Piñata-Copter, or, How I Didn’t Eat Enough Paste As A Child

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The Pie and il Principe share a birthday.  Sure, the Pie is now 29 and IP is only 2, but they can still enjoy the festive atmosphere of a birthday party.

And what’s a children’s birthday party without a piñata?  It’s — well, it’s pretty much just a party without a piñata.  But that’s besides the point.

The Pie and I thought that we would combine il Principe’s love of vehicles with his destructive tendencies, and a piñata filled with toys (because this 2-year-old has enough extra energy) was the perfect gift.

First, I spent a peaceful evening with the dog when the Pie was out tearing strips of newspaper.  These are old copies of a certain legal newspaper popular in these parts.  While it’s a very good newspaper, I must admit to a certain satisfaction in tearing up all that legal verbiage.

I also prepared my helicopter rotor blades (I decided that this particular helicopter has six blades, so there), as well as the tail and all the other bits.  I pulled old cereal boxes and such out of the recycling for this.

And I cut up some clear plastic out of the recycling to use as windows.  This is going to be one classy chopper.

So now that you’ve got everything ready, you need to make your paste.  In a bowl, mix together 2 cups flour with 3 cups water.

I like to use a spurtle to stir my paste.  That’s right.  A spurtle.

Mmm, pasty.  Everyone always makes jokes about “that kid who ate paste” in kindergarten, but we didn’t have that.  We did, however, have the girl who, when asked, DRANK (like I’m talking glug-glug-glug) Elmer’s School Glue.  Bleugh.

And now we need ourselves a balloon, which forms the basis for many, many papier-mâché projects.  The last time I did papier-mâché I made an enormous head with a huge nose, cut out holes for eyes, borrowed one of my dad’s fedoras (he also has a large head), stuck a Press Pass in the brim and went around for Hallowe’en as a reporter.  It was a good costume.  I swear.

I attached the tail to the balloon with tape.

Now we paste strips!  Run one side of your strip through the bowl of paste.

Use your fingers to squeegee off the majority of the paste.

Slap that baby on your structure and smooth it down.

Continue with more strips, being careful to slightly overlap each one.

If you need help with balancing your project as you work, why not try propping it up in a bowl for stability?

Once you have finished a complete layer, use your fingers to smooth on some extra paste.

Let that set for a bit to become tacky and sticky.  While you’re waiting you can put paper on your other bits.

For the wheels, for example, I wanted a little bulk, so I dipped a few strips, crumpled them up, and stuck them to the wheel template before wrapping the whole thing in other strips.

Set those aside somewhere to dry.

Repeat the layering steps a few more times, creating three or four layers of paper on your main structure.  The focus should be on creating what will be a hard shell around your balloon.  I tried to add a bit more paper at the bottom of the chopper-balloon to help compensate, balance-wise, for the weight of the tail.

When you have enough paper on your structure, put it somewhere out of the way to dry overnight.  The top of our fridge is as good a place as any.  Plus it’s nice and warm there (our fridge is ANCIENT) and with the current humidity I’m hoping it will give the paste a boost in drying.  

I saved the extra paste, just in case.

Now to clean up!

The fortunate thing about flour paste is you just have to wet it again and it comes off anything really easily.

The Next Day …

Actually, this was two days later.  It was so gloomy and humid that the darned thing just would not dry.So now we get to get around to our painting and assembly.We bought this lovely metallic blue paint at the dollar store and thought it would look good on a helicopter.  It did, but the problem was that it was transparent paint, something the made-in-China label didn’t tell us.  Nor did it tell us that the paint fumes were highly objectionable.  But you get what you pay for of course.Onto plan B, then.  I painted the props and the wheels with the silvery-blue stuff and went off to find a more opaque solution to the plane problem.Thus I came up with India ink.  And ink is awesome because it dries really fast.It's a Secret Part 2Of course, you can still see the metallic paint through the ink, but I figured I would just paint over the quick-dry ink with more metallic paint.

It's a Secret Part 2Mercifully, just as I’d finished, the sun came out, so I left everything to dry for a bit.

It's a Secret Part 2So now we need to cut out a wee hatch through which to insert the prizes.  Using a box cutter, carefully pierce your shell and the balloon underneath.  POP!

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Cut a hole only just big enough for your purposes, leaving a little flap so you can close it up again later.

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There’s that shriveled balloon.  You can throw that out.

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My helicopter is going to have a window, so I measured the “glass” to the side of the chopper.

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Cut out a hole.

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I think I may use the piece I cut out to make a fascinator at some later and unrelated date.

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I fixed the window in place with hockey tape, that lovely universal adhesive.

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I used a paper punch awl to poke holes to hang the suspension wires from.

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You can see that balance is going to be an issue here.  I ended up taping a few rocks into the tail of the chopper to balance it out.

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I stuck the props on.  The wheels refused to stick and were therefore scratched.  Bye-bye b’ys.

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Don’t forget to put your prizes in!

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Then the helicopter needed some accents.  On one side of the tail I painted on il Principe‘s initials and the year he was born, to look like some kind of ID code.

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On the other I did his birthdate (21 July) followed by HB – happy birthday.

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Then I added some dots that represent flashing lights, and blacked out the frame parts of the window.  And yes, I just made up where they went.

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And there you have it.  Il Principe can’t wait to destroy it.

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Author: allythebell

A corgi. A small boy. A sense of adventure. Chaos ensues.

101 thoughts on “Piñata-Copter, or, How I Didn’t Eat Enough Paste As A Child”

    1. Oh man, the Death Star would be so EASY. And you could just set it on something while it dried so the weight of the balloon and stuff would make that little depression. Your husband just lacks my creative juices. 🙂

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  1. The ‘copter turned out great. I hope you decided against letting it get beaten to a pulp. Let the jungle cats and cars race around inside it forever.

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  2. I loved you taking the time to teach us how to make papier mache with photos. I’ve always had trouble making it, because I need to see it done (visual one, here). Congrats on your imagination and determination. I will try my own pinata, following your guidelines!!!

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  3. Oh how I miss the smell of risograph paper and that thick glue paste. Oh – and covering my hands with Elmers glue and peeling it off after it dried.

    Congrats on FP

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  4. Just for the record, the paste in kindergarten tastes way different than the kind you make with flour and water. I won’t tell you how I know that.

    What a fun project!

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    1. That makes sense. I think the balloon is key because it gives you a good shape but once you pop it it’s gone. Maybe make one out of a cereal box but cut out the majority of the cardboard so you’re just left with a frame?

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    1. I would like to see pictures of that. I may have TASTED paste but I don’t remember eating any. I might have blocked that out though. My mother is an artist so I’m sure I ate many worse artistic chemicals.

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    1. I haven’t done it since I was a kid, so I was a little disappointed I didn’t get to participate in destroying this one. Maybe I’ll make another one for MY birthday.

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  5. This is so neat. You did a great job. I once made my son a rooster mask for a school play. I put glue in mine though to make it really hard, but if you want to break it, that would not be a good ideal.

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    1. Apparently il Principe has not ACTUALLY destroyed the copter, because his mother likes the distraction of sticking his toys in the cabin and making him fish them out. The propellers, of course, have fallen off. But if it does eventually meet its doom I will take pictures for sure.

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  6. Great post!

    I remember when a friend of mine had a birthday party for his three-year-old (I came in a Batman outfit for him, but that’s another story). The kids loved Big Bird and they had a Pinata of the character. All of a sudden the poor kid saw his friends beating Big Bird to death with a broomstick and freaked out. He spent the rest of the party walking around sobbing, with Big Bird’s decapitated head under his arm.

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    1. Ooh, do it! I love the A-Team! The Pie and I both have names starting with A and that’s what our friends call us. We even had my brother play the theme as the recessional at our wedding. Too far? Perhaps.

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  7. You have me inspired. Next party I’m making one. I love the photographed step by step guide. I am compiling a list of ‘inexpensive’ and creative activities to do with kids as a bit of a school holiday theme and pinata was on it, and now i have a how-to-do-it. Kia ora, Emily from Aotearoa’s ‘wild & grace’.

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  8. That is great. I decided years ago to make a pinata for the family Thanksgiving get together. I made a turkey. it sounded like a great plan until my sister thought it would be a good idea to put construction papers feathers all over it. So we tried glue, they kept falling off, so then we tried regular tape, it didn’t work. So then we thought being the brilliant women that we are that we would duct tape the feathers on. We did rows and rows of feathers. And it was so full. It looked great! The kids were so excited…they all beat the heck out of it. My Dad beat, it my brothers beat it., my sisters beat it …we beat it and beat it and beat it…. Let me tell you, duct tape is some tough stuff..
    I’m very jealous of your helicopter. 🙂

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  9. This is an extremely creative project! Thank you for sharing your tips with us! I had never thought that it was possible to make your own pinata (but then again anything is possible!). Great job!!! I hope it was a success at the party!

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  10. I remember my best friend’s mom transmitting directions for making papier mache through me. She emphasized that you needed no more than 2-3 layers of paper, tops. But when I told my mom this, she didn’t believe me. A pair of papier mache ballet slippers resulted that were so strong, not only was my dad unable to crack them with a broom, but my sister and I wore them around the house as play shoes for years!

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  11. So cool! My 10 year-old grandson loves to make all kinds of contraptions. I’m going to show this to him and challenge him to make his own. Thanks for the fun inspiration!

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  12. Yours look pretty good. As I child I remember my best friend’s dad making one, it was horrendous! It ended up looking like a nude colored egg and it was so thick no one could break it!

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