Custom printed fabric labels are easy to make using an inkjet printer and freezer paper. Make It Do shows how to do it. Get the tute.
Technorati Tags: sewing, tutorial, custom, fabric, labels, inkjet, printer
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by Anne Weaver
Custom printed fabric labels are easy to make using an inkjet printer and freezer paper. Make It Do shows how to do it. Get the tute.
Technorati Tags: sewing, tutorial, custom, fabric, labels, inkjet, printer
If you’re raising little recyclers, or just trying to get your kids to stop tossing snack wrappers under the couch, Cheekoo and the Cloud of Trash is the picture book you didn’t know you needed.
In this beautifully illustrated and imaginative story, we meet Cheekoo—a young girl who becomes the unhappiest girl in the world when a literal cloud of trash begins to follow her. Orange peels, plastic bottles, buzzing flies—the whole lot! Why? Because Cheekoo never listened when her Amma told her not to litter.
What makes this story so clever is how it transforms a common environmental lesson into a fun, visual metaphor that’s both humorous and powerful. Kids will laugh (and maybe squirm) at the idea of a garbage cloud trailing behind them, but they’ll also get the message loud and clear: our waste doesn’t just disappear.
As Cheekoo starts encouraging others to stop littering, her trash cloud shrinks—giving kids a hopeful reminder that change starts small, and everyone can help. There’s even an educational section at the end that talks about where trash really goes and how to make better choices like reusing bags or waiting to find the nearest bin.
For crafty parents and educators, this book opens the door to all kinds of creative eco-lessons. Try pairing it with a recycled craft project, like making art from clean trash or DIY bins for sorting recyclables. It’s a fun way to reinforce the book’s message while getting hands-on with the kids.
Final thoughts? Cheekoo and the Cloud of Trash belongs on every eco-conscious family’s bookshelf. It’s smart, silly, and wonderfully inspiring—a gentle nudge toward cleaner habits and a greener future.
Perfect for kids aged 4–8.