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DIY 🌎🪐 MELTED PONY BEADS #shorts

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#atoyday #shorts #meltedbeads #solarsystemcraft #planetsorder #planetsproject
Let's use Perler/Hama (Melted) Beads to create Solar System and learn order of 8 Planets.
We use different color Perler Beads. Perler beads are a fun activity for kids of all ages. They are little plastic beads that you use with a peg-style board to create designs and patterns and when heated with an iron through parchment (baking) paper, perler beads melt together setting the designs permanently. Kids can create a whole pile of fabulous pieces in an array of colors.
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Excellent for the preschool, kindergarten or elementary school lessons.
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How to learn the order of the planets?
Just remember:
My Mercury
Very Venus
Educated Earth
Mom Mars
Just Jupiter
Served Saturn
Us Uranus
Nachos Neptune
But where is Pluto? Pluto is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper belt, a ring of bodies beyond Neptune. Pluto was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930 and was originally considered to be the ninth planet from the Sun. Pluto is very small, only about half the width of the United States, that's the main reason why Pluto was relegated to "dwarf-planet" status by the International Astronomical Union in 2006.
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Let's use Perler/Hama (Melted) Beads to create Solar System and learn order of 8 Planets.
We use different color Perler Beads. Perler beads are a fun activity for kids of all ages. They are little plastic beads that you use with a peg-style board to create designs and patterns and when heated with an iron through parchment (baking) paper, perler beads melt together setting the designs permanently. Kids can create a whole pile of fabulous pieces in an array of colors.
++
Excellent for the preschool, kindergarten or elementary school lessons.
++
How to learn the order of the planets?
Just remember:
My Mercury
Very Venus
Educated Earth
Mom Mars
Just Jupiter
Served Saturn
Us Uranus
Nachos Neptune
But where is Pluto? Pluto is a dwarf planet in the Kuiper belt, a ring of bodies beyond Neptune. Pluto was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930 and was originally considered to be the ninth planet from the Sun. Pluto is very small, only about half the width of the United States, that's the main reason why Pluto was relegated to "dwarf-planet" status by the International Astronomical Union in 2006.
Subscribe: