Mother Nature's Toy-Shop by Lina Beard
What You Can Do with Them
Wild flowers, like children, are up early. They don't want to lie abed after their long winter's sleep; they want to be awake and see what is going on in the world. While you think it is still winter there is a stirring going on under the blankets of brown earth, and sometimes before the snow is off the ground you may find the little things working up through the stiff soil and opening their eyes to the gentle spring sunshine.
It is remarkable the way the soft, tender sprouts force their way through hard ground that we would have to take a knife or trowel to dig into. But they do it. Not all at once with a great, blustering rush, but gently, steadily, and quietly they push and keep on pushing until their heads are above ground; then they begin to grow in good earnest, and pretty soon they laugh right out into blossom.
The pleasure these earliest wild flowers give us is in going out to look for them and in gathering handfuls to carry home and put into little glass bowls to be "Oh'd" over and wondered at, to be admired and loved because they are lovely, and because they bring some of the sweet outdoors of spring into the furnace-heated house.
They are too delicate and fragile, these anemones, hepaticas, and bloodroots, to be handled and played with, but later come the stronger, sturdier flowers and with many of these you can do all sorts of entertaining things. You don't have to look very far for them either. They are in the fields, by the roadsides, and even along the edges of the streets of a village or small town. You won't find them in the city.
To begin with, there are the daisies. How white the fields are with them! If they are fine, large daisies on tall, strong stems they will reach up to your waist-that is, if you are a little girl. If you are bigger they will come well above your knees. There are a number of things that you can do with them. First, you can make a really beautiful
Daisy Crown
for a May queen, or to wear yourself just for the fun of it.
Fig.1 - Begin the wreath in this way.
Fig.2 - Turn the stem of B under the stem of A
Gather a whole lot of daisies with rather long stems. They will stay fresh longer if you put them into a pail of cool water and let them drink a little before using them; and if they have wilted while you carried them, the water will bring them up again as fresh as-why, as fresh as a daisy to be sure. This is the way to make the crown. It is a new way and a good way.
Fig.3 - Bring B around and in front of it's own upright.
Take one daisy in your left hand and hold it, not upright but in what is called a horizontal position like the one marked A in Fig. 1, then with your right hand hold another daisy upright and place its stem in front of and across the stem of the first, as you see it in Fig. 1.
Fig.4 - Let the stem of B rest on the stem of A
This second daisy we will call B. Now turn the stem of B under the stem of A and up at the back as it is in Fig. 2. Bring this same stem, B, around and in front of its own upright part like Fig. 3. Turn it all the way around the upright part and let the stem of B rest on top of the stem of A. Fig. 4 shows this, but in the drawing the stems are separated a little so that you may see each one plainly. It is something like weaving, you see. And it is weaving of a sort.
Fig.5 - Weave another daisy, C, on the first two stems.
Across the stems of the daisies A and B, two stems this time, place the stem of another daisy that we will call C, and weave it on the first two stems exactly as you wove B onto A (Fig. 5). The stem of the fourth daisy will have to cross three stems, A, B, and C. The fifth daisy-stem will cross four stems, but after that the end of the daisy-stem A will probably have been passed and you will be weaving on the others. It depends upon the length of the stems how many are woven over; sometimes there may be five. It is not well to have more than that number. You can cut a stem off when it seems to be going too far around the crown.
Fig.6 - A new way to make a Daisy Wreath.
Place the daisies close enough together to have their petals touch, or even crowd a trifle, because when the crown is curved and the ends brought together the flowers will separate and leave wider spaces. When you have woven enough daisies to make your crown the proper size to fit your head, cut the last stems off about two inches from the last flower and, with a strong blade of grass or piece of string, tie them to the stem of the daisy A, just back of the flower. Fig. 6 shows what the daisy crown looks like when finished.
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Chapter 1 DAISIES
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Chapter 2 JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT
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Chapter 3 RED AND WHITE CLOVERS
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Chapter 4 CLOVER DESIGNS
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Chapter 5 OTHER WILD-FLOWER DESIGNS
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Chapter 6 PUSSY-WILLOWS
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Chapter 7 ARRANGEMENT OF FLOWERS
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Chapter 8 FAIRY-TREES MADE OF GRASSES
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Chapter 9 A HOUSE MADE OF GRASS
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Chapter 10 GRASS DRESS AND GRASS HEAD-DRESS
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Chapter 11 OAK-LEAVES
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Chapter 12 GRAPE-LEAF DRINKING-CUP
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Chapter 13 GREEN-LEAF DESIGNS
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Chapter 14 PHLOX
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Chapter 15 CULTIVATED FOXGLOVE
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Chapter 16 MISS HOLLYHOCK'S GARDEN-PARTY
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Chapter 17 DAFFODILS
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Chapter 18 SEED-VESSEL PLAYTHINGS
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Chapter 19 BUCKEYE HORSE AND BUCKEYE RIDER
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Chapter 20 BURDOCK-BURRS
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Chapter 21 THINGS TO MAKE OF ENGLISH-WALNUT SHELLS
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Chapter 22 THINGS YOU CAN MAKE OF LIMA BEANS
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Chapter 23 SWEET-POTATO ALLIGATOR AND WHAT TO MAKE OF A RADISH
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Chapter 24 GREEN-PEA TOYS AND A GREEN-PEA DESIGN
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Chapter 25 CORN-HUSKS AND CORN-COBS
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Chapter 26 THE FUNNY ORANGE HEAD
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Chapter 27 APPLES AND APPLE FUN
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