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The easiest way to make kites by hand in kindergarten

The easiest way to make handmade kites in kindergartens is as follows:

Tools/materials: wrapping paper, glue, bamboo sticks, scissors, nylon thread.

1. Take two bamboo strips, draw a point in the middle, draw a point in the middle of one bamboo strip, and draw a point in the middle after the other bamboo strip is taken out.

2. Then, take a thin thread at the intersection of two bamboo strips, tie it tightly and tie a knot. Take bamboo strips, tie them tightly at the top of one millimeter, and tie them tightly at the bottom. Then tie the joint of the two bamboo strips up, down, left and right with thin thread and reinforce them with glue. Complete the kite skeleton.

3. Then glue the kite's skeleton, put the kite face flat on the table, put the skeleton on the kite face, adjust the position, and flatten the kite face and skeleton. Then the tail of the kite will stick the kite face to the skeleton in the above order. Flatten. Finally, draw a kite face or decorate it with paper cuts. The hexagonal wave kite is finished.

Kite introduction:

Kites were invented by working people in ancient China during the Spring and Autumn Period of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, which has been more than 2,000 years since. According to legend, Mo Zhai made wooden birds out of wood, which took three years to develop, and was the earliest origin of human kites. Later, Lu Ban used bamboo to improve kite materials in Mo Zhai. It was not until Cai Lun improved papermaking in the Eastern Han Dynasty that people began to make kites out of paper, called paper kites.

In the Northern and Southern Dynasties, kites began to be a tool for transmitting information. Since Sui and Tang Dynasties, due to the development of paper industry, people began to use paper to paste kites. Flying kites became a popular outdoor activity in the Song Dynasty. Zhou Mi in Song Dynasty wrote in Old Wulin: "People in Ming Dynasty flew kites in the suburbs and returned at dusk." "Kite" refers to a kite. There are vivid kite-flying scenes in Zhang Zeduan's The Riverside Scene at Qingming Festival in the Northern Song Dynasty and Su Hanchen's The Hundred Poems in the Song Dynasty.