Crafts from plasticine based on Chukovsky's fairy tales. The Good Wizard - Korney Chukovsky

Crafts on the theme of folk tales- a very exciting activity not only for children, but also for adults. Since children love to create something with their own hands, you can use the most different materials. For example, it can be all kinds of decorative elements (buttons, beads, seed beads, multi-colored ribbons), threads, colored cardboard or paper, plasticine, all kinds of cereals and pasta.

Children's crafts on the theme of fairy tales

Basically, children's crafts on the theme of fairy tales You can create it from any available material, but if you are doing a craft with your baby for the first time, it is best to use paper for this. Children love working with paper because they can crush it, tear it into pieces, draw on it, or cut something out of it.

Older children will probably enjoy creating with threads and then decorating them.

For example, from threads you can make an original craft based on the Russian folk tale “Kolobok”.

In addition to threads, to make this you also need: a balloon, scissors, a little plasticine, PVA glue and colored paper. Balloon you need to inflate it to medium size and tie it so that no air comes out of it. Pierce the jar of PVA glue right through and pull a thread through the holes. Place the end of the thread on the ball, and to prevent it from slipping, secure it with a piece of transparent tape. Then you need to carefully wrap the ball with thread dipped in glue. When the entire ball is wrapped in thread, cut the end of the thread and leave the ball until the threads are completely dry. After this, you need to pierce the ball and pull it out through the hole in the threads. When the preparatory work is completed, you can begin the most interesting thing for children - decorating the craft. You need to cut out a circle from colored paper and decorate it with a pompom made from plasticine. This will be the kolobok hat, which can be attached with glue. Also cut out the eyes, mouth and cheeks from colored paper and paste them onto the craft.

They turn out no less beautiful crafts on the theme autumn tale, which are most often made from natural materials. Very simply made from acorns, nuts, chestnuts, various seeds, berries and, of course, bright autumn leaves. Autumn is very rich in such natural materials, and they are stored well for quite a long time, so such crafts can be made in winter.

With your child, you can make a beautiful craft on the theme of an autumn fairy tale from natural materials using applique elements.

For this you will need: a sheet of cardboard (or the base of a cardboard box), leaves, feathers, chestnut shells, glue and plasticine. The basis for such a craft will be a sheet of cardboard covered with leaves. You need to sculpt a bird from plasticine and decorate it with feathers. Place the finished bird on the leaves and glue it for security. Also, for such a craft, you can make funny hedgehogs from chestnut shells and plasticine and glue them to the base.

And how many amazing crafts can be made from ordinary pasta! These could be small Christmas trees, snowflakes, flowers or characters from your favorite fairy tales.

For example, pasta can be used to make wonderful crafts on the theme of Pushkin's fairy tale, namely "The Tale of the Goldfish".

To make such an application, you first need to prepare the background. This can be done very simply, for example, you can take an ordinary landscape sheet and decorate it with blue paint. When the paper is completely dry, you can proceed directly to the application. To make it easier for your child, you can draw on a sheet of paper with a simple pencil sketch a future craft or cut out a fish from colored paper, stick it on the background, and only then decorate it with pasta. For this craft, it is advisable to use small pasta, which can be laid out in the shape of fish scales. To make the applique more accurate, try laying out the pasta pattern first, adjusting it if necessary, and then gradually gluing the pasta to the design. In addition to pasta, you will also need colored paper, from which you need to make a tail and fins for the fish. To do this, you will need to cut out two small semicircles from paper, fold them in the shape of a fan and glue one side to the fish. The tail is made in the same way, only a semicircle needs to be cut out for this. bigger size. To decorate the seabed, you can use shell-shaped pasta, which should be placed at the bottom of the sheet and glued. Algae can be made from colored paper by cutting out a long strip about half a centimeter wide and folding it like an accordion. To make the seaweed threads look more voluminous, they need to be glued not completely, but only at the top and bottom.

More than one generation has grown up reading Chukovsky’s books. The books of this wonderful writer are probably in every family library, and his poems and fairy tales are a constant success among children. long years. That's probably why crafts on the theme of Chukovsky's fairy tales are created especially often.

An interesting idea for a children's craft on the theme of Chukovsky's fairy tales is the children's craft "Moidodyr".

As a basis for this craft, you can use a two-liter cardboard juice box, which needs to be covered with self-adhesive paper. Then cut the top off the box and staple it to the bottom of the box. This way you will get Moidodyr with a sink. Cut three small rectangles from a piece of foam rubber. Paint two rectangles with black paint and glue them to the top of the box. This is how you get Moidodyr’s eyebrows. The third rectangle needs to be glued in the middle, making a faucet. The eyes and mouth can be drawn with paints or felt-tip pens, and the bottom of the craft should be decorated with colored paper. To decorate the sink, ordinary foil is suitable. To make the hands, you need to wrap terry cloth (you can use pieces of an old towel) around the wire and attach it to the sides of the craft. Moidodyr's hair can be made from woolen threads, and a small plastic plate is suitable for a hat.

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Natalia Markina

Works by K.I. Chukovsky have a huge educational, cognitive and aesthetic value, because they broaden the child’s horizons, influence the child’s personality, and develop the ability to subtly feel the form and rhythm of the native language. This creative activity is related to children's works K. AND. Chukovsky contributes to the development of interest in the book.

During the lesson, students get acquainted with the biography of K. Chukovsky, get acquainted with such works as “Moidodyr”, “Fly-Tsokatukha”, “Miracle Tree”, “Aibolit”, do crafts with their favorite characters.

fairy tales"Aibolit"

Exhibition of children's works

Volumetric applique based on fairy tales"Fly-Tsokatukha"

Craft based on fairy tales"Miracle Tree"


Craft based on fairy tales"Moidodyr"


Craft based on fairy tales"Moidodyr"

Volume applique based on fairy tales"Fly-Tsokatukha"


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Nina Chashchina

Who doesn't know famous fairy tales Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky"Fly - Tsokotuha", "Telephone", "Moidodyr", "Cockroach", "Barmaley". All these fairy tales are familiar to each of us from childhood. These works Children love and listen with great pleasure. These are real literary masterpieces for young children, which are still being published to this day. About itself literary writer, poet, translator, the children learned in class. Real name Nikolay Vasilievich Korneychukov. He was illegitimate, because of this life put him in predicament. He was expelled from the gymnasium due to low origin. Chukovsky self-educated, studied English language. He wrote a lot about other Russian authors - Nekrasov, Blok, Mayakovsky, Akhmatova, Dostoevsky, Chekhov. Chukovsky remained in memory, How children's writer. He felt great, understood children, and was a good child psychologist.


Publications on the topic:

Today I decided to show you through a photo report the process of my work on a new didactic game– multifunctional development.

Target. Develop visual and auditory attention, memory, observation, resourcefulness, fantasy, imagination, creative thinking. Shape.

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"Autumn Tale". I love you, autumn, for the unprecedented beauty, for the elegant leaves and belated warmth, for the harvest harvest, the flying cobwebs.

The works of K.I. Chukovsky are of great educational, cognitive and aesthetic value, because they broaden the child’s horizons and have an impact.

Autumn. Beautiful time of the year. Poets write poems about this time of year, artists paint pictures. This year we were especially pleased with autumn.

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More than 130 years ago Nikolai Vasilievich Korneychukov was born, children's poet- Korney Chukovsky, whose poems we have known since early childhood.

“I never had the luxury of a father or even a grandfather.”- Korney Chukovsky, real name Nikolai Vasilyevich Korneychukov.


Information from the Internet:
“Nikolai Korneychukov was born on March 31, 1882 in St. Petersburg. When the boy was 3 years old, his mother and two children moved to live first in Nikolaev, then in Odessa.

Nikolai Chukovsky. Odessa. 1906
His childhood and youth passed in Odessa.
Nikolai’s mother, Ekaterina Osipovna, had no education, and in order to raise her children - a son and a daughter - she hired herself out to wash clothes. The money she received for doing laundry was almost her only income. Ekaterina Osipovna made every effort to give her children an education: the girl entered the diocesan school, the boy entered the Odessa gymnasium
Since childhood, the boy became addicted to reading and began writing poetry early. At the Odessa gymnasium, he met Boris Zhitkov, in the future also a famous children's writer. Nikolai often went to his house, where there was a rich library collected by Boris’s parents.
But he was expelled from the 5th grade of the gymnasium by a decree to free the gymnasium from children of “low” origin.
He independently completed the entire gymnasium course, self-taught English and French, passed exams and received a matriculation certificate.
In 1901, the first article signed “Korney Chukovsky” appeared in the newspaper “Odessa News” under the title “To the eternally young question.”
Then Chukovsky wrote a lot - both articles and feuilletons on the most different topics. This is how his literary activity began.
At the age of 21, he was sent as a correspondent to London, where he lived for a whole year, studied English literature, wrote about her in the Russian press, returning to Russia, published his articles in newspapers and magazines.
But it was his poems and fairy tales for children that made him famous.
Chukovsky himself said that he became a children's poet and storyteller completely by accident. It turned out that his little son fell ill. He fell ill in Finland, in Helsinki. Korney Ivanovich took him home on the night train. The boy was capricious, moaning, crying. To somehow entertain him, his father began to tell a fairy tale. Having started, he himself did not know what would happen next.
Once upon a time there was a crocodile.
He walked the streets
I smoked cigarettes!
He spoke in Turkish -
Crocodile Crocodile Crocodilovich
The boy quieted down and began to listen.
Korney Ivanovich recalled what happened next:
“The poems spoke themselves. My only concern was to distract the sick child’s attention from attacks of illness. Therefore, I was in a terrible hurry... the emphasis was on speed, on the fastest alternation of events and images, so that the sick boy would not have time to moan or cry. So I chattered like a shaman:
And give him as a reward
A hundred pounds of grapes
A hundred pounds of marmalade
A hundred pounds of chocolate
And a thousand servings of ice cream!”
The boy, listening to the fairy tale, fell asleep unnoticed. But the next morning he wanted his father to tell yesterday’s tale again: he liked it so much.

Chukovsky with his son.
Chukovsky began to head the children's department of the Parus publishing house and began writing for children: poetic fairy tales “Crocodile”, “Moidodyr”, “Tsokotukha Fly”, “Barmaley”, “Aibolit” and others.
They listen to Korney Ivanovich with interest, and then very young children read his poems.
In his children's books, he uses folklore forms that children love so much - counting rhymes, sayings, riddles, sayings, comic “nonsense”, for which he came up with his apt name - “shifters”.
He also works as a translator. It is thanks to Chukovsky’s translations that children and teenagers can read in Russian such books as “Fairy Tales” by Kipling, “Robinson Crusoe” by D. Defoe, “Tom Sawyer”, “Huckleberry Finn” by M. Twain, “The Adventures of Munchausen” by R.-E .Raspe, “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” by G. Beecher Stowe, “The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes” by A. Conan Doyle.
In 1928, K.I. Chukovsky’s book “Little Children” was published. The author will continue to write it for 50 years. It will become the prototype of the book “From Two to Five” - an amazing, unique book that both children and their parents have read with pleasure for many decades.”







The Japanese adored Chukovsky: his book “From Two to Five” was published twice in Japan, which Japanese scientists and teachers consider one of the best studies of child psychology. If you have not read “From Two to Five” by Korney Chukovsky, you can easily find this book on the Internet and read it. You will have great fun and, most importantly, you will begin to understand your kids even better.
Key dates in the life and work of K. Chukovsky:
1882 , March 31 (March 19, old style) - born in St. Petersburg.
1885 - Ekaterina Osipovna Korneychukova with her children: daughter Marusya (Maria) and son Nikolai moved to Odessa.
1898 - in the fifth grade he was expelled from the gymnasium “due to low origin.”
1901 , November 27 - the first article in the Odessa News newspaper.
1903 , May 25 - marriage in Odessa to Maria Borisovna Goldfeld.
1904 , June 2 - birth of son Nikolai.

Son of K. Chukovsky Nikolai.

K.I. Chukovsky in Kuokkala with his children. 1910


In the nursery. Nikolai and Lydia with mom and dad, Boba in the arms of the nanny. Kuokkala. 1913
1906 , autumn - the Chukovsky family settled in Kuokkala near St. Petersburg (now the village of Repino).


Family at lunch. Photo by K. Bulla. Kuokkala. 1912


Family of Korney Chukovsky.

Korney Ivanovich - and Kolya, Boba, Lida. Summer 1914
1907 , March 11 - birth of daughter Lydia.
1907 , September 9 - meeting I.E. Repin.


Ilya Repin reads a message about the death of Leo Tolstoy, 1910


Repin's "Penates". Ilya Efimovich (standing second from left) with guests. In the boat - Korney Chukovsky with his wife and children. 1913
1908 - a collection of critical articles by Chukovsky “From Chekhov to the Present Day” was published and reprinted three times.
1910 , June 30 - birth of son Boris.
1911 - the collection " Critical stories", brochure "For mothers about children's magazines", book "About Leonid Andreev".
1916 , September 21 - acquaintance with A.M. Gorky.
1917 , June - fairy tale “Tsar Puzan” for children's performance in Kuokkala.
1917 , autumn - edits the magazine “For Children”, which publishes the fairy tale “Crocodile”.
1918 - The Commission for the Publication of Russian Classics instructs Chukovsky to edit Nekrasov. Work begins at the World Literature publishing house.
1920 , February 24 - birth of daughter Maria (Mura).

Mura Chukovskaya, 1924 Sestroretsk.

Mura Chukovskaya.

Korney Ivanovich with Mura and Tata
“Murochka, Chukovsky’s fourth child, was born on February 24, 1920 in hungry and cold Petrograd. “The long-awaited child, who - the devil knows why, wanted to be born in 1920, in the era of peas and typhus,” her father wrote in his diary. Spanish flu, no electricity, no bread, no clothes, no shoes, no milk, no nothing.
Chukovsky was almost 38 years old, his older children were 16, 13 and 9. He made his living, as they said then, by being a philanderer: he lectured in the Baltic Fleet, in Proletkult, in World Literature, in the House of Arts, at the Red Army University; I read to midwives and police officers, read, read, read endlessly. Rations were given for lectures. These rations fed the entire household: my wife and four children. “No one in all of Petrograd needs more than me,” Chukovsky wrote at that time in a statement to the People’s Commissariat for Education. - I have four children. Youngest daughter - infant. The People's Commissariat of Education is obliged to help me and immediately, if he does not want writers to die of hunger... Help should be immediate and not paltry. It’s impossible for a person who has such a huge family to give an allowance of 10-15 rubles.”
The girl begins to speak. Individuality is already being determined: emotional, sensitive, nervous Murochka is easy to make laugh, delight, amaze, anger, offend; She is very similar to her father - even in that, like him, she sleeps poorly. Laying her down and talking to her during long sleepless nights, he tells her fairy tales. The famous “Crocodile” also grew out of such a charm fairy tale, told to a sick child on the road. Chukovsky and the sick Blok, when he went to Moscow with him, chatted, distracted, talked - and it seemed to become easier for him.
Murka soon became his faithful reader, and then his favorite interlocutor. As soon as she spoke, it became incredibly interesting to be with her. “You know, when it’s dark, it seems like there are animals in the room.” For her, a reader and interlocutor, he put together “Murka’s book,” which she was looking forward to. This book became not only Murochka’s reading: almost all children in the country have been starting to read in Russian for ninety years now from “Murka’s Book”: from “Confusion”, from “Zakalyaki”, from “Kotausi and Mausi”, from “The Miracle Tree” and "Barabek". Murochka Chukovskaya is a sister to all of us from our first books.
He walks a lot with his daughter, runs, shows her the world - animals, birds, people, even a cemetery. Plays school with her, invents countries for her, composes books for her. Marina Chukovskaya, the wife of Korney Ivanovich’s eldest son Nikolai, recalled how Chukovsky played dog with Mura: he led her on a leash, and she barked; the scene shocked passers-by, but both were incredibly happy.
Murochka is his joy. With Murochka he reads Pushkin, Nekrasov, Longfellow, learns letters with her, talks; Murochka appears to him as a fairy: knock, a fairy will appear to you and fulfill your wishes... She appears and fulfills: she makes the bed, takes the dishes out of the room... The diaries show how the spontaneous talent of the wonderful age from two to five to six years is replaced by reflection, artificiality and looking at those around him: Dad, I came up with a children’s word - yummy instead of casserole...


Chukovsky with his youngest daughter Mura. 1925
“Mura took off her shoe,
Buried in the garden:
- Grow up, my little shoe,
Grow up, little one!
Just like washing a shoe
I'll pour some water,
And the tree will grow,
Wonderful tree! ("Miracle Tree")
Mura fell ill at the end of 1929, and in 1930 it became clear that she had bone tuberculosis. The girl was taken to the Crimea, to Alupka, where in the sanatorium of Dr. Izergin tuberculosis was treated with hardening. They didn’t know how to treat him with anything else at that time: they just took the sick to a mild climate and tried to strengthen the body so that it could fight the disease itself... Murochka died on the night of November 11, 1931, she was only 11 years old.”
1923 - fairy tales “Moidodyr” and “Cockroach” are published.
1925 , January-February - publication of “Barmaleya”.
1926 - “Telephone”, “Fedorino’s grief”, the collection “Nekrasov. Articles and materials".
1941 , June - the beginning of the war, work in the Sovinformburo; both sons go to the front.
1941 , October - evacuation to Tashkent; performances in Tashkent schools and clubs.
1942 - work in the Commission for Assistance to Evacuated Children; son Boris went missing at the front; The book “Uzbekistan and Children” was published.
1942 , September-October - trip to Moscow; publication of the fairy tale “Let’s Defeat Barmaley!”
1943 - return from evacuation to Moscow, giving lectures.
1945 - work on a new fairy tale"Bibigon".
1956 - the abridged “Bibigon” and the collection “Fairy Tales” are published.
1957 , April - the 75th anniversary of K. Chukovsky is widely celebrated; he begins construction of a children's library in Peredelkino.
1957 , October - opening of the library.
1965-1969 - six volumes of the Collected Works of K.I. Chukovsky are published.


Korney Chukovsky.


K.I. Chukovsky (read by the author) - “Telephone”.


Korney Chukovsky and Yuri Gagarin. Peredelkino, 1961





K.I. Chukovsky. Oxford. 1962.





Korney Chukovsky walks with children near the children's library in Peredelkino. 1959


Korney Chukovsky among children. 1961









Writer Korney Chukovsky at his dacha in Peredelkino with readers, 1951
When a person reaches out for a book for the first time in his life, it turns out that Chukovsky’s fairy tales are already waiting for him. They are waiting to please, to teach native language and love for native poetry. There, ahead, are waiting for Pushkin, and Lermontov, and Nekrasov, and Mayakovsky, and now he is undergoing a kind of preparatory course great poetry- fairy tales by Chukovsky. These fairy tales have become so firmly entrenched in our lives that it is difficult to even imagine a time when these fairy tales did not exist. Aibolit, Crocodile, Barmaley, Cockroach for us stand next to Baba Yaga, Gray wolf, Ivan Tsarevich, and we don’t even think about the fact that the heroes folk tales It’s been a long, long time, and the heroes of Chukovsky’s fairy tales were born relatively recently. It seems as if both existed together and always...
The first book of my childhood was the fairy tales of Korney Chukovsky. I was 2 years old when my parents gave me a book. Many years have passed and more than one generation has grown up on these fairy tales... The book is already 44 years old and it is still with me!
The book is old, but so dear...

The doll (German, by Elisabeth Bürckner Elsterwerda with the EVE stamp) is also from my childhood, it is even older than the book.

Now the doll has a “French style outfit”, and the doll also has her last outfit from her childhood - a cute sundress.

So in the next part we will look through an old, old book with good fairy tales Korney Chukovsky. To be continued…

More than one generation of children grew up reading the books of Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky. And now this tradition continues. Every child has a couple of books by this wonderful children's writer in their home library.

And so that your acquaintance with Chukovsky’s books is not in vain, we propose to revive their heroes with your own hands! We hope they will good friends for your child! Here are some craft ideas for Chukovsky's fairy tales.

Craft for K. Chukovsky’s fairy tale “Chicken”

Pour a jar of yellow gouache into a disposable plate. We ask the child to dip his hands in the plate and leave handprints on album sheet.

On the back of the orange paper, draw a circle with a compass. Cut it out and glue it to the middle of the sheet, between the prints.

Glue the beak (yellow triangle) into the middle of the circle and draw the eyes and legs of the chicken with a felt-tip pen.

Drawing with applique “Miracle Tree”

On a landscape sheet we draw and color a tree, grass and sky. While the paint is drying, use your imagination and draw various items of footwear and clothing: stockings, shoes, dresses, jackets, etc.

Let's color them ( better with pencils), cut out and glue to the crown of the tree. We glue each item halfway to make the applique voluminous.

Craft “Moidodyr”

The basis of the craft is a 2-liter paper juice box. We cover it with self-adhesive paper. We cut off the upper part of it and attach it to the lower part with a stapler, so that we get a figurine of Moidodyr with a shell.

We cut out 3 small rectangles from the sponge, paint 2 of them black and glue them to the top. These will be the eyebrows. Glue another rectangle to the middle of the muzzle - this will be the faucet spout. Now we draw the eyes and mouth with a felt-tip pen.

We decorate the lower part of the craft with colored paper. We make sink doors out of it. Line the top of the sink with foil.

We make Moidodyr’s hands from a piece of towel. We thread the wire through it and fasten it to the back or into the holes cut on the sides of the box.

We glue woolen threads onto Moidodyr's head. And on top of the threads is a plate for doll dishes.

This is the kind of toy we made from scrap materials!