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Putting The Pretty In Preschool

Finding Beauty In Everyday Early Childhood Experiences

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Annette Kaminsky

Flower Potion Sensory Tray

August 10, 2025 by Annette Kaminsky Leave a Comment

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If you’ve been following my blog for a while, you know I love flowers and enjoy incorporating them in early learning activities. This flower potion sensory tray features vibrant flowers from my yard, colored water, and glitter for eye-appealing and super fun sensory play.

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Flower Potion Sensory Tray Supplies

Gather the following for this gorgeous sensory tray:

  • large sensory tray
  • squirt bottles
  • bowls and spoons
  • eye droppers or pipettes
  • mortar and pestle sets
  • pitchers
  • serving trays
  • liquid food coloring
  • glitter
  • shaving cream
  • leaves and flowers
  • small rocks

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The Flower Potion Sensory Tray

An active world tray easily holds all the supplies for making potions.

Potions can be mixed in white bowls and wooden mortar and pestle sets. Pitchers of water provide the base for the concoctions.

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Squirt bottles with food coloring added to water allow for vibrant colors.

Small rocks and a selection of leaves and flowers are the natural materials included.

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Gold glitter adds a sparkly touch to the potions.

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Shaving cream adds a fluffy, foamy texture.

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Inserting large, clear cups gives more potion-making opportunities.

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Have you tried a flower potion sensory tray? Share in a comment below.

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More Activities With Flowers

Flower Treasure Blocks

Balloon Painting Flower Art

Bee and Sunflower Sensory Bin

Contact Paper Flower Art

Flower Stand Dramatic Play Center

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Filed Under: flowers, sensory, spring, summer Tagged With: color experiment, flowers, nature, sensory bin, sensory tray

Rhubarb Sauce Snack Tray

August 9, 2025 by Annette Kaminsky Leave a Comment

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As a teacher, I am always on the lookout for hands-on activities that are economical and have educational value. This rhubarb sauce snack tray activity offers a valuable sensory and cooking component, and is easy on the pocketbook.

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Rhubarb thrives in cooler climates and is plentiful in temperate, northern locations of the world. The hardy plant is technically a vegetable, but is classified as a fruit when used in cooking. Its thick, edible stalks are either red, green, or a combination of the two colors. The large, spinach-like leaves are toxic when consumed in large quantities, so they should not be eaten.

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Rhubarb Sauce Supplies

It’s easy to make a simple sauce with just rhubarb stalks and a sweetener such as sugar or honey. To give the children more to do in the activity and to add taste and nutrition to the sauce, this recipe includes strawberries and a banana in the mix.

Ingredients to gather are:

  • 2 cups rhubarb
  • 2/3 cup strawberries
  • 1 ripe banana
  • 3 tablespoons honey

Food preparation supplies to gather are:

  • cutting boards
  • disposable knives
  • measuring cups
  • tablespoon
  • crockpot
  • stirring spoon
  • whisk
  • hand blender (optional)

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Rhubarb is fun to explore in a sensory activity on its own. Before preparing the sauce together, show children a picture of a rhubarb patch. Bring samples of washed rhubarb stalks with leaves attached. Invite children to describe the size and color of the leaves. Explain that they contain a toxin and should not be eaten.

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Next. cut the leaves off and discuss the color and thickness of the stalks. Give each participant a cutting board and a child-friendly knife. Allow children to explore the fruit by peeling off the skin, cutting the stalks into pieces, and smelling and tasting as they go.

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Making the Rhubarb Sauce

To make the rhubarb sauce, invite each participant to use a child-friendly knife to slice the stalks on a cutting board, aiming for small pieces.

Next, measure two cups of cut rhubarb into a crock pot. A small pot will work fine for this recipe.

Afterward, give each child a few washed strawberries to slice up, enough for 2/3 cup. If leaves are attached, have them cut them off first.

Then give a few children a peeled banana section to slice.

Have children take turns adding strawberries and the sliced banana to the pot, along with three tablespoons of honey.

Next, allow everyone to stir the mixture.

Then put the lid on the crockpot and heat it on low or medium for three or more hours.

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After the rhubarb is cooked, invite participants to blend the cooked ingredients with a whisk. For a smoother consistency, use a hand blender.

Taste the cooked sauce and add more honey or a little sugar if desired.

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The Rhubarb Sauce Snack Tray

Rhubarb is tasty served warm or cold. It is delicious spooned over ice cream or custard, or offered as a dipping sauce on a snack tray. A rhubarb sauce snack tray is superb for children who have never tried rhubarb before, as they can sample it in small amounts with familiar foods.

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Along with inviting children to help prepare it, attractively offering a new food encourages them to try it. This sun-shaped serving tray and these pretty disposable plates are great for presentation. On the tray, a bowl of rhubarb sauce is surrounded by mini toasts and semi-sweet cookies.

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Invite children to spoon a little rhubarb sauce on a plate and dip cookies and crackers into it for a delightful snacking activity.

What do you think?

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More Activities With Food

Cauliflower Theme Activities

Green Bean Theme Activities

Beet Science and Sensory Activities

Fun Ways to Serve Watermelon

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Filed Under: autumn, desserts, Food, gardening, preschool, sensory, summer Tagged With: cooking, fall, sensory tray, snacks

Recycled Cardboard Process Art

June 22, 2025 by Annette Kaminsky Leave a Comment

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If you are looking for an easy-to-set-up, inexpensive, intriguing art activity, this recycled cardboard process art invitation fits the bill. It is an effortless art invitation that yields beautiful results. The activity is a good choice for Earth Day or anytime of the year.

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Supplies to Collect

Cardboard pieces with interesting shapes are perfect for this unexpected process art painting activity. Gather the following:

  • cardboard protective packaging
  • egg filler flats
  • thinned tempera paint
  • paint pots and brushes
  • large sensory tray

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Preparing the Recycled Cardboard Art Activity

A large active world tray is my go-to for this art activity. Place it indoors or outdoors on a stand or table. Or use an art table with a protective table cover.

Next, set recycled cardboard pieces in the sensory tray. Protective packaging and egg filler flats are good choices.

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Then pour paint into paint pots and mix in a little water to make it thinner. Add brushes, and set the pots around the cardboard molds. That’s it!!!

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The Recycled Cardboard Process Art Activity

A group of children can participate in this open-ended art activity with recyclables. Invite them to pick a spot to paint the three-dimensional shapes in the tray.

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When two children work on one cardboard shape the art activity is collaborative. While working on different sections of a piece, one child creates a frigid northern landscape, while the other chooses contrasting paint colors.

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A square egg filler flat inspires creating mini volcanoes with bright orange paint.

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The thinned tempera paints use fewer resources, cover the textured cardboard easily, and allow for spatter painting.

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Children may use the recycled cardboard pieces in other art projects when the paint dries.

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Benefits of the Recycled Cardboard Art Activity

In this cost-effective recycled cardboard art activity, children

  • participate in a relaxing, calming process art activity.
  • paint on novel, textured three-dimensional objects.
  • recognize patterns and design them with paint.
  • mix colors to create new ones (making brown is always a favorite.)
  • build hand strength and coordination while using paint and brushes.
  • have the freedom to paint without feeling pressure to produce a completed art project.
  • experience a collaborative art environment.
  • learn the value of recycling and reusing materials creatively.

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More Process Art Activities

Salt Painting Planet Art

Pump Bottle Watercolor Art

Watercolor Apples With Markers

Painting With Corn

Eye Dropper Pumpkin Art

Fall Leaf Salad Spinner Art

Squeegee Painting Heart Art

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Filed Under: art, Earth Day, preschool, sensory Tagged With: Earth Day, painting, process art

Flower Treasure Blocks

June 21, 2025 by Annette Kaminsky Leave a Comment

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Flowers can be delicate and fierce simultaneously, making it hard for children to get up close to study them. The Alberta Wild Rose, with its fragile rosy-pink flowers and thick thorny stems, is one such flower. Rather than having children handle the prickly-stemmed blooms, flower treasure blocks are a good way to introduce the prickly rose.

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The Alberta Wild Rose is a hardy, bushy shrub that grows in sunny spots in the wild all over temperate regions in Canada. It is a low-maintenance plant that is drought-tolerant and fire-resistant. The plant is non-toxic, and the leaves and fruits are edible. The beautiful, five-petaled flowers with yellow stamens are easy to spot at this time of year.

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Supplies to Collect

Gather the following supplies for this flower-themed science and sensory activity:

  • fillable treasure blocks
  • flowers, petals, leaves, and stems

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Introducing Flower Treasure Blocks

Fillable treasure blocks, also called window blocks, generally have wooden frames and clear panels. One side of each block is removable, so loose parts like buttons, beads, gems, or natural items such as flowers, leaves, pine cones, and twigs can be placed inside. The see-through blocks are a valuable resource for the home or classroom.

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Unscrew one side of each block and add flowers such as the Alberta Wild Rose or your favorite flowers to the blocks. Include the blooms, buds, leaves, and stems. Then screw the panels back on.

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Set the flower-filled blocks in a display corner or on a light table for children to observe. Or place them in a block corner with a variety of other blocks. Your little charges will be delighted to handle the see-through blocks and study what’s inside.

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Another Way to Display Flower Parts

Instead of using treasure blocks to display flowers, gently place their parts between two clear magnetic tiles.

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The Alberta Wild Rose showcases brilliantly between the tiles, and the flowers look gorgeous. I skipped adding the spiky stems since the magnetic tiles are easy to take apart.

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Related:

Skeleton Treasure Blocks

Christmas Treasure Blocks

Winter Treasure Blocks

Valentine’s Day Treasure Blocks

St. Patrick’s Day Treasure Blocks

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Filed Under: display, flowers, gardening, preschool, science, sensory, spring, summer Tagged With: AB Wild Rose, flowers, nature, sensory play, treasure blocks

Salt Painting Sensory Bin

June 15, 2025 by Annette Kaminsky Leave a Comment

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This gigantic salt painting sensory tray is inspired by the many eye-catching salt trays I’ve seen online over the years.  In this activity, children are invited to color salt in a huge sensory tray and draw, design, and sculpt with the wet salt.

Salt is inexpensive and has a sand-like texture. It is taste-safe, non-perishable, and easy to color in many beautiful hues.

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Supplies to Collect

Gather the following supplies for this silky salt-based sensory bin:

  • 4 boxes of salt
  • food coloring
  • paint pots
  • eye droppers or pipettes
  • small bowls
  • clear storage containers
  • tablespoons
  • toothed scraping tools

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Setting Up the Salt Painting Sensory Tray

This low-cost sensory activity is effortless to set up and works splendidly indoors or outdoors.

If doing the activity indoors, set a large, low-edged sensory tray on a table or stand made for the tray. This light, transportable active world tray, also called a tuff tray, is up to the task. Outside, if a table isn’t available, it rests on four stackable stools or patio end tables. So easy!

Tip: Outside, I recommend placing the sensory tray away from plants and grass since salt harms them.

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Next, add food coloring in a few hues to paint pots filled with water. Thinned tempera paints also work fine. Add eye droppers to the pots.

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Then add bowls and tablespoons for scooping and mixing, and toothed scrapers for creating designs.

Lastly, pour three boxes of salt into the tray. Reserve one box to sprinkle in more doses of salt periodically to add interest to the sensory invitation as children are playing.

The salt tray is ready to explore.

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Exploring the Salt Painting Sensory Tray

This salt painting sensory tray is suitable for a group of children to explore. Invite participants to drip paint onto the salt and mix it in. They will love the coloring process and delight in mixing colors in the bowls and clear containers.

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They’ll naturally pick up the tools to make designs in the salt.

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Periodically add more salt to the bin so they can continue mixing and changing the colors.

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As the salt gets wetter, children may mold cakes and other items from the salt. When this happens, the scrapers make excellent slicers!

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When children are finished investigating the salty tray, have a water source nearby so they can wash up easily.


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Benefits of the Salt Painting Sensory Tray

Exploring a salt tray and mixing colors is a relaxing and satisfying science and sensory activity. Salt trays are also popular as prewriting invitations. Children experience a novel way to practice tracing and writing lines, letters, numbers, and shapes, using at least two of their senses. They develop eye-hand coordination and refine fine motor skills.

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More Sensory Activities

Salt and Glue Moon Art

Salt and Ice Science Experiment

Salt Painting Planet Art

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Filed Under: art, preschool, pretend play, science, sensory Tagged With: painting, sensory bin, sensory play, sensory tray

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Hi, I'm Annette Kaminsky, a preschool teacher who loves sharing learning through play activities for young children. Thanks for visiting my site. Feel free to stay awhile!

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