Posts Tagged ‘toys’

Why Archery Is The Intelligent Sport

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

Archery requires flawless hand-eye coordination and a steady hand. In this situation, a steady hand does not come from not drinking alcohol, but by being so strong that the archer is not straining to draw the string and hold it while taking aim.

Rapid fire archery necessitates fast reflexes You could say that these qualities are desired for other objectives in general life and that may be a fact, but archery is the one sport that requires them all.

Shooting a gun accurately takes some of these skills too, but it does not need great strength and rapid fire is only a question of pulling the trigger or even holding it back. It is the case that when guns were developed, archers looked down on riflemen, because they did not require the same level of training to be good shots.

This is one of the main factors why guns took over from bows. It took 10-15 years to train a long bowman, but just a couple of weeks to train a rifleman. It was compulsory in England and Wales for all men and boys to practice with their longbows at the village butts on a Sunday where they were watched over and instructed by the local sheriff’s militia.

The long bowman was a respected figure, because everybody knew the commitment and skill it took to be an accurate archer. This was not merely a fact in Great Britain, but in each country in the world (except Australia) as far as we know.

Evidence of archery, but not the longbow, has been discovered everywhere from Europe to Asia and some of it goes back 12,000 years, which is a long time for a bit of timber to last, particularly when a broken bow would often have been a household item which could be used on the fire as fuel.

Prior to the proliferation of the bow, huntsmen and warriors used the atlatl (or woomera, in Aborigine Australian), which is a long, grooved stick used to hurl a one-metre long dart at almost 100 mph. There is proof that the atlatl was being used by Homo heidelbergensis 400,000 years ago in contemporary Germany.

The longbow and the flat bow were most frequently used in northern Europe where most soldiers walked into battle as only knights (nobility) had horses. On the other hand, in most other countries, where much of the fighting was done from horseback or from chariots, a shorter bow was used as it was less unwieldy and easier to move across the horse’s neck to shoot left and right.

The longbow and the flat bow were about six feet in length and had a typical draw weight of over 60 lbs but up to 100 lbs, which would fire a three-foot arrow up to 1,000 yards.

The shorter bows were recurve bows and although lighter to draw, it took a significant amount of ability to hit a target whilst travelling at speed on the back of a horse or bouncy chariot.

There are two ways of aiming any bow: by sight and by intuition. In sight shooting, the archer aims down the arrow and lines it up with the target allowing for distance, wind, movement etc, but in intuitive shooting, the archer just concentrates on the target. Intuitive shooting might come after lots of sight shooting practice.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a variety of subjects, but is now involved with the Nerf n-Strike Stampede Blaster. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Smart Toys for Kids.

Mini Remote Controlled Helicopters Are Fantastic Gifts

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

If you are ever stuck for a gift for someone, consider a mini remote controlled helicopter. They sound very expensive and a decade ago they almost certainly were, but they have come down a great deal in cost. I am sure that you will be surprised to know that you can buy a mini radio controlled helicopter for about $30.

What type of RC helicopter can you buy for $30?, you may be asking yourself. Something powered by rubber bands? Well, no, you would be surprised. Contemporary mini radio controlled helicopter have three electric motors. Two of these electric motors drive twin large rotors on top of the helicopter and one drives the rear rotor.

Three micro motors provide plenty of power for these small, 20 centimeter (eight inch) wonders. They are very light, weighing merely a couple of ounces, although they are of metal construction, so they are not as fragile as you might think. Despite the strength of these mini radio controlled choppers, they are subject to air currents, so they are principally for indoor use.

Having said that these micro radio controlled helicopter are primarily for use indoors, you can play with them outside on a fine day, because the signals from the RC transmitter will carry for around 30 feet.

The rechargeable battery in the chopper will drive six or seven minutes of sustained flight. That does not appear long, but the battery can be recharged very easily in 30 minutes.

The batteries in the micro radio controlled helicopters can be charged by three methods: by mains electricity with the AC charger or via the USB cable that is delivered with the chopper. This USB cable will plug into any computer and even into the hand set transmitter and take enough power to fly your helicopter again.

The hand set normally takes four AA batteries, which themselves may be of the rechargeable type in order to hold costs down as low as possible. The transmitter has three channels to control the flight of your mini remote controlled helicopter: up and down; forwards and backwards and left and right. This permits you to place your micro helicopter through some pretty tight manoeuvres.

Two important parts of the innards of the micro remote controlled helicopter are the 32-step speed controller and the gyroscope. The speed controller and the gyroscope automatically coordinate the pitch and speed of the rotors to make flight more stable.

These are great technological devices which make flying the mini radio controlled helicopter easier without detracting from the skill required to fly it in the correct manner.

There is no need to worry about crashing, because there is a full range of spares for the majority of model helicopters - you can purchase everything from spare rotors to motors and batteries. These mini remote controlled choppers are entry-level remote controlled playthings, but are great fun for individuals of all ages.

Flying a mini remote controlled helicopter is also a decent way of finding out whether you would like to take up flying larger radio controlled choppers later on

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a variety of subjects, but is now involved with the Gyro Helicopter S107. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Smart Toys for Kids.

Safe Kids’ Toys

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

We are fortunate in the West, or most of it anyway, because the European Community, north America and Canada have strict laws on how safe kids’ toys should be.

Despite this, there are plenty of unscrupulous people about who will import cheap junk toys that could be hazardous to children, which means that anyone buying children’s toys has to have their wits about them.

Having said that, the larger stores do do their best to weed out the rogue suppliers and in fact most of the unsafe children’s toys are discovered before they go on sale. Be careful in discount stores and open-air markets though.

Once you get your safe kids’ toys home, the time to be careful starts. This is because most injuries in the home involving toys do not happen to the person that the toys were bought for. This is because adults trip over them. The staircase is the worst

The first thing that anyone buying toys must look for is the label. In the United States this is known as the CPSC (Consumer Product Safety Commission) and in Europe it is known as the Certificat European (CE). However, be cautious, because these labels can be faked very easily.

If you are not accustomed to buying toys for children, the next indicator to look for is the age bracket for which the toy is meant. In general the indicator will give 5+ or 7-12, so you still have to use some judgment.

Educational toys are important to children and one of the best of these that you can add to as the child gets older is Lego. Duplo is the kind of Lego that is most suited to very young children.

This is because Duplo building blocks are larger than the normal Lego building blocks so that tiny hands can manage them easily.

One of the biggest risks for very young children is choking. Young children put everything into their mouths but Lego has made these Duplo building blocks too large to swallow.

As your child grows older, you can add to the Lego set right up to adulthood. There are Lego electric motors for teenagers and there are many adults that have carried on using Lego well past their Twenties.

If however your child does have an accident with a toy, you should strive to find out how it happened immediately after seeing to your child.

If the accident was plainly the child’s fault or someone else’s, you can report it if you like, but if the problem came about because of a problem or failure inherent in the toy, you ought to report it.

The first location to report the toy is to the local authorities and then you should inform the manager of the shop where you bought it. Keep the toy until the wheels of bureaucracy turn enough to get around to you

They will come back to you and you may save other children and their parents from going through the same problems that you did.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a range of topics, but is now concerned with the Fisher Price Big Foot Monster. If you would like to know more, please go to our website at Smart Toys for Kids.

A Brief History Of Chess

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

Games similar to chess have been about for at least a thousand years, but there are also board games that could be called chess’ antecedents that go back another 500 years or so.

North-east India seems to have been the place of origin of a game known as ‘caturanga’, which was played on a board with squares even if they were not black and white. The name of the inventor is also lost in the mists of history.

Caturanga was played by monks and the nobility in north-east India in the Sixth Century. Buddha came from Nepal a thousand years before that and it is thought that the monks took caturanga on their pilgrimages to the East. China has a game of chess called xiangqi, but it is uncertain which came first.

Japan has a game called shogi, which is also played on a grid or uncheckeded squares. It appears that traders also took the game to northern Africa where the Persians took it up with passion.

The kings of Persia were known as Shahs and this became the basis of the word for chess in many European countries.

‘Shaxmati’ in Russian, had reached northern Europe by 1000 AD at the latest, but the path into the countries of Europe came from the north and the south. Vikings were playing a kind of chess in Britain in the Eighth Century called ‘Taefl’ or ‘Hnefatafl’.

The game was called ’shatranj’ in Persian and this entered Portugal and Spain with the Arab invasions. However, by 1200 AD, the rules were being altered and by 1475, the game was approximately like the game we know and play today.

Chess became part of a knight’s formal education in strategy. Books and pamphlets on how to play chess began to be published in the late 15th Century.

By the 18th Century, the epicentre of European chess had moved from Spain to France, but by the early 19th Century northern Europe was starting to figure prominently in the beginnings of European Chess Championships.

Chess clubs started to spring up all around Europe in the mid-19th Century. Britain and Ireland were starting to figure prominently in the tournaments. People began buying books on chess and famous chess matches were published so that they could be scrutinized by enthusiasts.

Newspapers were publishing chess games and correspondence games were being played between the London and Edinburgh chess clubs in 1824. However, it took until 1851 before the first modern ‘all comers’ chess championship was staged. It was won by a German called Adolf Anderssen. Anderssen’s aggressive style became the manner of the day.

German players dominated the world chess scene until a Cuban, Capablanca, ruined it for them by holding sway as World Grand Master between 1921 and 1927. Capablanca did not lose a game for three years.

Alekhine, a Russian French player took the title from Capablanca and held it until his demise in 1946, although he lost it for two years to the Dutchman, Euwe.

No changes to the rules of chess have been brought in for hundreds of years.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a variety of topics, but is now involved with the Gyro Helicopter S107. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Smart Toys for Kids.

The Joys Of A G Gauge Train Set

Friday, September 16th, 2011

Have you ever noticed the eyes of a young child whilst they watch a sibling or friend get a train set as a present? They would like to play with it also but cannot because they are too young.

However, there are train sets on the market that the young ones can enjoy as well. The G gauge train set is the perfect choice.

This train set is also a wonderful toy if you are looking for a train to install around your Christmas tree or outside in the garden, but it does require some room.

This train set seldom derails which is why it would be best for younger children. The track is big enough at 45mm that a child could place a car back on it with very little problem. The track is sturdy enough that it would not be hurt if it is trodden on.

There are two sizes of straight and curved track available for the G gauge train set. This train set does have not so many accessories obtainable than most of the other gauges.

However, by shopping around one might find quite a range of engines, cabooses, box and passenger carriages to fit their requirements. There are also landscaping, tunnels, lights, and other items that can be bought to fit this kind of train set.

The cars come in different sizes. The average size is about 17 ?? long by 4 ?? wide by 6 ?? high. There are some that might be shorter or a little longer. The locomotive is around 26.7? long.

Many of the cars and track are manufactured from brass. This is so they will hold up to bad weather conditions and are durable. Brass also makes for easy polishing.

Power is supplied by battery, transformer, or DCC. A battery or DCC can become quite expensive to use. If you decide on the transformer be certain that it is powerful enough to run the locomotive that you buy.

The G scale train set normally comes in a box and finished to be fitted together once it is opened. Other pieces may be purchased to make the set as you want it.

Storage may be somewhat difficult if you decide to set this up in your garden. If you have a shed big enough it could be slid in there without having to take it to pieces. Big totes are a safe manner to transport a train of this size.

There are many manufactures on the market that make this type of train set. Each offers numerous things that could go with this set. Prices vary according to the amount of track and amount of rolling stock and manufacturer.

Looking on the web is a good method of seeing what each manufacturer has to offer and the prices they are asking.

Many of the larger chain shops carry them as do a few the smaller model stores too. A train of this size would keep any child of any age content for hours. It would be a learning experience with the prospect of turning into a life-long leisure pursuit for some.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a variety of subjects, but is currently involved with Polar Express train sets. If you would like to know more about train sets for kids, please go over to our website for some fantastic offers.

Christmas Decoration Projects For Children

Friday, August 5th, 2011

Are you a parent? If so, there is a excellent probability that you already know just how much children like the holidays. That is why you may want to think about letting your children aid you to decorate for Christmas. In fact, in addition to just letting them assist you to hang Christmas ornaments, you may also want to let them make their own handmade Christmas decorations. Not only will you find that there are a number of advantages to doing so, but you will also find that there is a number of fun and exciting Christmas ornaments that they can easily make.

Almost every family that celebrates Christmas has a Christmas tree; therefore, there is a good chance that your family will have one. One fun and exciting Christmas craft that your children could be involved in is making their own Christmas ornaments. Christmas decorations can be made from regular paper or any other type of fabric. In fact, you can purchase a number of Christmas decoration cutouts from your local craft store. These ornament pieces are probably plain, but already shaped like something, such as a star or a cross. It would be up to your child to paint their decoration. This type of Christmas decoration craft project is great for small children or those who may be making their own Christmas decorations for the first time.

In addition to Christmas trees, a large quantity of families have small Christmas pictures throughout their home. These pictures often state a Christmas message or have a picture of Santa. Your children could easily create their own paintings or drawings, often with the materials that can already be found around your home. Your child?s picture would likely look great on your refrigerator or you could even frame the picture and hang it up somewhere. This type of Christmas ornament craft project is ideal for children of any age and it is a great way to save money since you likely already have all of the materials you need.

Another fun Christmas ornament that your children could do is a showpiece for your dinning room table. In fact, you may also want to use that showpiece for your Christmas dinner. If you are looking for a somewhat elegant showpiece, you could easily have your children make their own. You can do this by buying artificial flowers, a large bowl or vase, and other decorative items. Your children can arrange these items to make their own unique centerpieces for your dinning room table. Your child may also be able to create a showpiece in the shape of Santa or a Christmas tree by using stiff paper and a few other small materials.

The above-mentioned Christmas craft ornamentation ideas for kids are just a few of the many that exist. In addition to using your own craft ideas, you can also find a quantity of other fun Christmas craft projects for kids online. You can find a collection of ideas by performing a standard internet search. Also, in your local library or at one of your neighborhood book stores, you may also be able to find a collection of Christmas craft books for children. These books tend to outline the supplies needed, as well as giving detailed directions on how to make Christmas ornaments.

Regardless of which kind of Christmas ornaments you permit your child or children to make, they will probably enjoy the experience, especially if you participate as well. Children like to see their Christmas drawings hanging on walls or their Christmas ornaments hanging on the tree. That is why you are advised to let your children make their own Christmas decorations.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a lot of subjects, but is currently occupied with American Flyer Train Sets. If you would like to know more about train sets for kids, please go over to our website for some great offers.

How To Manufacture Dolls’ Dresses

Friday, July 29th, 2011

A great deal of folk get a real kick out of making dolls’ dresses and other clothes whether they be for their own dolls, a relative’s or for sale. However, as with each hobby or craft there are a few ground rules, a couple of dos and don’ts which will help you enjoy your new hobby straight from the beginning until you gain enough experience to create your own judgments. In this article we will explain the fundamentals of how to make dolls’ dresses.

The first thing to do to make making dolls’ dresses easier is to think that you are manufacturing a new outfit for yourself. This is easier for you because you already know yourself and have improved from making gaffs in the past, but how well do you know the doll for whom you are going to be manufacturing clothes?

If you are making clothes for your own doll or for retail, this is not a problem but if you are making dresses for a friend’s doll, it would be a good idea to see her, hold her and get a feel for her before you purchase any textiles.

You might prefer to get a pattern for a doll’s dress if this is your first one, but you can probably make it up as you go along, or be really professional and create a few sketches with notes first.

This is certainly very handy, because you can modify the pattern in light of experience and make notes about difficult areas. Who knows, once you have twenty of them you might be able to publish them.

The apparatus that you will need to facilitate making dolls’ dresses is basically the same as any tailor or seamstress would need. That is: a sewing machine, pins, needles, shears or a rotary cutter, glue, pinking scissors, thread, tracing paper, pencils and a marking chalk or pen.

You will almost certainly require other items too depending on what you intend , but they could include: ribbons, elastic, sequins and lace. Then you are ready to make your sewing machine for use. If you have not used it for a time, give it a quick service as instructed in the handbook that came with the sewing machine.

See your handbook if you do not know how to set up your machine to pin tuck otherwise look it up on the Net. It is a good notion with some textiles to spray the fabric with starch before you begin this stage.

After you have finished your doll’s dress or even before that stage, you should take into account whether the style calls for any lace, ribbons, embroidery or sequins. You can create or purchase tassels if they are called for.

You can get a great deal of fun out of manufacturing dolls’ dresses for yourself or a niece and the look on their face while they comprehend that you have taken the time to make something so special and unique just for them and their doll is reward enough.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a variety of subjects, but is now concerned with Silver Cross Dolls Prams. If you would like to know more, please go over to our web site at Doll Prams.

Top 10 Christmas Presents For Families

Monday, July 11th, 2011

What do people give for Christmas and are those presents any different from thirty or forty years ago? Obviously, there are games around now that did not even exist thirty or forty years ago. In this piece, I would like to take a look at some of the most well-liked Christmas presents of all time. They are not in any particular order, merely as they occur to me

Number 1: the number one desirable Christmas present for sons and fathers for almost a hundred years is the train set. There have been toy train sets for over a hundred years, but they were too costly for working class households until about the 1950’s. There are still more boys and fathers wanting train sets than mothers and daughters. A decent train set will last decades and rise in value.

Number 2: a rocking horse. All children like rocking horses. Boys and girls; girls seem to retain their fascination with horses longer than boys do, in Europe anyway. This gift has staying power lasting for a number of years even if it is used by many siblings. A good rocking horse can be passed down generations.

Number 3: doll’s houses and toy forts. All children like to play with either a dolls’ house and dolls or a fort and soldiers. A Wendy House and a tree house are in this bracket too. You can see children all over the world building make-believe houses and imitating their parents’ life.

Number 4: dolls; both sexes like to play with dolls of one form or another: teddy bears, rag dolls, action men, Barbie and Ken and toy soldiers are all dolls

Number 5: a doll’s pram is still a firm favourite with young girls - imitating mum transporting her baby about. Similarly toy pedal cars, which are well-liked with young boys and young girls alike.

Number 6: bikes and tricycles are also well-liked with boys and girls of all ages. We seem to all have an early desire to travel at a speed faster than walking pace.

Number 7: board games have been popular for thousands of years. Roman soldiers used to play a game comparable to ludo and chess has been around for roughly as long as that as well. Nowadays, there are hundreds of other board games as well, some of which have become classics already. Some of the board games that have been popular since they were invented are: Monopoly, Scrabble, Cluedo and Risk and there are many more besides that as well.

Number 8: cards. The original games of cards were nearly all gambling games or could be gambled on, but for decades there have been children’s decks of cards meant to make some children’s card games like Snap and Happy Families more simple and more fun.

Number 9: shoot-’em-ups. Boys have always liked shooting. At the outset cork guns or toy bows and arrows or toy crossbows; then air guns, then paint ball and then genuine guns.

Number 10: costumes; Children like to dress up, whether girls dress in mum’s clothing and boys dress as Batman; girls dress as nurses or boys dress as Superman, all kids dress up at some time or other in their lives.

To this list of more conventional toys, you can add the modern number ones like computers and gaming machines, but then they have been about for thirty or forty years already as well.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a variety topics, but is now involved with Silver Cross Rocking Horses. If you want to know more, please visit our web site at Rocking Horses for sale.

How To Pick The Best Material For Your Sewing Project

Saturday, July 2nd, 2011

Up until fifty years ago, the vast majority of women knew how to sew. All the women that I knew as a child sewed and knitted and manufactured some of the clothes for me and my four brothers. When I was eight or nine, I and each other child in my class was taught the fundamentals of knitting and before I went off to college, my mother taught me how to take up my jeans, sew on patches and repair my clothes.

Unfortunately, sewing, knitting and repairing clothes has largely died out in the United Kingdom. I now live in Thailand and I do not see much evidence of sewing or knitting here, so I assume that these arts are dying out all over the world among the masses, although I am certain that there are individuals everywhere who still knit and sew.

It is a real shame. If you are going to make your own clothes or furnishings like cushions, pillows or soft toys, it is quite essential that you select the right fabric for the job. Using the wrong fabric will make your job harder and may even render your work pointless. So here are a couple of tips on choosing the correct cloth for the job in hand.

The first and most obvious thing to do is look at the suggestions on the pattern you are using and if you are a novice take that advice until you know what you are doing. Regrettably, a lot of people do not read the directions anymore. I can not remember the number of times I have seen someone struggling to assemble something and discovered the directions in the bin with the packaging.

Get to know textiles by examining the textiles in the shop. Ask questions about textiles and look at the fabric on the bolt or roll. If the fabric does not look correct on the bolt it probably will not look right anywhere else either. When you unroll a few feet of the bolt, does it lie flat or does it roll up or crumple? Grab a handful and squeeze it. Does it crumple easily? Does it feel correct?

Is the cloth fraying on the bolt? If so it will fray while you use it too. Look on the bolt for special cleaning or handling instructions. Do they suit your requirements?

It is quite difficult to work with satin because it slips easily. T-shirt knit is also difficult because it rolls up on itself. It is probably best to avoid these materials until you acquire some experience

Cotton is the best fabric for beginners because it is easy to work with and everyone is very familiar with cotton goods. We know how they should feel and we can tell good, thick heavy cotton from cheap, thin cotton. We also all know that cotton shrinks. Therefore before you cut you cloth. wash it and cut the shrunken cotton fabric. In effect, you have pre-shrunk it.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a number of subjects, but is now involved with decorative sofa pillows. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Modern Throw Pillows For Sale.

The Two Fundamental Types Of RC Cars

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

Do you like the idea of taking part in a real car race? Lots of people do, but the number of us that have the chance to drive a real racing car is tiny to infinitesimal. Many people would be too frightened to get behind the wheel of a real racing car anyway because the power of these vehicles is really tremendous. However, there is a viable alternative and that is remote controlled car racing.

RC car racing is extremely exciting, but there is scarcely any risk to the driver or the spectators. The rest is all there: thrills, spills, crashes, speed, skids, fires, gambling, etc.. The best drivers and the best builders are well-known within their sport and are treated like mini stars. Some of these RC cars go very fast and they can accelerate and take corners faster than their full-scale counterparts.

There are two fundamental types of RC cars which are differentiated by their power source.

Electric RC Cars: this is the most prevalent sort of RC car, probably because parents buy them for children and a newcomer to the sport may purchase one to see whether he likes it or not.

The largest advantage of the electric RC car is that they are silent, which is a big plus point if your kids use their cars in the garden. It is also vital if you would like to attach a camera or a video recorder to it for filming timid, wild animals like birds.

They are also cheaper than other sorts of model cars and smokeless, which means that you can practice manoeuvres indoors if it is raining.

Some disadvantages are that the batteries of an electric RC car wear down. This means that the car will become slower and that the power of the car will be governed by the power of the batteries not the power of the engine.

Batteries are costly too and rechargeable batteries are very expensive to buy. The batteries may run down when the car is some distance away.

Liquid Fuel RC Cars: there are two types of liquid fuel RC cars: those that run on a special mix known as Nitro and those that run on petrol. These cars are a lot faster than battery cars and they run for much longer too.

They are also cheaper to run. These facts make the liquid fuel RC car the choice of real enthusiasts, racers and car builders alike.

Petrol and Nitro are cheap in comparison with batteries and the quantity that the engines of these cars use is almost irrelevant anyway.

However, they have disadvantages as well. They have an internal combustion engine, so they produce smoke, which means that they must not be used indoors and they are noisy. Most racers would say that this adds to the excitement of a race and they are probably correct.

These model RC cars were meant to race and the public likes to see them doing it.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on many subjects, but is at present involved with remote controlled cars as a hobby. If you have an interest in model or toy RC vehicles, just go over to our website now at 1/5 Scale RC Cars