These are the supplies I bought for the project - 10" wooden circle, clock mechanism, black craft paint and a white paint marker. (FYI, the wooden circle is sold right below the clock mechanism in Michael's and it's perfect because there's already a circle drilled through the center.)
First thing is to paint the wooden circle. I used a 1" foam craft brush and did two coats.
While I painted the back and the edges, I stuck a pencil through the center hole to hold it up. You need to paint the back because the clock mechanism (where the battery goes) sticks out a little which prevents the clock from sitting flush against the wall.
The next step was the most time consuming and that was recreating the math problems in Illustrator. If anyone is interested in a pdf of the file, please feel free to drop me an email. I printed it out exactly to size and then then taped the papers together.
Before I taped it to the clock, I shaded the back of it over the areas I would want to transfer - think old school transfer paper!
Then I just traced over each number and it appeared lightly on the clock face.
I used the white paint marker to pretty much color in the lines and then followed the directions on the clock mechanism to put it all together.
I love that it has a chalkboard feel to it! This is also perfect for a home-school classroom.
Are there any math lovers in your life?
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