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Question:

Cold coming in sliding door part 2!?

Last time my question was: Cold air coming in sliding doors-ideas?I have a slider in my daughter's bedroom, can't seal it off with plastic for the winter b'c hub needs to get out there to shovel the snow off the balcony. I was going to buy fleece to cover the window, just drape it up over the top slider hardware and let it hang down to the floor, that way hub can open it when needed. Do you think the fleece will be warm enough and might it be too heavy? Anyone know of any warm but lightweight materials I could use?So I bought the fleece and made a cute curtain in her 2 fav colors using 15 inch squares sewn together. Now I want to back it with a plastic liner to further cut the draft. (The window is fine, there are no cracks or gaps) Any suggestions on how to attach the plastic to the fleece that won't add too much weight to the whole thing and won't sink thru the fabric and look gross like glue probably would? I can't put the plastic thru my sewing machine. Thanks!

Answer:

You can have the children pour safe things into plastic beakers or container and wear safety goggles while doing it. You can get a color changing temp duck and shoe your kids that the duck stays the same if the water isn't to hot and if it is it changes color. You can put plastic dishes in the sensory table and have your kids pick them up with a oven mit you can set up a sand table with cars and stop light (may want to save for later) You can let the children touch a silicone glove, hard hat, pot holders, work boot and other safety equipment and explain how they keep people in certain occupations safe. i am really trying to think
It's probably to get back at us for hating on them too much lol BQ: Sure BQ2: Maybe?

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