Sanitation SUPERSTARS!

It’s a big job, but our stellar sanitation team is up to the task! Drive your garbage truck to multiple locations around town, then head to the city dump and send everything flying down the chute. Yes we made a mess, but we had SO much fun!

We read Trashy Town, written by Andrea Zimmerman & David Clemesha, illustrated by Dan Yaccarino (HaperCollins, 1999), and read here by Michigan City Public Library. Mr. Gilly is a trash man and wow is he is busy! There are lots of stops all around town (like the school, town park, a pizza parlor) and finally to the city dump to unload. But there’s still one more stop for Mr. Gilly after that…the bathtub!

This was a special final Tiger Tales story time request from a family who was moving out of the area. The story time kiddo asked for “garbage trucks” and “chutes” and we think we delivered!

You’ll need:

  • 1 large craft box (ours was 4.5” X 4.5” x 9” but a large tissue box works too!)
  • A box cutter
  • 1 sparkle stem
  • 1 toilet paper tube
  • Tin foil
  • 1 truck template, printed on 8.5″ x 11″ card stock
  • Black construction paper
  • Yarn
  • Hole punch, scissors and tape for construction
  • Markers for decorating

First, the garbage truck! Use a box cutter to make diagonal incisions in the back and bottom of your box, then fold the entire section upwards. This is your garbage truck’s loading hopper. In order to make it easier for kids to raise and lower the hopper, we looped half of a sparkle stem, then taped it to the tailgate.

Notice the garbage cans hanging on the side of the truck in the above photo? To make those, cut a toilet paper tube in half, then wrap each in tin foil. Punch a hole in the side of each can and hang them on sparkle stem hooks taped to the side of the truck. We filled our can with scrap tissue paper “garbage” as well.

The front of the truck is a template from this post (just disregard the roof section on the template – or better yet, cut it into little bits and use it to fill your mini garbage cans!). Tape that in place, then add some black construction paper wheels and decorate the truck with markers. Tape a yarn pull string to the front of your truck for hauling.

It’s time to get to work! We constructed models of each of the sites mentioned in the book…school, park, doctor’s office, pizza parlor, fire station, and the city dump. Many thanks to my daughter for helping me construct them (love the smiling pizza slice)!

We constructed the buildings and park with shoe boxes and box lids, but the city dump was much larger. It was big box with a removable chute that allowed kids to tip their garbage and send it sliding into the dump. You can see the whole thing here, modeled by our awesome grad student volunteer Shruti Sharma (who was also a cloud scientist at a library event this spring).

Once every kid had made a truck, they received a “route card” that showed the order in which they needed to visit each place. Since there were 5 sites, I made 5 routes, all different so they story time kids wouldn’t clump together. Each route, of course, ended at the city dump.

We placed the buildings around the library, and each had it’s own unique “garbage” to be collected. Mostly, these were little do-dads and art supplies from the cabinet. The school’s garbage, for example, are leftover wooden letters from this project. Caregivers and older siblings volunteered to staff each site, refilling “garbage can” cups as each truck rolled up, and the story time garbage kids got to work.

At the city dump, Shruti helped kids slide the garbage down the chute. The back of the big box was cut open, in case kids wanted to take their garbage home. It got a little messy and chaotic. But hey! It IS a dump after all!

If you would like to do this story time and don’t have time to make the buildings, no worries! Here’s a printable set of the buildings that you can tape to walls and tables. Drive safe, and happy collecting!

Pastries On Parade!

What do you think…is this too much pink? Display alllllll your fabulous frills with a delicious donut float, then join a march around the library. Today, we’re celebrating frosting, filling, glaze, and sprinkles. And yes, we have parade footage!

We read The Great Doughnut Parade by Rebecca Bond (Houghton Mifflin, 2007). It begins with Billy, who has innocently tied a donut to his belt for convenience. His little life hack triggers a chain reaction of followers, from farm animals to a marching band! Billy is unaware of it all, and finishes his day calmly sailing his boat and dreaming with his delicious donut.

You’ll need:

  • 1 wheel assembly (more on this below!)
  • An assortment of boxes
  • Art supplies for decorating
  • Yarn
  • 1 donut parade float template, printed on 8.5″ x 11″ card stock
  • Scissors, tape, glue, and hot glue for construction
  • Markers for decorating

Our wheel assembly is exactly like this pig parade float, except that we substituted toilet paper rolls for tape boxes. Simply glue or tape various boxes to the top of your wheel assembly, then decorate! In addition to the donut template, we offered construction paper, straws, fabric flowers, paper crinkle, crepe paper streamers, craft ties, stickers, and muffin cups. We finished it off with a yarn pull string. And then my friends we MARCHED!


Song: Marching Music on the Tramp by John Philip Sousa. Original source: Music by Nesrality from Pixabay. Created in iMovie.

Colors & Words

Our exhibit “They’ve Got Game: The Children’s Books of Toni & Slade Morrison,” wrapped this spring, and we’ve had such an amazing time making connections to these extraordinary books. We’ve chatted with the exhibit’s featured illustrator, Pascal Lemaître, made an unusual reunion with retired teacher June Volk, and hosted a Zoom panel with the five outstanding illustrators who brought Toni & Slade’s words to life: Joe Cepeda, Pascal Lemaître, Giselle Potter, Sean Qualls, and Shadra Strickland.

In May, we made one last exhibit connection, which also had the special distinction of being our first in-person community event since the pandemic! Titled Colors & Words, the program was based on Toni & Slade’s final book, Please, Louise, which is illustrated by Shadra Strickland.

book cover 3

Please, Louise written by Toni & Slade Morrison, illustrated by Shadra Strickland. Simon & Schuster, 2016.

In the story, Louise discovers solace, freedom, imagination, and joy inside her local library, and it just seemed the perfect fit. The book is filled with images of storms, clouds, sky, and rainbows, so we went all out!

Perhaps one of the most touching thing about the Morrison’s children’s books is that they are a collaboration between mother and son. So we also brought that element to the event with Farmside Crafts, an artistic duo of stepmother and stepdaughter. There’s an interview with them at the end of this post!

As visitors entered our gallery, they were greeted by “Build A Story,” which is the same concept as magnetic fridge poetry, re-imagined as building blocks. Our blocks were 7″ x 5″ x 2″ white cardboard shipping boxes ($15 for a pack of 25 boxes on Amazon). Katie put together this fabulous list of words, keeping Toni & Slade’s stories in mind.

Guests could also register to win one of five giveaway baskets, each matched to a Morrison children’s book. We had SO much fun putting these together at JaZams, our local independently-owned toy store!

A little further back in the gallery was the science area, which had three way cool experiments: microwave clouds, grow a rainbow, and a rainbow optical illusion from our special collections (seen on this post and you can print it here!) The table was staffed by one of our super star volunteers, grad student Shruti Sharma!

The science was a little messy, but oh so fabulous! Just look at the results of the grow a rainbow! All you need are paper towels, cups of water, and washable markers…

Perhaps one of our favorite part of the program was the quietest. Inside our library’s famous tree, Katie rigged up a tiny blue tooth speaker ($20 on Amazon) and streamed Toni Morrison’s Grammy-nominated reading of her Who’s Got Game series. Throughout the day, you could peek in and see kids & caregivers relaxing on pillows, listening to Toni and paging through their books.

Displayed throughout the library were bios of the five illustrators who created children’s books for Toni & Slade. Each had a QR code linked to our Zoom panel.  Fun fact: Sean’s book Little Cloud and Lady Wind has a surprise appearance in Please, Louise (you’ll have to listen to the panel to find out where!):

The event two hands-on craft projects. The first was a simple bookmark making station (basic foam shape stickers – very popular with the younger set).

The second was a custom umbrella decorating area. The umbrellas were a direct nod to Please, Louise, who carries an umbrella throughout the entire story. We purchased the plain white child-sized umbrellas from Oriental Trading Company. A pack of 24 costs $75 (basically $3 an umbrella), so this project IS a splurge, but the great thing is you can return anything you don’t use to the company for a refund. We used Crayola fabric markers, which are 100% waterproof (we tested!) and very vibrant.

Some kids worked 10 minutes on the project, some took longer. The record was a whopping 2 hours of concentrated artistry resulting in the most fabulous umbrella I have ever seen.

Finally, we had the honor of hosting Farmside Crafts at the event! They brought a plethora of macramé rainbows, did live craft demos, offered sweet coloring sheets, and donated five custom pieces to our giveaway baskets!

Farmside Crafts began as a rainbow project between stepmom Amber and stepdaughter Lucy. It quickly grew into a business, with the entire family contributing their efforts and skills. Later, I caught up with Farmside Crafts for an interview:

Tell us a little about yourself!

We are a stepmom/stepdaughter team creating macrame rainbows together. It started when we made one for Lucy’s room and thought it would be fun to create custom rainbows for family and friends. It’s become a family affair with everyone helping and supporting. It’s been a wonderful bonding experience within the blended family struggle.

What has it been like to turn your passion into a business venture?

Lucy: I love that my art can make people smile. So I get to make people happy while also making money to be able to fund my other passions like theater, college savings, and having my own money to buy fun things.

Amber: We’re just getting started, but so far we’ve made over 22 custom rainbows and more than 200 rainbows for artisan markets, including other shapes like hearts, stars, and candy canes. We participated in Bryon Barn’s Christmas & Spring artisan market as a Junior Artisan. We’ve enjoyed meeting other young artisans, connecting with people in the community we wouldn’t otherwise meet, and the opportunities that have come out of it such as connecting with Cotsen Library. It always feels good to see that the hard work is recognized and appreciated by others.

What’s your favorite thing about your art?

It’s really fun to create beautiful & unique rainbows. It’s fun to get pictures from customers of our rainbows in their homes and to go shopping and find cute extra details to make one-of-a kind rainbow creations (i.e. adding bunny ears to a rainbow that we repurposed from some clearance bunny glasses).

Amber: One of my favorite things has been creating the branding with Lucy. She choose the name, came up with the logo concept, and found a quote from Maya Angelo that we use as our tagline, “be a rainbow in someone’s clouds.” She takes pride in packing up the orders to ship, and is thrilled when someone buys our rainbows. Watching her get excited about all the little details along the entrepreneurial path is such a joy and has brought me back to that same excitement I felt when I launched my marketing business 10 yrs ago. How cool that she is learning this at such a young age – its our modern day lemonade stand.

What has been the most surprising thing about your journey?

Lucy: The most surprising thing about doing my rainbows was how many people in my life were ready to jump in and help me. My dad made displays, my sister helped man my booth and some of my youth church leaders helped make rainbows. It’s a community effort.

Lucy, what advice do you have for any other young artists or business persons?

My advice to young artists and business people would be to make sure you are having fun. If you are being too hard of yourself, you will not stick with it long enough to improve. If you hate doing it, you won’t last long.