Category Archives: Arts and Crafts

Indian films for children

I want to write about two Indian films for children that may interest those who like to offer their kids a multi-cultural perspective.

behind-the-mirror.jpg I just saw this movie, which has the title Behind The Mirror in English. I was by myself, as Antonia and Mike decided they were too tired to trek to a cinema out of town. It’s probably just as well, as I would recommend it more for older children (10+) and teenagers. It’s a relatively slow moving film that depends on complex ideas and immerses the viewer completely in Indian culture. Really young kids may not get so much out of it, unless they already have some contact with India. This is really a ‘thinking film’, about the loss of ancestral cultures and the mitigated advantages of modernity that affect many of us to various extents. The film also raises interesting questions about the education of children and their autonomy in choosing their own path in life.

I also regretted seeing this film with the French voiceover. I thought it clashed badly with the Indian mannerisms of the actors. But watching subtitled films is obviously a much harder proposition for young children. That’s why the film was voiced-over in the first place: the organiser’s were aiming at the 6+ crowd.

The theme of the film is the clash of cultures between generations. The little boy, Anirudh, has grown up in the big city. His parents both work all hours, and so does he, at school! The father abandoned his ancestral culture, which he’s inclined to see as primitive and backward. But circumstances force him to take his son back to his home town and leave him with his mother for a while. Anirudh is fascinated by the painted havelis and learns that his grandfather was a painter. He aspires to learn to paint and draw himself. This does not fit in with his father’s vision of the boy’s future.

I’d give this film 5 stars as a serious film for older kids, teenagers and adults. Now, you just have to find it!
bal-ganesh.jpg And now for some unashamed enjoyment for younger kids. Antonia and I saw Bal Ganesh at the cinema in India, and we are looking forward to getting the DVD, which is available. Bal Ganesh is a nicely animated film, complete with Bollywood style song and dance, that tells the most popular myths of Ganesh. Most of these can be found easily on the Internet in various places. I don’t know if the DVD comes with English voiceover, but Antonia enjoyed watching it in Hindi, though she had been pre-primed with most of the stories before hand. There are other animated films dealing with aspects of Indian mythology for children, though I hear Bal Ganesh may be one of the best. When I saw it, I was at a loss to understand why a film of this quality wouldn’t be much better known internationally. Having said that, we are talking about fun and a basic education in mythology, not an intellectual experience as in Behind the Mirror.

Just plain disbelief

I don’t believe what my kid is doing!  She came back from the US with a big book of craft projects she chose herself, and she is circling the projects she wants to do in pencil, and cross-referencing the pages that show the finished projects to the pages with the instructions.  She is six and a half, for god’s sakes!  When I was six, I would have cut up the book to make collages with it!

KNL Dragon

 

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Hee, hee, … I get to brag about my miserable accomplishments now! I am working through Robert Lang’s  Origami Design Secrets at the embarassing rate of about a chapter a year.  This is my first origami fold with a graft in it.  A graft is basically where you take a square of paper and fold it in such a way that you have a small square and a medium sized one to work with.  Then you get to do two separate models in the single sheet – in this case the head and the body.  I spent a lot of time thinking this was going to be yet another CPP (Crumpled Piece of Paper), but it looks almost as it should.

dragon-habitat.jpg

Antonia designed a habitat for it, reinventing the reverse fold in the process, not to mention controlled use of the CPOP.

Making a multi-tiered decorated cake for kids

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Antonia’s dream cake looks amazing but it was actually quite easy to make. She’s been on to us to help her make a cake like this for over a year. I can’t believe it took us that long to get round to it and figure out a workable procedure.

Make the tiers

  1. Buy one or more plain cakes from a shop – or make them if you prefer
  2. Make a large, medium and small circle template out of paper and make sure you like the relative proportions and that they fit on your cake
  3. Cut out the circles with a knife and stack them
  4. (optional) we made a double layer for the first tier. We didn’t have enough cake to make the full circle so we cut out two halves from the left over cake, put them together, and filled in any gaps with bits of cake. It worked fine.Make the icing
  5. Make a large batch of icing. To do this, we just whipped up some butter in the mixer, added icing sugar till it tasted right, then a tiny bit of cream to adjust the consistency.
  6. Separate the icing into two or more bowls and add colour/flavour. We stirred vanilla essence into one bowl and melted chocolate into the other. The chocolate icing was too runny at first, but it soon reached the right consistency in the fridge.Decorate the cake
  7. Apply icing to cake as desired. Antonia used a butter knife to apply icing to the top surfaces. Then she used a piping syringe to pipe icing up the sides. She did the white stripes first, leaving a gap for the chocolate ones. In some places, she did all white or all chocolate. After one demonstration, she could do it by herself. The difficulty comes when you want to change colours. The ideal for children would be to have one piping syringe per colour of icing. Otherwise, and adult may need to help with the cleaning.
  8. Apply bought decorations of choice to cake, or candles or any decorations made at home.Last but not least
  9. Eat… but leaving it in the fridge for a few hours hardened up the icing a bit and made it even better.