Create your own holiday mystery with the Super Secret Decoder Wheel, inspired by Super Secret Jack Spinner, the Specialized Sleuth, and his Mighty Sidekick Zachery, the Kosmic Kid! This fun DIY project lets kids unlock secret messages just like their favorite holiday heroes. Perfect for classroom activities, party games, or family craft time, the Decoder Wheel encourages creativity and problem-solving. Kids will love using their new decoding skills to send festive messages or create personalized puzzles, just like the Mighty Duo!
Get creative with this fun and easy Sponge Painted Snowman craft! Perfect for kids and families, this DIY project uses simple sponges and paint to create a festive snowman masterpiece. A great addition to your holiday crafts collection, it’s ideal for classrooms, home decorations, or as a unique gift for friends and family. Celebrate the winter season with this cheerful, hands-on craft that adds a personal touch to your Christmas festivities.
Create a charming Sock Snowman with this easy holiday craft! Perfect for kids and families, this DIY project turns simple socks into adorable snowmen, making it a fun and festive activity for the Christmas season. Great for holiday classrooms, craft parties, or homemade gifts, this Sock Snowman craft adds a personal touch to your decorations and brings the magic of winter right to your home.
Create a magical Christmas tradition with this Santa's Sleigh Craft! Perfect for kids, this simple yet fun DIY project lets little ones build their own Santa sleigh using easy-to-find materials. Ideal for holiday classrooms, family activities, or festive decorations, this craft brings the North Pole to life and adds a touch of Christmas magic to your celebrations
Bring Santa to life with this fun and easy DIY Santa Paper Plate Mask craft! Perfect for kids, this simple craft lets little ones create their own Santa mask using a paper plate and basic supplies. Ideal for holiday parties, classroom activities, or festive dress-up play, this craft is a great way to get into the Christmas spirit and add some extra cheer to your celebrations!
Christmas is just around the corner… and you’d think at the North Pole, the capital of Holiday Spirit, they’d already be prepping the Christmas trees and decorations. The elves want you to know that they always take time for fall festivities! While it’s true that the elves are already hard at work making toys, Halloween time offers a great opportunity for so much fun! And it can be very useful.
Halloween is a shortened version of All Hallows’ Eve. It was originally abbreviated to Hallowe’en. Hallows means saints, and Halloween is celebrated on the eve of All Saints’ Day. In Celtic celebrations, people dressed up in costumes to scare away or trick evil spirits. If you celebrate Halloween now, you know that dressing up is much more playful in our modern day celebrations. This makes Halloween not only a lot of FUN for the elves… but it offers a very convenient way for the elves to get a jumpstart on that naughty or nice list!
The elves love to dress up and visit different countries to go trick or treating! Not only do they get candy (elves just love sugar) but they can get a up close look at how all of the kids in the world are behaving. Are they sharing their candy? Are they saying thank you? Are they pushing other kids?
So it is a magical night where the elves walk amongst the children of the world. They also like to check on the harvests around the world. Many of our Halloween celebrations can also find roots from a variety of harvest celebrations. Corn, pumpkins, apples, and squash are all part of the autumn harvest, and play big parts in our Halloween celebrations. In fact, did you know that before carving pumpkins, people in Ireland carved turnips and potatoes? They made scary faces to scare off an evil spirit named Jack. And in England they were known to carve beets! When the Irish and British came to America, they began to use pumpkins instead and the Jack O’ Lantern was born.
So the elves also have carving contests. The elves can attempt to use any fruit or vegetable they can find. Some have even tried to carve a tomato… which didn’t come out so well, but it sure gave everyone a big laugh, and made a mess which the elves quickly cleaned up. So when you're out trick-or-treating, be sure to keep an eye out for your favorite elf from the North Pole.
While it’s true that the elves are already hard at work making toys, Halloween time offers a great opportunity for so much fun!
As kids around the world are getting ready to go back to school, the elves at the North Pole are gearing up for their favorite time of year...
August is a very special time at the North Pole. While the elves enjoy the last full month of summer, as the high temperature can sometimes reach up to 41° F, they also start to prepare for the colder months of Autumn and Winter.
Because the elves of the North Pole consider themselves global citizens, they enjoy celebrating all of the national holidays!
Things are really heating up in the North Pole now! In June, the elves enjoy temperatures that can reach up to 38° F!
Welcome to May in the North Pole. The elves are excited because there is usually a big temperature jump in May.
April showers, bring May flowers… But in the North Pole April brings a lot of fun and festive times for the elves. With holidays that celebrate their love of fun and faith, April has it all.
Right now our favorite elves are decorating for St. Patrick’s Day at the North Pole while also starting their spring cleaning and planting. They are dreaming about shamrocks and the sun!
Let’s take a look at some of the holidays our friends celebrate during the “Month of Love.”