Eres una apasionado de Minecraft, y estas cerca de dar una fiesta, estas de suerte, os traemos varias ideas de decoración para Fiesta de Minecraft. Minecraft, es un juego de supervivencia y creatividad, al cual, muchos niños y adultos, están totalmente enganchados, y no es por nada, pero es que es un gran juego, por ello si quieres hacer tu propia fiesta de Minecraft os mostramos varias ideas. A continuación, os dejamos varias ideas de decoración para Fiesta de Minecraft, entre lo que podremos ver, mesas de dulces, centro de mesa, tarta o pastel, dulces, invitaciones, aperitivos, adornos, globos, elementos decorativos y demás elementos típicos de una fiesta. Esperamos que os sirvan de inspiración para vuestra fiesta.
There is none.
Planning a kids' party? Need inspiration? How about a Minecraft-themed party? I've pulled together lots of fun ideas for Minecraft fans to help you plan the perfect event. Let's party!
Animals, Enders, and lots of Creepers to be found in Jaime's Minecraft Birthday Party featured at Kara's Party Ideas. See it all here!
On a weekend around the beginning of May 2009, Notch created the Java Version, the original version of Minecraft. In the TIGSource forum, a community for independent game creators, the game was first made available to the general public on May 17..
Ben jij op zoek naar een leuke, maar makkelijke Minecraft traktatie? Dan is dit misschien wel hét idee waar jij naar op zoek bent. Voor deze Minecraft
Minecraft Enderman Birthday Party Your child loves to play Minecraft and they want a Minecraft birthday party but their favorite character is Enderman. What’s a mom to do? Get busy! Le…
Je kind gek op Minecraft? Dan is er natuurlijk niks leuker dan een Minecraft feestje in stijl! Weet je even niet hoe? Doe hier inspiratie op.
Last week George and I finished up the Minecraft chest. For a project that we stretched out over 7 months, a 10-year old boy was surprisingly patient. I let him make a few of the critical decisions along the way, including how involved to get with the finish. Here's how we made it. First we had to do some research. Steve's chest is a cube made up of 8-bit pixels. Count the pixels and settle on an overall size for the chest and then we could determine the pixel size. We decided a cubic foot would be a good size for a 10-year old boy. The cube-shaped chest is fourteen pixels square, so each pixel would be 7/8" x 7/8". That would yield about 1 cubic foot. We decided early on that we'd keep the project simple for ease and speed. We didn't want to fuss with a bunch of different wood species to capture an exact look. We did want to retain the pixelated 8-bit look, but not so much that the finished piece looked like a prop, hokey or temporary, so we refined some of the elements just a little. We wanted it to look like a piece of furniture. We settled on cherry for the panel's fields, and macassar ebony for the border of each field. Although the border is pixelated, we wanted an uninterrupted border for our chest, both for looks and durability. We joined the border at the corners with butt joints to keep the rectilinear theme. Mitered corners would have looked odd. We started out with cherry veneer, but quickly realized there was a quicker (and better) way to assemble the cherry pixels. We found a wide cherry board (a couple inches wider than the chest) not paying much attention to any color variation within the board. The grain direction is indicated by the yellow arrow. The end grain is the dark end (obviously.) Next we jointed and planed the board to 7/8" thick, then crosscut strips off the end of the board at 7/8" wide. We then rotated some of the strips 90 degrees in an irregular pattern so the face grain on the end of each strip alternates 90 degrees (or not at all), to the adjacent piece. This would mimic the pixels in the 8-bit chest, some of which are identical to the adjacent pixel. We glued this entire assembly together as pictured with epoxy, since many of the joints are face-grain to end-grain. A light pass with a hand plane cleaned up the surface after gluing. Next we ripped 3/32" strips off the edge of the slab, hand-planing the cut edge of the slab after each cut so one side of each strip was smooth. The show face of each cherry "pixel" is entirely face grain. No end grain is visible in the finished piece. Because the original piece of cherry was wide, and contained both flat, rift and quartered grain, the color and chatoyant quality of each pixel varies widely such that the finished piece looks like it was made from cherry of many different shades. In fact, all the cherry on the chest came from one board. After sawing each strip from the edge of the slab, they can be joined edge to edge to form the large panels for each side of the chest. We cut all the strips and intentionally mixed them up in order to create a more random look. We didn't want a butcher-block or checker-board pattern in the finished piece, although we did end up with a little of that here and there (I let George arrange many of the strips hinself, explaining the idea of randomness as we worked.) Here the strips are getting taped together for gluing to the panels. The back side (planed surface) was first assembled with blue painters tape, butting the joints tight. Then the opposite face (the bandsawn surface) was taped with veneer tape. After the veneer tape dried, the masking tape was removed. This would be the glue surface. We made enough for five panels. We glued the panels to 1/2" baltic birch plywood using a friend's vacuum press. We freshened up the surface of each panel with a smoothing plane, working diagonally across the panel to reduce tearing the cross-grain pixels. The box was glued up in one solid cube, then opened on the table saw. We fit the macassar ebony strips by rabbeting each edge, two edges at a time, then applying the ebony with glue and blue tape, the same way you would glue in binding on a musical instrument. This took more time than the cherry, since there were 28 strips to assemble, and we could only do two at a time. I think this took us a week of evenings. But it was worth it. Doing it this way meant we didn't have to fit any butt joints. We simply ran the ebony past each end and planed it flush. Cutting the adjacent rabbet established any necessary butt joints to the previous piece. It was time-consuming, but easy. The "lock" is a solid piece of aluminum that we lapped on a surface plate to 150 grit so it was dead flat on each face. We finished it in clear satin lacquer, which gave it almost a clear anodized look. It functions simply as a lift handle. The lid stay is made from gabon ebony and black paracord. It's attached with socket head cap screws, tapped into the side of the chest. To install the paracord we counterbored the back the ebony bracket and then drilled a through hole of a small diameter, just a tad larger than the paracord. We slipped one end of the paracord through, lit it on fire, then let it burn until it melted into a ball about 3/8" diameter. We extinguished the flame, then pressed the soft ball of molten cord (its nylon) into the counterbore. Once cool, its very hard and can't pull through the smaller hole. We finished the piece with three coats of Tru-Oil, then a week cure, then a rub out with 0000 wool and Watco dark satin finish wax. It's silky smooth.
Je kind gek op Minecraft? Dan is er natuurlijk niks leuker dan een Minecraft feestje in stijl! Weet je even niet hoe? Doe hier inspiratie op.
So I asked my son in January what he wanted to do for his birthday party theme. Of course, I have to start planning months in advance. When he said Minecraft I thought to myself - wow that game is ugly! It looks worse than MS-DOS back in the day! However, my babe wanted it so I had to figure out a way to make it happen! I also had to learn all about the game because the party had to be the most fun any child his age will ever have at a birthday party! That's always my goal anyway. So to start, I designed the invitation. I have to say, it wasn't the prettiest invitation I've ever designed. Minecraft is just not good looking. A quick trip to my local copy store and boom! The complete piece was a fold over invitation on gloss stock with a custom pocket, inserts and a save-the-date frig magnet. Just hours after handing these out I had the responses I was looking for. "Best invitation ever!" "My son can't wait to come!" "Lily is counting down the days until Theron's birthday party!" SCORE! So now, to create favors, schedule his school party, soccer team announcement, decor and decide how the games and party will work! 1. I signed up with Theron's teacher to hold his birthday party at school the Friday before his big party on Saturday. I took green cupcakes, designed cupcake wrappers and cupcake toppers, green bags with custom designed tags, custom notepads, green pencils with "Happy 8th Birthday Theron!" on them and custom wrapped chocolate bars for each child! 2. I had to get my template down for the school rock. Theron looks forward to this every year! I have a reputation to keep up :) I'll post soon about his fishing tournament party! That rock was the best by far! 3. Now to work on the favors for the big party. I always do something for adults and children. I made notepads for all the adults. For the kids I ordered some green canvas bags, made a Minecraft face template and painted the face on each one. I just printed the face on a piece of thick card stock and cut out the face with an x-acto knife. Some black acrylic paint for $.80 cents and a stippling brush for $1.99 and I'm on a roll! I made bags for girls and boys. It included pencils, chocolate carrots (Easter clearance was great!), creeper notepads, chocolate bars, gold (Rolos) and dynamite (Twizzlers) plus fun stuff I picked up at Target and Walmart at the 90% of Christmas sale such as: green hairbrushes, green bounce balls, etc. Oriental Trading company had braided green bracelets and misc items to add as well. Each bag cost about $3.50 total! I designed a thank you tag and all that was left was some green ribbon and a bow! 4. What to wear? We found green t-shirts, aprons and oven mitts which we just applied iron-on Minecraft faces and we were ready to rock! All the "helpers" aka close family members and friends had to be uniformed up! 5. Recording the event! I hired a photographer to come out and shoot the whole thing! Worth every penny! You can get a college or high school kid that is decent with a camera for $50 for several hours if you don't want to go with a pro. Also, I had a sign-in frame that is now hanging in his room. He loves to read it over and over again! Hit up Ikea for a 11 x 14 black frame - $8.99 and grab a matte from Michael's Craft Store, AC Moore or Hobby Lobby. I designed and printed the personalized sign sheet on the copier at work! $15 bucks total! 6. Decor. Honestly this can get expensive. I went cheap and it still looked amazing. I bought a Coleman air pump ($20) and a pack of 30 balloons in each color: green, lime green, black and tan. After they were all blown up (my entire dining and living room was covered) I tied them in bunches of seven or nine and left long tails of ribbon on each set. The day of the party I tied these balloons on all the chandeliers, poles, stairs, front porch railings, etc with some big long pieces of ribbon and a few other paper decor pieces from Oriental Trading company! This makes it look like a million bucks for a little bit of change. These photos don't do it justice. I also made some quick candle wraps and had them set up in several places throughout the party! You can get some fern greenery at your local dollar store! You can kinda see the ferns in the photo below.. Great for extra fluff in the decor. I made a handful of little creeper face tags and etc., and punched a hole in those and tied them on all the candles and pots too. Nice extra touch. Balloons can go up three days in advance inside your home and you can put them up outside a few hours before the event if it's not too hot or cold. They'll stay nice and perky for the party! I made a bunting banner to hang behind his cake with card stock, twine and a hole puncher! I added a touch of green with two table clothes from the dollar store behind the banner. Some streamers from the light to the edge of the table in black and green plus some paper lanterns from Oriental Trading company and the exit favor table was set up! The media room doors (headquarters for the overnight sleepover for all the boys) was perfect for Enderman Minecraft eyes! Just two strips of printed paper and some double sided tape! The ribbon from my Christmas 90% off sale at Target was great for to hang from the banisters and made a great entrance when you walked in the front door. 7. Gift registry time! Honestly this may seem ridiculous but parents seem to really appreciate having a CLUE what to buy for a kids birthday. Theron rocked the Target gun and scanned half the store for his birthday wish list! 8. No party is complete - at least to our crowd, without a bar! All the parents stayed for the party and enjoyed Diamond Martini's in the Blue Diamond Lounge! It was roped off and had comfy seating just for the adults! 5 gallons held us over until almost the very end! Wow! 9. Food - we had hamburgers (cows) hot dogs (pigs) and we had the best time with a candy bar! Blue Diamond row included blue gumballs, blue m&m's from Easter stash and more! Swedish fish for the fish, Twizzlers for the dynamite, Rolos for the gold etc. I made little cards for each! 10. Did I mention decor? I have several folding tables and parties are not complete without table clothes and runners. We had black table clothes and green runners. This place is crazy cheap! TableClothFactory! Do yourself a favor - always get the floor length. It is either the same price or a little more and it looks so put-together and classy when you're done. I hate I didn't get a good photo of the tables all set up with the center pieces. Boo! See the table behind me - that's all I got. 11. What to do with these kids right? Well, we live in the woods in the middle of nowhere so we had the perfect setting all around us. I really had fun at Target's Easter clearance sale a few months prior. I bought all the plastic blue eggs they had in stock for $.10 a bag. Good stuff. So I gathered all the kids on the porch and introduced them to the zombies. Which were my oldest kids and their friends with card stock Minecraft zombie masks on! Paper and ribbon! The kids had to divide into two even teams. My babe's team was one. The other team leader was chosen by who could bring me a rock, leaf and a pine cone first. From there I told the two team leaders to pick their team and if they could do it nicely I wouldn't get involved and choose for them. It went surprisingly smooth! Each team then came up with their own team name. They got to write their team name on a bucket (thank you Dollar Store) and both buckets were set up on "base" which was the back porch steps. Each person had to get as many blue eggs for their team as possible. All of the eggs were hidden in the woods and I had parameters with adults set up so no one would get lost. Plus they didn't care about going too far once they knew the area where the eggs were hid. Some where on the ground, some in the trees, some in bushes - they were all over and hidden for each age. The trick was they could only bring back one egg per person at a time to their team bucket. Picking up more than one egg put them at base with me until they counted to 60. They were also chased by zombies throughout the woods and if tagged, they had to sit at base with me and count to 60 before they could get up. These kids ranged from 6-12 in age and were both girls and boys. Total we had about 26 kids and 4 zombies which worked great. I threw another curve ball in the mix. I found blue diamond eggs that actually looked like the ones in the game. The kids went nuts for them! They were shaped like a gem! If they found one of those they won a prize all their own outside of their team. The winning team got to shop my "prize" table first, which I showed to everyone before the game started so they were pumped. They didn't get to look long. I lifted the sheet, counted to ten and covered the prizes again. At the end of the game, everyone gets something! My prize table is made up of crazy deals I've picked up - nerf guns, balls, toys, etc., plus some Minecraft bracelets, shirts (that we made with an iron-on, candy and much more. To keep the game going with the ultimate energy I would holler from the porch "10 more minutes" "only ten eggs left" "team creeper is winning by two eggs" - I was like the announcer at the ball game! When the game was over - it took about 45 minutes, I brought all the kids that found the GEM eggs and let them have a go at the prize table first. The key was, there was only five seconds per pick. The sheet covered the table after I counted to five! The energy was intense! I did this again per kid and then the whole team that won with the most regular eggs in their bucket got to stand around the table and the whole team got five seconds to pick! It might sound like a hot mess but it worked and worked well. After that the kids were having a blast in the yard with their new toys, water guns and just running around playing in general. 12. Music. If you don't do anything else, get the music right. It sets the mood and the atmosphere for the entire party. I'm thankful that my brother-in-law knows about wiring. We have speakers throughout the house and some outdoor speakers as well. I just programmed all the latest Minecraft music into Grooveshark (free) and hit repeat. I also threw in some great songs from the 80s and 90s between each Minecraft themed song. Made for a great time for the parents too! If you don't have the speakers, an iPod and a iPod speaker stand works too! You can have Grooveshark for your mobile for $9.99 a month and skip spending the money on all those songs with iTunes. 13. Atmosphere. Just like the music, spacing is everything. When I get around to it, I'll show a diagram of the party layout. I placed tents, tables, food and the parents lounge within a certain proximity of each other. Parents were up high on the porch so they could see their kids, yet roped off so the kids would let them relax in comfy chairs outside with a drink in hand. If you were there helping me set up, you might have said, "you have this whole yard? why is everything so close together?" Don't get me wrong, folks could walk around but making it seem a little tight versus spread out can make or break the rocking atmosphere at a party. It didn't look oddly close either. Just right! Think of it like a club. If you walked in a big club and there were 100 people, it might would seem empty and you'd leave but put 100 people in a small bar and all the sudden it's jamming and you're staying! 15. Oh! I also had t-shirt tie-dyeing! Kids signed the matte frame and then the walked over to the tie-dying tent. Shirts for $1-$2 each plus a big Zip-lock bag to write their name on with a sharpie, some washing instructions and we are on a roll! Kids had a blast! I had one of my buddies running the show. It was a fun thing to do until all the kids arrived. There is kind of a lull when you're waiting on everyone to get there and this was a great filler. If I had thought about it, I could have had a creeper face printed on the white shirts. I always think of more ideas afterwards! I also ended up printing him a pillow for his room! I found a fabric pen in the house and we actually used it the pillow for his friends to sign their names on it too. It proudly sits on his bed! What a ham! The big gift. My sweet little brother built a fort in the woods for T's birthday present. He had no idea! I walked him out after the blue diamond egg hunt with a blind fold and showed him his new hang out. I love you darling boy! GO BIG OR GO HOME! :) I love designing custom birthday party themes, invitations, decor, planning the party - all that jazz! If you have a special birthday coming up and want a custom invitation design or anything along those lines, shoot me an email at [email protected]. I hope all of this helped the mom's out there wrestling with party ideas for Minecraft! THANKS!
Je kind gek op Minecraft? Dan is er natuurlijk niks leuker dan een Minecraft feestje in stijl! Weet je even niet hoe? Doe hier inspiratie op.
These summer crafts will keep your kids busy while they're on break or provide you with the perfect seasonal DIY.
Minecraft-Birthday-Banner-Set-1 Divertidos banderines de Happy Birthday para tu fiesta de Minecraft para imprimir gratis. Simplemente descargar imprimes y a colgar! Minecraft_Cupcake_Toppers Wrappers y toppers para imprimir Gratis de Minecraft. Descarga e imprime. Cubo para tu fiesta de Minecraft. Recuerda dar clic a las imágenes antes de guardar para obtener su máxima calidad. Wrappers para cupcakes.
chowvegan.com/2014/07/14/im-minecraft-y/