How To

How to Host an Indian Birthday Party

Member
By Pattie Curran
User-Submitted Article
(2 Ratings)
The author's boys with their friends at an Indian Party
The author's boys with their friends at an Indian Party
Pattie Curran

Hosting an Indian Birthday Party is easy and fun! With a few simple steps, your child will have the party of his life!

Difficulty: Moderately Easy
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  1. Step 1

    Set the party date and send out invitations. I went to a local craft store and bought a rubber stamp that had an Indian print on it, some colorful feathers, construction paper, paint and face paint. This was the beginning of my party planning for the big day. We made colorful invitations with construction paper using the rubber stamp. We also included an Indian feather on the front of the invitation to add a special touch. We let our guests know that they would be learning to shoot a bow and arrow, paint on buffalo skins and making their own headdresses as part of the party fun.

  2. Step 2

    Find items you have at home that fit the theme or purchase them, if possible. We already had a seven foot teepee, Indian costumes and a bow and arrow set. I figured that was a decent start for planning and hosting an Indian birthday party.

  3. Step 3

    Before the party, prepare the crafts for the children, decorate your teepee and get ready for the big day! We stamped the Indian pattern on the teepee, painted the stamped designs and added other hand painted Indian designs on the outside. We cut the strips for the headdress craft and prepared our buffalo skins from paper bags. I ripped large brown paper bags into buffalo skin shapes. I crumpled them and wrinkled them until they looked like buffalo skins.

  4. Step 4
    The birthday boy with his bow and arrow
     
    The birthday boy with his bow and arrow

    On the day of the party,prepare the fun stations. We set the teepee up in the yard and had the craft projects ready for our guests. As each child arrived, they made their own Indian headdress with the rubber stamp, feather, paints and precut headdresses. Once the squaws and braves had their headdresses complete, they moved to the next station we had set up--face painting! Several of my friends volunteered to help with the face painting table, so it made this part of the party go smoothly. Each child painted Indian designs on their face and then headed out to shoot the bow and arrow with my husband. As the children waited for their turn to shoot arrows, they helped me to pick flowers, leaves and grass to make paints for the buffalo skins. We crushed raspberries and blueberries to use as natural paints. The children helped me crush the flowers, leaves and grass using a mortar and pestle and while the kids all ate cake and ice cream, I simmered the plant matter in pots of water on the stove (separated by color). By the time my son opened his gifts, the paints were ready to be used.The children had an amazing time painting buffalo skins with the paints we made from nature.I had several books that included Indian designs to help spark their imaginations. The kids all left the party happy after having a great day pretending to be squaws and braves.

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