My friend and I collaborated on this end-of-the-year gift for our boys' teachers in 2013. We had fun putting it together. We mailed 5 questions to each student in the boys' classes and each student wrote their responses and mailed them back along with $5. Then, we alternated the cards with crisp, brand-new $1 bills and bound it with that paint-on adhesive stuff to make a tear-off notepad. The teachers can tear out the money and are left with a fun memory of this year's class! We each had about 2 of 22 cards that weren't returned, but that's not bad, huh!? We delivered them anonymously to the teachers the last week of school. Thanks for a great year, teachers!
Questions:
--This year Mrs. Dardis taught me...
--What I love most about Mrs. Dardis is...
--Mrs. Dardis loves me because...
--Mrs. Dardis lives...
--For lunch, Mrs. Dardis likes...
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Lego Instruction Manuals
Nothing fancy, but it works quite well. The binder on the far right in the picture below is a standard sized binder, 1" thick that can be purchased from basically anywhere. I made the cover and the spine (haha, don't laugh at my weak graphics skills) and just added blank plastic page protector sheets. The large sized manuals and other papers fit in the big binder.
The smaller 2 binders on the left are a small sized binder carried by Office Max. I brought in one of the smaller instruction manuals and was surprised to find this little binder and the page protector sheets for inside and it's the PERFECT size for the smaller manuals. I have the smaller binders separated by Lego City and Lego Creator but I need to add another smaller binder for more City and/or misc.
The one drawback of this system is that there is nothing closing each page protector so if the binder is stored upside down or slid across the carpet, the manuals sometimes slip out the top of the binder.
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