a quote I read by H.G. Wells.

“Narrow history teaching of our school days was mainly an uninspiring and partially forgotten list of national kings or presidents.“

Avoiding uninspiring lists and meeting the challenge of dodging inside-the-box history curriculum has not always been easy.

So I was happy to review What Every Child Needs to Know About Western Civilization by BrimWood Press.

I will just tell you now that I won’t hide my obvious preference for this curriculum.

It fills a much needed niche in the homeschooling community, but it is so much more than a history curriculum. More on that in a minute.

What Every Child Needs to Know About Western Civilization by BrimWood Press

I glanced through all the fascinating and detailed pictures.

The BrimWood press bundle I received included:

  • 1 Guide: What Every Child Needs to Know about Western Civilization.
  • 1 Calendar Quest which is a historical narrative.
  • 1 Color the Western World.

I am especially giddy about this curriculum.

It is the first one that I have used that covers history in broad strokes.

How broad? Well, in just 12 – 14 lessons you cover 5,000 years of history.

Review of What Every Child Needs to Know About Western Civilization by BrimWood Press

I had to read that twice. I might add there are 2 more lessons, but one is an introduction and one is a review.

Details can be fascinating, but they can get in the way too.

Not all details are necessary to understanding and grasping the full picture. Sometimes it just does not matter. I think kids know that too.

Middle School Homeschool History

I have covered history through unit studies, through a four year cycle and through the eyes of individuals that lived in each time period, I couldn’t wait to get started using it.

This teaches a story of how the calendar came to us which is how What Every Child Needs to Know about Western Civilization teaches. Clever.

As the fictional characters, Lindsie and Evan travel through time in a refrigerator box, Tiny eagerly tuned in,

Strangely enough Father Time always seems to be around to explain about how a seven day week came to us or how the constellations were located in the sky.

It didn’t hurt either that Mr. Awesome joined us for this review and read aloud to us. I highly recommend using your highschooler for a read aloud if you have one.

I am happy that my high school teen joined us for this review .

It allowed me to evaluate how extensive it was for him a high school teen.

Homeschool History

With the additional activities listed in the manual that include research, questions concerning worldview, introduction to the traits of each civilization and the contributions made by each civilization, I certainly think that a novice or highschooler could use the manual to discover them.

Too, if you have highschooler who is burned out on history, then using the manual can breathe life back into your day.

The wide scope that it covers keeps it so not intimidating.

As for the reader or Calendar Quest, it is written to an elementary age child. 

However, there were some characters along Lindsie and Evan’s trek that Mr. Awesome and I had obscurely heard of. Discovering those vague history characters was an unexpected benefit of Mr. Awesome reading to Tiny. 

Mr. Awesome claimed the reader was too young for him and it was, but then again, it is right on grade level like the publisher claims for using with a younger child. Tiny enjoyed the humor in the reader and I found a way for my older child to join us.

What I love about What Every Child Needs to Know about Western Civilization.

Like I mentioned before, it is so much more than a history program. Listing both the history features that I loved and the other things, I don’t want to miss giving you any nifty detail.

  • I find the lesson plan layout very useful. You know my obsession with expecting a lot from a teacher’s manual and how some manuals are nothing more than an answer sheet. This is an excellent and well organized manual or guide with practical tips. You see exactly how to cover each lesson.
  • One more significant point about this manual is that it is BOTH teacher and student guide. You use it with ALL of your children. Thank you BrimWood Press for understanding that we are teaching multiple ages of children and that we try to avoid insanity by not using 3 or 4 different teacher’s manuals.
  • Use this one manual for multiple ages of children. By the way when I find a curriculum like this that I can use with multiple ages of children, I try to divide the price by the number of children using it so I can see what I am actually paying for each child per year. Then divide it again into half because it is both teacher manual and student manual to get a true cost. That is how I arrive at the value of a curriculum that I use with multiple children.

Teacher Manual Features

Review of What Every Child Needs to Know About Western Civilization by BrimWood Press
  • I’m not done yet with the manual because it is so comprehensive and I have to tell you about the layout. The first page of the lesson has a box called Teacher Preview and another one called Objectives. Oh YES – I am in organization bliss! Give me a purpose for the lesson and I have a direction for the day.
  • Here is another sweet bite on this program because you know I said it was so much more than a history program.  It has geography and a snip of language arts too. This especially feeds my desire to teach out of the box because I can include any subject I want to and apply those subjects when I teach about a topic. It’s more meaningful to include details when they are wanted.

Teaching Helps

  • The next part of the lesson is called History in a Nutshell. It includes information on the significant contributions of that time period along with instructions on coloring the stickers for the younger kids that are included in this curriculum. Information on filling out the 14 Hats of History which are the 14 periods you are striving to memorize is included in this section. Several lessons include helpful background information of that time period. You do not have to research extra information if you do not want to because it is included. This part appeals to me so that I can determine if those foundational pegs or key events are covered when teaching that time period. This part is the reason I see this manual being practical too for the first time history teacher or student who finds history boring and wants just the general sweeping ideas.
  • Between the stickers and Color the Western World coloring book there is plenty to choose from for both your younger and older children.

History in Broad Strokes

  • Key events that you add on the back of the cards and details that you fill in on the front of each card as you go along help to solidify the timeline of history. We followed along in each lesson plan as you are encouraged by the curriculum to try to put your hats in chronological order. By using both the front and back of the card, your kids come away with a fresh, unique and overall picture of history. Certainly, a doable goal to memorize all 14 time periods. This is a refreshing change from all the details that you may be teaching when using a four year history cycle curriculum.

I won’t be giving up my copy of What Every Child Needs to Know about Western Civilization any time soon as I plan on using this for years to come.

It is a keeper in my home, and I plan on going over it again both as a standalone history curriculum and to use as a review tool.

My boys still need to see the flow of history and a way to tie it all together.

I tend to be organized overboard when it comes to details because we love history, but I restrained myself from delving into them like the curriculum suggested because it defeats the purpose of what I am trying to do.

Don’t pitch your slow moving curriculum, just use What Every Child Needs to Know about Western Civilization when you want to take it up a notch.

Thank you BrimWood Press as I confess my absolute love and bias for a one of kind history program.

Where to Buy What Every Child Needs to Know about Western Civilization and Product Facts at a Glance.

Product Name: What Every Child Needs to Know About Western Civilization, Calendar Quest and Color the Western World.

Ages: 5th – 8th grade, but I see a practical use for highschoolers who struggle with history.

Type of Product:  Physical product.

What Every Child Needs to Know About Western Civilization is an awesome homeschool history program covering history in broad strokes. You’ll love how quickly you can cover 5000 years of history in a few weeks. Check it out at Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus

You’ll love these other history helps:

  • 35 Simple But Powerful American History Homeschool Resources K to 12
  • 15 EASY History Ideas for Homeschooled Kids Who Don’t Like School
  • How to Create a Creditworthy American History Course (& resources)
  • Amazing Hands-on History Activities for 14 Ancient Empires (free notebook cover too)

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, History Resources, Homeschool Curriculum Review Tagged With: brimwoodpress, handsonhomeschooling, history, homeschool, homeschoolhistory, medieval homeschool history, middle ages history, middleschool

How to Make an Easy Roman Helmet & Shield & A Set of Printable Wings

July 1, 2013 | 6 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

How to Make an Easy Roman Helmet & Shield and A Set of Printable Wings was easy to make. Also, look at my Ancient Rome Lapbook for Kids and Fun Hands-on Ideas for more fun.

It has never been a secret that I don’t sew and barely craft.

So when it came time to get Tiny ready for our year end co-op when studying Ancient Civilizations, I turned to cardboard and duct tape.

How to Make an Easy Roman Helmet & Shield & A Set of Printable Wings

Ancient Rome was a powerful civilization, and it influenced many things in our modern world.

And you’ll love how to make an easy Roman helmet doesn’t really take so long.

HOW TO MAKE AN EASY ROMAN HELMET

Supplies List

  • 2 Large pieces of cardboard. I got mine from Target when they were throwing the boxes away. I knew I wanted one piece tall enough to be a shield for Tiny.
  • Gold and red duct tape or your choice of colors.
  • Silver Sharpie
  • 1 piece of red cardstock
  • About 3 pieces of poster board. We chose red color.
  • 1 men’s extra large red t-shirt
  • Scissors, a hot glue gun and a sharp craft knife like x-acto
  • We already had brown summer sandals for footwear.
  • Of course, no kid this age will go without anything under the shirt, tee hee hee and they shouldn’t so a shorter pairs of shorts works.

Just in case all of this gets gibberish sounding and because you know I love a good old picture anytime to explain anything, I put one here for you.

Easy Peazy Roman Kids Costume How To

It was all easy to make but like anything it takes a bit of time to put it together.

HOW TO MAKE AN EASY ROMAN HELMET

This took me part of 2 days or one weekend to put this together along with some help from hubby.

Helmet. The helmet was 3 pieces of cardboard, some duct tape, and red cardstock.

One piece of cardstock I measured to go around the head or as a headband.

One to go over the top so the “feathers” can adhere to it and then the front part that was free drawn by hand and then colored with a silver sharpie.

It was glued on the headband.

Easy Roman Costume
Easy Roman Shield

Then I took the red cardstock and made a crease in the center and then cut it into strips but not cut all the way through.

Then glued it on the top of the cardboard piece of the helmet.

Easy Roman Shield
How to Make an Easy Peazy Roman Costume

Here is a side angle of it.

After you glue it on the top strip coming over the helmet, just work with the cut strips until you get them to stick up how you like.

KIDS ANCIENT ROME COSTUME WITH CARDBOARD

I cut some up thicker and others thinner to make it more rustic and real looking.

Easy Roman Shield

Tiny was pleased with it and we worked next on some “armor” for the shoulders and chest.

Shoulder & Chest Armor. This was quiet a bit easier. I just used soft poster board, duct tape and leather shoe strings. I laid the soft poster board across his shoulders, did an eyeball measure and taped it with duct tape.

It is two pieces after I cut a circle for his head and I taped the back side. I left the front open so he could slip it on.

Easy Roman Shield
Easy Roman Shield

 One view is of the top in the picture above and if you turn it over it didn’t look so hot on the underneath, but hey nobody sees that anyway. I just used more tape to hold it.

This was the very last piece put on so that I could put duct tape around the neck or the other side of the circle.

I used leather shoe strings around a piece of gold poster for his chest armor.

Shield. This didn’t take long either. The hardest part was cutting it. I thought about painting it but didn’t really want to mess with waiting for it to dry.

That was one option though. Instead we just covered it with red poster board and used duct tape to cover the edges.

Easy Roman Shield
Easy Roman Shield

I think I change my mind but maybe the hardest part was finding a good set of “wings” that were approved by Tiny.

MORE ANCIENT ROME HANDS-ON ACTIVITIES

  • Ancient Rome 15 step-by-step projects
  • How to Make a Roman Costume With Kids
  • Create a Roman Solider Mosaic
  • Paint a Roman Jester
  • Make a paper Colosseum

He spent almost an hour on the internet looking for some. In the end I couldn’t find any that were free on line so I made some from our clipart.

You never know when you might need one set of wings, so download here printable wings.

Easy Roman Shield
Easy Roman Shield

Add a foil covered bowl to the center and we were done.

It was the back that took just a little longer because I made some cardboard  holders for him to put his arm through and one for him to hold.

So in all the back had 2 holders to keep up his shield.

Again I lifted the shield and measured about where he would hold it and made some cardboard “holders” and used duct tape to keep them in place.

Kids Roman Shield from Cardboard

After that hubby helped to make a sword “holder”  out of a left over piece of cardboard and a bracelet or two and we were done.

Helmet, shield, chest armor, shoulder armor and a sword holder. What more could a kid want for his Roman soldier costume? Try one!

6 CommentsFiled Under: Ancient Civilizations, Hands-On Activities, History Based, History Resources, My Unit Studies {Free Printables & Hands-on Ideas} Tagged With: hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, kids costumes

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