After seeing Pokemon terrariums advertised on Facebook and sold through Etsy, I decided to run this program for high school teens. The program itself is relatively simple - place Pokémon miniatures and miniature terrain on a
plastic 100 mm ornament, then seal with tape. No crafting experience is necessary, and the results almost always look impressive.
This is a great program for Pokémon fans and should inspire interest across multiple ages. The challenge, however, is that it requires significant preparation beforehand. The programmer will need to spray paint multiple halves of the plastic ornament, cut out multiple circles of cardboard for the terrain, and ensure hot glue is ready for participants. The program itself should inspire creativity among participants as well as teamwork and helpful critiquing.
Type: Active Age: High school Optimal size: 6-10 Estimated cost: $51 - $100 Planning time: 2-5 hours Frequency: One-time
Below you will find a list of supplies. Please note that the provided links are suggestions and you can very likely find cheaper substitutes if you shop around. The largest cost of the program is the Pokémon miniatures, though you can find cheaper ones than the ones I've listed. Be careful - you get what you pay for with the miniatures so be very careful with what you buy.Supplies:Pokémon Miniatures 100 mm Plastic Ball Ornaments Miniature FoliageCardboardBlack Tape (masking or electrical)Nail FileWire CuttersHot GlueScissorsBlack and White Adhesive FeltLandscaping TerrainWhite Spray PaintOptional:Fake WaterRocksQuartz Crystal Point ShardsPreparation:1. Take apart ornaments and snip off ornament hangers with your wire cutters, then buff the cut spot down with a nail file.2. Spray paint one half of the ball ornaments. These will be the bottom of your "Pokeballs."3. Place one half of the ball ornament on a piece of cardboard and trace a circle. Cut the circle out.4. The circle should be slightly larger than the ornament itself. Trim the edges until it fits snugly inside the white half of the ornament and can be sealed with the top clear half.5. Place the cardboard circle on top of the terrain you purchase and trace a circle. Cut the circle out.6. Hot glue the terrain to the cardboard circle. Rather than do this yourself, you may choose to have your participants hot glue the terrain themselves. This is especially true if you've purchased a variety of terrain.Directions for Participants:1. Select a Pokémon miniature and foliage2. Plan where you will place your Pokémon and foliage3. Poke a hole into the terrain and insert your foliage. If the foliage is loose, reinforce with hot glue. You can use a letter opener, a pair of scissors, or a pen to create the hole.4. Once all terrain has been placed, hot glue Pokémon to the terrain.5. Place the terrain inside the white half of the Pokeball. Seal with the clear portion. You can also hot glue the terrain to the inside of the white half to prevent it from moving around if necessary.6. Seal the Pokeball with black tape. Masking tape will likely crinkle along the edge, so smooth down as you go.7. Cut a larger circle of black felt, and then a smaller circle of white felt. 8. Stick the white felt to the top of the black felt. This is the "button" of the Pokeball.9. Decide where the "front" of your Pokeball is, and then stick the felt button on the black tape.If the adhesive isn't strong enough on the button, simply attach with hot glue.Finally, you can use a ball jar cap as a display to hold your terrarium, or the lid of a jar of peanut butter.
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