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A Museum of Early American Tools

Eric Sloane
This book is exactly what the title says it is: a museum of Early American tools. And, as
with any great museum, simply to enter is to find oneself awash in awe and admiration and
wonder. This is simply one of my all time favorite, best loved and remembered books ever.
Seeing Eric Sloane's work come back into print and regain popularity gives me cause for
hope for the world. His every sketch, every comment embodies a respect and love for things
made by human hands, hands that know and understand the nature of their tools and materials. A
Museum of Early American Tools in particular evokes a love of both nature and human effort
without ever saying a word about it. Open the pages, you'll see!
In the context of Waldorf education, there are so many places where having a copy of this
book simply available for browsing would enliven a student's understanding and warm his or
her interest -- for instance:
- during the house building and farming blocks in Grade 3
- kept nearby as woodworking commences in grades 4 and 5 and beyond
- perhaps even referred to during lessons on the Industrial Revolution
- as it is bursting with examples that bridge the pre-industrial and industrial
ages
There is life and the magic of imagination on these pages!
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A Reverence for Wood

Eric Sloane
If you want to infuse your student with an understanding of why natural materials are so
special, just be sure there's a copy of this book available for browsing in your classroom
or home. This refreshing, delightfully written, and magnificently illustrated book offers
up one picture after another of things made with wood; functional things like doors and sheds,
beautiful things like tables and bent wood boxes, and tools - such tools. Sloan even
begins the book with colored pictures of the different woods common in North America, and
ends it with the most artistic field guide to trees imaginable.
It is sheer joy to see Eric Sloane's books coming back into print - ready to nourish and
inspire another generation! A Reverence for Wood is one of his very best.
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Waldorf Curriculum Guides
Practical Arts - Handwork & Crafts
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Will-Developed
Intelligence
Handwork & Practical Arts in the Waldorf School
Elementary through High School
David Mitchell and Patricia Livingston
Softbound
$22.00
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An outstanding overview of the nature and role of the practical
arts in Waldorf education! The illustrations alone offer
such a clear view of the specific projects and goals of
the "crafts
classes" that
the excellent descriptive text is almost an added bonus!
Anyone teaching any of the crafts will LOVE this book - it
is a real gift and I'm thrilled to see it available.
Mitchell
and Livingston examine how working with the hands opens
up neurological passageways that establish the foundation
of thinking. Copiously illustrated,
this book shows how the conscious development and training
of the hands in the Waldorf curriculum, from kindergarten
through high school, begin
with the heart forces to lead the student to enhanced
cognition. Additionally, they have created a practical
guide to the subjects that make up this
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The Golden Path
Craft - Technics - Practical
Class 1 to 12
Alan Whitehead
Softbound
$22.95
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The Golden Path is a triumph! Finally, a comprehensive,
thorough and deeply considered overview "the crafts" that
are taught throughout the curriculum of Waldorf schools
- covering everything from Grade 1 to Grade 12. And,
it's in English!
From my perspective, the most significant and valuable aspect of the book is that Alan brings to life Steiner's intent that Waldorf schools offer both a basic liberal arts education and a basic trades education. This intent is all too often lost in what has become, in my opinion, a misunderstood focus on "handwork" as a balancing tool for all the "headwork". In Alan's approach, the students are taught genuinely useful-to-the-modern-world ways to use the intelligence of the hand, which not only serves to lead them into the world in a more complete and powerful way, but, as modern science has shown, creates the framework for a fully human intelligence. It is his modernization of the curriculum, done while keeping very much to Steiner's intent and without losing any of the more commonly taught subject matter, that is the central gift of this very fine book.
A real bonus with The Golden Path the unending
stream of color photographs of different projects completed
by students in various grades. Alan's recently enhanced
printing capacity enables all of us to delight in these
handwork victories and study their manifest technic and
form. (This is an author, incidentally, who actually produces
all his books from writing to printing to binding - no
wonder he has such a terrific grasp of the role of the
crafts.)
I should add that this is not a how-to in terms
of learning the techniques of any of these subjects - there
are plenty of resources for that available in our bookshop
and elsewhere. This is a guide to what to teach,
how to teach it, why you and I want children to learn these
things, and the joy they bring. Absolutely everything from
knitting to gardening to survival training to baking to
toymaking to desk building to . . . more and more and more.
All of it is presented with wisdom and enthusiasm.
Inspiring and wonderful! Don't miss it!! |
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Green Fingers and Muddy Boots
A Year in the Grden for Children and Families
Includes a CD-ROM with worksheets
Ivor Santer
Softbound
$30.00 |
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Here is a beautiful, wonder-filled introduction to the joys of gardening! Packed with photos and drawings of birds, bees, flowers, vegetables and much, much more, Green Fingers and Muddy Boots is so evocative of the pleasures of working with nature that you'll find yourself setting it down frequently in favor of going out and getting your hands into some soil. Which I know the author would love for you and children everywhere to do.
Green Fingers and Muddy Boots—with worksheets on the accompanying CD—presents practical and fun activities in the garden for every month of the year, come rain or shine. Activities range from growing flowers and vegetables to spotting birds and tracking the weather and keeping a garden diary.
The activities are suitable for seven- to fourteen-year-olds. Although older children will be able to work independently, it can be fun to work together as a family or school class.
This book is based on the original “Plant and Grow” course developed with the Royal Caledonian Horticultural Society, which has been used successfully by many families and schools for several years.
We recommend it as wonderful for children of all ages! You can never be too young or too old to get out into the garden. |
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Spring
Nature Activities for Children
Irmgard Kutsch and Brigitte Walden
Hardbound
$22.95
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It is thrilling to see the second of this vibrant 4-book series in print in English. It is every bit
as beautiful and as inspiring as it's companion volume, Autumn, and I expect it will do a great
deal to get all of us outdoors and loving our dear world more and more.
Spring is the time of creating and cleaning, of building and renewing, and each of the activities suggested
here harness our impulses as they connect us and our children with the earth and nature. It's hard to
imagine more exhilarating and inspiring activity ideas than these.
Here's what's inside:
Introduction
Between Heaven and Earth
MARCH
- Nesting
- Our Native Birds in Spring
- Even Younger Children Can Help Build a Nesting Box
- Nesting Help for Birds
- Box for hole nesters
- Box for eave or platform nesters
- Sowing, Planting, Growing
- Sprouting Grain
- Caring for Flowers
- Sprouting Walnutes
- Johnny Appleseed Grace
- Johnny Appleseed
- Thought about trees
APRIL
- Creating Garden Spaces
- Garden Work and Health
- Landscaping a Garden as a Group Project
- Actively Shaping Our Surroundings
- Gardens at the Root of Social Change
- What to Consider When Landscaping a Garden
- Initial considerations
- Action guidelines
- Conclusions
- Landscaping Ideas
- Layered tree trunk wall
- Climbing wall
- Tree stump spiral for climbing and sitting
- Twig layer wall
- Building with stone and wood
- A root mountain
- Nesting places for insects, bats, wild bees and wasps
- A willow arbour
- Making a spring flute from a willow branch
- Play pit
- Stone herb garden
- Paradise garden
- Earthworms - compost in a worm box
- Potato box
- Strawberry pots
- Keeping pets
- April does what she wants
MAY
- Plant-based dyes and paints
- Making Dyes
- Color chart for plant dyeing
- Characteristics of plants used for dyeing
- Painting with plant-based paints
- The invigorating effect of plant colors
- Milk Processing
- The Cow - Serving humankind since ancient times
- Milk - Lifeblood of the child
- What can be made from milk
- Beekeeping
- From forest bees to beekeeping
- The Bee Colony
- Biology of the Bees
- Beehives
- Bee products
- Swarming
- How can children be included in beekeeping
Further reading and resources
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So - grab your sweaters, put on your shoes and let's go outside!
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Summer
Nature Activities for Children
Irmgard Kutsch & Brigitte Walden
Hardbound
$22.95
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Ahhh! Those lazy, hazy days filled with wonder and adventure
and the vibrancy of life. In this sunny book that completes the seasonal
Nature Activities series, Irmgard Kutsch and Brigitte Walden take children
on a stroll through the wonders of the outdoor world in full bloom. Whether
you are fortunate enough to have a rural countryside at your front door,
or have window box gardens and city parks as your touchstone to nature,
you'll love this book and find hundred's of ways to delight the children
in your care with the natural world.
Inside you'll find:
Foreword
The Story of This Book
An Invitation
JUNE
Working with Herbs
- The Herb Garden
- Raised Beds for Herbs
- Working with Herbs: Basic Skills
- Herb Recipes
Breeding Butterflies
- Butterflies: a Symbol of Beauty
- Looking after Caterpillars
- A Butterfly's Favourite Places
- From Caterpillar to Butterfly
- Making a Butterfly Cage
JULY
Water
- A Bridge to Lie on
- Ponds and Streams
- Water: Lessons for Life
Earth
Air
- Giant Soap Bubbles
- Conscious Listening
Fire
- A simple fireplace
- Building an underground oven
- Building a clay overn
- Building a clay ball oven
- A wood-fired kiln
- Some thoughts on responsibility, safety and supervision
AUGUST
From Grain to Bread
- Healthy Nourishment
- Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread
- Creating an Eating Culture
- From Whole Grain to Fine Flour: The Story of Grain
- Grain Recipes
- A Quick Reminder
Resources
Further Reading
The Children's Nature and Garden Centre
Credits
Special Thanks
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Autumn
Nature Activities for Children
Irmgard Kutsch & Brigitte Walden
Hardbound, full color photos and drawings throughout
$22.95
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What a wonderful, exciting book! This is one of the best "activities with children" books
I've ever been privileged to hold in my hands. Both the authors and publisher deserve a big "Thank
you!" from all of us who care for children. The author's experience as teachers at the Children's
Nature and Garden Centre in Reichshof just radiates off these pages!
Each and every activity suggested within this beautiful book forges a simply tie between those who
do the projects and crafts and the world of nature. Here you have everything from harvesting fruits and
vegetables, to building houses (including a chapter on house building in the Waldorf 3rd Grade!) to beeswax
modelling. The authors exude such an enthusiasm that I think anyone who reads this book will want to
get started on one of the crafts right away.
Most of the activities can easily be done within cities and towns, also -- you very definitely don't
need to live in the country to create with autumn's gifts. There are some, such as extracting honey,
that do require knowing someone who works vocationally with nature (and are very much worth pursuing,
if possible), but the overwhelming majority of activities are simple and easy to do with materials that
are not difficult to come by unless you live in the desert.
I should also add that although autumn is the theme of the book, the activites given for late autumn
can take you well into winter as well -- they are very suitable for those days when we like to gather
in our snug homes and make things
Here's what you'll find in between the covers:
SEPTEMBER
- Harvesting fruit and vegetables
- Where do fruits and vegetables come from?
- Biodynamic Farms & the environment
- Natural wholefoods in the kindergarten
- Information and advice
- Eating together: A good influence
- Understanding how things are connected
- Training the senses
- Recipes for freshly-harvested fruit
- Drying fruit for the winter
OCTOBER
- Basket-making
- Plants used for basket-making
- Making a willow basket or hanging basket for flowers
- Weaving round or oval objects
- House-building
- Simple houses and huts
- Building: Putting down roots
- Imaginative structures: Large and small
- Building as an archetypal experience
- Building a house together: Developing social skills
- House-building in the third grade
- A dedication ceremony
NOVEMBER
- Caring for birds
- What we can do to protect birds
- Food for birds
- Working with Beeswax
- Modelling with beeswax
- Beeswax: A precious material
- Dipping candles
- Related Activities
- Making paper
- History and production of paper
- Making paper with children
- Painting and handicrafts without toxic chemicals
- Paste and plaster
- Glue
- Finger-painting
- Sand pictures
- Nature mobile
- Pan pipes
- Castanets
- Pinwheels
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Winter
Nature Activities for Children
Irmgard Kutsch & Brigitte Walden
Hardbound
$22.95
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Kutsch & Walden's third nature activities book leaves
me simply breathless with excitement -- this is the best-ever compendium
of winter-y joy! It all but guarantees that gloomy winter days will be
a thing of the past, replaced by day after day of discovery, creativity
and accomplishment. Just the ticket for home and school - which I predict
will take on a warming glow of wonder with the help of these two wonderful
ladies.
Here's what's inside:
Foreword
The Story of this Book
DECEMBER
Advent
- Advent: A Time for Contemplation
- The Advent Wreath
- Advent: A Time for Candles
- Blowing Ships
- An Advent Story
- Blooming Branches
- Rattling Walnuts
- Christmas Scenes
- The True Meaning of Advent
JANUARY
Working with Wool
- Working with Wool: A Rich Experience
- Processing Wool
- Clothing: Our Second Skin
- Wool: from the Sheep to a Ball of Wool
- Wool: from a Ball of Wool to a Toy Sheep
- Free Play with Wool
- Stories
FEBRUARY (Part 1)
Working with Willow
- February: the Last Chance to Cut Willow
- Willow: a Good Plant for Children
- Willow: Creative Possibilities
- Making a Latticework Willow Hedge
Woodworking
- Wood: A Valuable Material
- Forests
- Wooden Toys
- Listening to Wood
- Rattles and Stick Instruments to Scare away Winter
- More Woodworking Projects
FEBRUARY (Part 2)
Working with Clay
- Pottery: a Valuable Activity
- Basic Rules for Doing Pottery with Children
- Clay Bowls for Easter Grass
- Clay Insect Nests and Bird Baths
Resources
- Further reading
- Craft Suppliers
- Conservation of rare domestic animals
- The Children's Nature and Garden Centre
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Zen and the Art
of Knitting
Exploring the Links Between Knitting, Spirituality,
and Creativity
Bernadette Murphy
Softbound
$10.95
Contains outstanding descriptions of knitting
classes in a Waldorf school!
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This book has an enormous amount to say about the value
to human beings, young and old,
of working with our hands. It
also happens to contain two wonderful
chapters devoted to someone
who is an amazing handworker
and the best Waldorf crafts teacher
it has ever been
my privilege to know:
Elizabeth Seward.**
Bernadette Murphy has given the most detailed, life-filled
descriptions I've ever read of
knitting classes actually taught to first and fifth graders
in a Waldorf school (Highland
Hall). Even better, what
you'll find in these descriptions
is what I have always hoped someone would do for these
classes -- Elizabeth
presented everything to the children
in ways that united their hands with the hearts and heads,
and left an opening
for spirit and soul to thrive.
We can all be inspired by the simple, yet deeply resonant
way she guided the
children through the techniques
and leads them into a loving, caring relationship with
the work of their hands.
All this, while maintaining an
atmosphere of joy along with setting high standards for
the outcomes of that
work! What she accomplished is
truly what we all want for our children.
N.B. Contrary to what the title may lead you to believe,
it is not a treatise on Buddhist meditation, though Murphy's
exploration does include this. It is a heartfelt consideration
of the core essence of what knitting evokes in the inner
life. Interestingly, about 80% of the people she interviewed
or observed are practitioners of Christian prayer and
meditation. It is a book whose contents and intents are
still living in my heart, well past the reading of it.
I think you'll love it, too.
**Elizabeth is no longer active as a Crafts Teacher,
but does still offer classes
and workshops to adults and makes herself available as
mentor and guide to Waldorf
Crafts teachers. I have known
Elizabeth for about 20 years and can think of no one
better to call upon in
this role. Whether you are involved
with a Waldorf School, public or private, that is ready
to deepen its crafts
program; or are part of a home
school cooperative and would like a workshop to help
the adults become more
skilled at both the crafts and
teaching them; or are an adult wishing to enrich your
own life with a deeper,
more joyful relationship to handwork
-- Elizabeth Seward, in my opinion, is some one you could
call upon with confidence
that your needs will be met and
your time and resources more than well-spent. Elizabeth
can be reached through
her web site: www.workofourhands.net
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Children's Knitting Special
Purchase both A First Book of Knitting for Children and Knitting
for Children - A Second Book
Regular Price $44.90
Special Price $39.90
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This combination of approaches is sure to help establish any child (or
adult!) as a great knitter!
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A First Book of Knitting for Children - New Edition!
Bonnie Gosse and Jill Allerton
New photos - 20+ more pages!
$19.95
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This charming book is nothing less than the Waldorf approach to knitting
captured between two covers. Here is everything - rhymes for each stitch,
excellent step-by-step photographs, and the most delightful collection
of projects we have seen gathered in one place. With the help of this book
and a kind adult, any child can master the basics of knitting and then
go on to create more animal and people friends than you can shake a knitting
needle at! We are often asked questions about how knitting is taught in
a Waldorf school - we are delighted that now we have such a wonderful way
to answer them.
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Knitting for Children
A Second Book
Bonnie Gosse & Jill Allerton
Softbound
$24.95
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The long-awaited continuations of the authors' wonderful A First Book of Knitting for
Children has finally arrived! Building on their first volume, the authors bring many
new skills and a wider variety of patterns to eager children and adults. Here is everything
anyone needs to know about:
- reading a pattern
- increasing and decreasing
- dividing work
- picking up stitches
- ribbing
- multi-color knitting
- knitting in the round
- turning
- double casting off
- making proper holes
Included too are patterns for everything from sweaters and hats to gnomes,
frogs, hand dolls and their clothing. This is a great book to have fun
with - whether you are a child expanding your knitting horizons or an adult
knitting for a beloved youngster. A terrific and inspiring resource!
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Woolly Thoughts
Unlock Your Creative Genius with Modular Knitting
Pat Ashforth and Steve Plummer
Softbound
$8.95
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Here is a book to delight knitters and teachers of mathematics - all at the same
time!
How do they do this? Well, they are both mathematics teachers, amazing in their ability
to make everything clear and fun. Right from the start, they forge a pathway to knitting
heaven by having you take out whatever yarn you like, your choice of needles, and a
small calculator. What happens next is a guided tour through a mosaic of shapes and
colors -- all of them easy, all of them fascinating and beautiful. With Pat and Steve
at your side, you can truly forget about conventional knitting patterns and follow
your imagination where ever it leads you. Your students will begin absorbing and delighting
in geometric and mathematical relationships without even noticing that's what they
are doing. They will also being to love the time they spend knitting simply because
they can follow their own inspriation so easily.
Happily and heavily illustrated throughout, with a section of color plates showcasing
some of Pat's creations, Woolly Thoughts brings you everything you need for
a lifetime of discovering the joys knitting and mathematics. This is a book that students
and teachers will love equally - each will discover their knitting and their mathematical
skills just get better and better, one stitch at a time!
A beautiful way to unite handwork with mathematics!
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Single Crochet for Beginners
Cindy Crandall-Frazier
Softbound
$22.99
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Cindy Crandall-Frazier has created the book I've always hoped
for to help teach children (and anyone else!) how to crochet (part of the
3rd grade handwork curriculum in Waldorf education). In it you'll find
a perfect marriage of joyful enthusiasm with clear instruction featuring
creative techniques and new learning approaches. It is fabulous. Cindy's
background as a homeschooling mother and Waldorf Kindergarten teacher shines
through the book as well: though written for a broader audience, she has
incorporated so much of what makes the Waldorf approach to teaching fruitful
and beloved:
- She includes a verse with instructions for making the slip knot as
well as a diagram for those who are visually oriented
- She created new labels for the parts of the hook, so that using the
hook can be more clearly explained
- Her technique of having students skip the first 2 chains when beginning
a row is brilliant because it makes it much, much easier to see the first
stitch and to keep correct count
- She includes a very helpful chart of hook sizes coupled with yarn weights
- very helpful.
- You'll also find LOTS of information about different fibers and color
- wonderful stuff!
- and, her projects just sing with the kind of excitement that will urge
children or adults on to more learning and eager skill development
There's lots more to love, much more - but I'm hoping you'll get a copy,
grab your hook and yarn, and discover them for yourself. Your children
will come to think of the crochet lesson as one of their favorite parts
of the day!
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Carpentry for Children
Simple Step-by-Step Plans for Great Do-It-Yourself Project
Lester Walker
Preface by David Macaulay
Softbound
$16.95
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If ever there was a book embued with the power to transform
lives, Lester Walker's Carpentry for Children is it. It is absolutely
thorough in its task of introducing the world of hammer, saw and wood to
children (and the adults who teach them), and is so infused with the joy
Walker so clearly finds in this craft that in addition to being a consummate
guide to introductory carpentry, it is also just plain good reading.
The instruction is designed for children ages 7 through 11
(or so) and the book is written to be read not only by adult teachers,
but also by the older student-carpenters. Walker begins with guidance on
buying tools that will be of the right size and weight for this age group
then proceeds to discuss what materials to buy (and what to look for to
make sure you are getting the quality you need). He also devotes an entire
chapter to how to use each tool well and safely.
As is both necessary and practical, the first project involves
creating a workshop, including building a workbench, toolbox and sawhorses!
From there, the projects march out, beginning with a tugboat and including
a puppet theater, painter's easel, stilts, a raft, and even a coaster car
for fast trips to the bottom of your favorite hill.
Walker's contribution to putting handwork back into our lives
is wonderful - we hope that more and more children can be gifted with the
experiences he is sharing.
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Housebuilding for Children
Step-by-Step Guides for Houses Children Can Build Themselves
Lester Walker
Preface by Nonny Hogrogian
Softbound
$16.95
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For me, one of the most attractive things about Waldorf Education
is that toward the end of 3rd Grade "housebuilding" is part of
the curriculum. When I first read this, I could hardly wait for our children
to reach 3rd grade so that they could experience some of the joy I had
at that age.
When I was 8-10, my family lived in a home that backed up
to an untended field filled with high-growing grasses. With the help of
nocternal creatures we never saw, we children discovered pathways and little "rooms" in
the grass, quickly caught on to the process, and set about making house
after house that we played in year after year (building them afresh each
season by crawling to make paths and lying about to create the "rooms").
Once we had conquered the art of grassy housebuilding, we moved on to large
trees where we discovered in our imaginations all manner of houses in the
large and leafy branches. This was a period of almost rapturous play and
discovery in my life -- and one that I knew could be reflected in the housebuilding
blocks of a Waldorf 3rd Grade, even though at the time my children lived
far from the wide open spaces I had enjoyed as a child.
What I love about Housebuilding for Children is that
it is not about creating the perfect playhouse for children
to play in, it is about guiding children to build their own
houses, with only enough adult supervision to be sure that safety is part
of the process. The houses range from ultra-imaginative super-low budget
projects (using discarded materials such as a mattress innerspring or an
old dresser), to an actual woodframe house whose charm is enhanced by the
fact that it really can be built by children, given a bit of instruction.
This is a wonderful book that offers children adventure and
discovery, and offers the adults who teach them the guidance
needed to convey basic building skills to their students. Happily,
it is again in print. We are delighted to bring it to you.
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Gardening Classes
at the Waldorf Schools
Compiled and written by Rudolf Krause
Spiralbound booklet
$7.00
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Gardening Classes at the Waldorf Schools brings
together collected comments and remarks by Rudolf
Steiner, written descriptions by Karl Stockmeyer,
and written thoughts and advice by the author based
on his many years as a Waldorf school gardening
teacher in Europe. Anyone undertaking to teach
gardening within the context of the Waldorf approach
will find it extremely valuable.
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Hand Bookbinding
A Manual of Instruction
Aldren A Watson
Softbound
$12.95
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Rudolf Steiner established Bookbinding as one of the required classes in the high school curriculum of the original Waldorf School. In his day, this was actually an essential skill for anyone wishing to build a personal library: books were sold in unbound signatures; it was up to the buyer to create a protective (and hopefully beautiful) cover. In our day, Bookbinding is still taught in Waldorf high schools, and although it is no longer a necessary skill, it is a richly rewarding one.
This is one of those how-to books that has everything you could want in it - it will take you and/or your student(s) step-by-step through the basics of bookbinding, and then introduce you to some very elegant techniques as well. Watson details materials and tools, and even offers some history as well. Everything is illustrated with beautiful and clear drawings and explained clearly and completely. I can't imagine anyone not falling in love with bookbinding by the time they finish looking through the book. |
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