* º½À» À§ÇÑ À̾߱Ⱑ ¸¶ÀÌ ÇÊ¿äÇÕ´Ï´Ù.^^;;
¾ËÀ» ±ú°í ³ª ¿Â º´¾Æ¸®¿Í ¾Æ±â ¿À¸®¸ç, ²É, ³ªºñ,,,
¸ðµÎ°¡ ¾î¿ï¾îÁø ¸ÚÁø À̾߱Ⱑ ÀÖÁö¿ä.
¿Àµð¿Àµµ ³ë·¡´Â À¸Â Àç¹Ì³Áö~!
¿©·¯°¡Áö ±³ÈƵµ ³Ê¹« ÁÁ±¸¿ä!
- µû¶óÀïÀÌ º´¾Æ¸®ÀÇ Àھƹ߰ß!! ^^;;
±×¸®°í Ä£±¸°£ÀÇ ¿ì¾Ö µîµî,,,



This cute Easter Chick will give you something to remember those little crafting fingers with. (It makes a great gift for long distance grandparents!)
This craft doesn't take a toilet paper roll. All you'll need is a printer, piece of paper (I prefer construction paper), scissors, glue and crayons (or something else to colour with).
Print out the template of choice. | |
Colour (where appropriate) and cut out the template pieces. | |
Glue the face pieces (circle eyes and triangle beak) onto the head. | |
Glue the legs onto the body. | |
Now comes the fun part! Trace your child's hands onto another piece of paper (yellow construction paper works well or use white paper and colour in). | |
Glue the hands onto the body (thumbs up) to form wings. |
Alternative decorating ideas:
Instead of gluing on the wings, you can use brass bendable tack things so the wings can be moved (I always forget what those things are called!) | |
If you don't have a colour printer, you can print one black & white copy on yellow construction paper and a second copy on white. Then mix and match the pieces. | |
Buy feathers (or pluck your old feather duster!) and glue a few feathers onto the top of the chick's head. |
| Close the template window after printing to return to this screen. | |
| Set page margins to zero if you have trouble fitting the template on one page (FILE, PAGE SETUP in most browsers). |
Have You Seen My Duckling?
Farmer Duck
ÀÌ·¯´Ù°¡ °ÅÀÇ 'Á¶·ùÇÐÀÚ°¡ µÇ´Â °Í ¾Æ´Ñ°¡?' ÇÏ´Â | Mallard Duck | Animal Printouts Label Me! Printouts |
Mallard Ducks are common wild ducks that live in Northern Hemisphere wetlands. Most domestic (tame) ducks were bred from mallards. The female is called a hen, the male is called a drake, and the young are called ducklings.
Anatomy: Males are brightly colored, having a green head, a white collar, and a bright yellow bill. Females are mottled brown with a brown bill. Mallards are about 20-23 inches (51-59 cm) long.
Diet: Mallard ducks have a varied diet. They eat insects, worms, frogs, snails, slugs, small shellfish, grasses, and other plants that grow near shore.
Eggs and Nests: Mallards build cup-like nests made of grass and leaves; they are lined with duck down (delicate feathers). Nests are usually on the ground in dense undergrowth. Females lay 5-14 greenish-white eggs in each clutch (a set of eggs laid at one time). The female cares for the young.
Let's Read and Find Out ½Ã¸®Áî Áß¿¡¼.
±×¸²ÀÌ ³Ê¹« ¾Æ¸§´Ù¿î °úÇÐÃ¥À̸ç, ³»¿ëµµ Â÷¾Ï ÁÁ¾Æ¼
¾ðÁ¦±îÁö³ª ¿ì¸®ÀÇ ¾ÖÀåǰÀÌ µÉ ¸¸ÇÏ´ä´Ï´Ù.
¸Ç µÞ Àå¿¡´Â °£´ÜÇÑ ½ÇÇèÀ» ÇÒ ¼öÀÖµµ·Ï Á¦½ÃÇϰí ÀÖ¾î¼,
»ýȰ¼Ó ¿ø¸®°úÇÐÀ¸·Î Àû°ÝÀÌÁö¿ä.
-----------------------------------------------
* ÀÌ·± ³»¿ëµéÀ̾ß, ¾¦¾¦ ÄÁÅÙÃ÷ °ø¸ð°Ô½ÃÆÇÀ̳ª,
°ø±¸È°¿ë¿¹¹®À» ÀÌ¿ëÇϽÉ, ¸ÚÁö°Ô ÇØ°á µÈ´ä´Ï´Ù!!
ÀÌ·¸°Ô º½³ªµéÀÌ »Ð»Ð»Ð~~ ÇØ º¸ÀÚ±¸¿ä ^----------^

¾¦¾¦¸ô

> 




 



Gather, together~! Duckling and Chick !!
ÃÖ½Å
ÀÌÀü


