

We started school off with a favorite topic this year: princesses. And pink!
Our theme book was
Pinkalicious
by Victoria Kann & Elizabeth Kann. Definitely a favorite in our house – just a fun pink story. A little girl who LOVES pink eats too many pink cupcakes and turns pink, then red. The cure, as recommended by the doctor, is to avoid pink food and eat green food.
(By the way, I would avoid Goldilicious by the same author; that was a disappointment for me because of the “magic” content. There are also a few princess books we excluded in this post because I didn’t like the feminist anti-marriage message in them.)
Thanks to
Itty-Bitty Bookworm for most of the book theme ideas and printables.
Let’s start with our book list. First the books related to
color change:
Now the
princess books!
And just some
girlie books…
Moving on to activities…
Of course, we had to make pinkalicious cupcakes! Preparing the pan:
Making the white cake mix pink with a little red food coloring:
The best part: slathering the cupcakes with pink icing:
The finished product… Sad to say (or maybe good, since none of us turned pink) – we didn’t make it through most of the cake and ended throwing out a lot of it.
Moving on… We did a lot with the color pink. Like pink thumbprint bugs…
…which morphed into entire pink handprints.
We filled a jar with pink pom poms, and then took turns rolling dice and removing the corresponding number of pompoms from the jar until it was empty. Esmé counted up the final quantity we each had, and she was by far the winner!
Esmé mixed red and white paint to create a BIG pink flower.
She marked (with flat glass marbles) the objects “that don’t belong” on cards made using many items from the theme book.
She did a survey in our house as to who preferred green versus pink. Green was the winner!
I brought out a bunch of cupcake printables from
www.childcareland.com, such as this cupcake puzzle:
And this tracing cupcake (which impresses me because Esmé doesn’t often FINISH her coloring projects. And her tracing has been improving significantly over the last couple of months.)
And this “circle all the numbers” cupcake
And this cutting-practice sheet. Which was a little too simple, so she started cutting out each of the itty-bitty cupcakes, too. Right on the lines. Separating the liners from the tops.
We had to do some drama play! One of Esmé’s dolls mysteriously turned up pink. Fortunately, it wasn’t a case of pinkititis, but merely markers, which washed off fine in the bath.
We put a masking tape cross on a piece of cardstock, and then Esmé painted the cardstock black. The masking tape came off afterwards to leave a white cross. We folded the cardstock in half, stapling the two sides to make a doctor’s bag with a pipe cleaner handle. Then we filled it up with goodies like alcohol swabs, bandaids, and cotton balls. So Esmé could make house calls on little children who had turned different colors.
Dr. Esmé is in the house… She worked on stuffed green Frog (aka Princess Fiona) quite a lot, because Frog kept dying on us.
We washed and painted some pennies – green on one side and pink on the other. Then we tossed them and used Do-a-Dot markers to track whether they landed green- or pink-side up. It came out just about 50-50, as expected, though Esmé got far more of the pink ones and I got far more of the green ones for some reason…
Esmé painted a watermelon using pink and green watercolors (with black paint for seeds).
Esme matched up beginning letters to pink objects.
And she took uncolored objects and determined if they were generally pink, green, or any color. (Didn’t ‘cha know umbrellas and fish should ALWAYS be pink?!)
We made some pink and green food collages using pictures from old magazines. Interesting how there was no junk food to be found on the green collage.
And here’s an easy-reader book entirely illustrated by PONY, aka Esmé.


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Posted By Mozi Esme to
Mozi Esmé at 9/20/2010 12:34:00 AM