Jennifer's Free Dollhouse Printables

SNACKS
&

POTATO CHIP BAGS

To save the printable to your computer,

hold your mouse over the image and right click,

select > save image as


 

Grocery Printable Menu

 

 

Laundry Products

Cereal Boxes

Baking Supplies

Canned Food

Snacks

 

Fullpage Grocery 1

Fullpage Grocery 2

Fullpage Grocery 3

Fullpage Grocery 4

Fullpage Grocery 5

Grocery Menu



 

 

 


Animal Crackers

Turned 100 years old 2002!



The OREO® cookie was born in 1912, but no one seems to know for sure where the name came from. Since then over 362 billion of these cream-filled chocolate wonders have been eaten, making them the world's most famous cookie. If all 362 billion OREO® cookies were stacked on top of each other the pile would reach the moon and back more than five times. Now that's a lot of cookies! from

Snack-Facts

Ritz Crackers

Times were tough for Americans during the Great Depression. Few people could afford luxuries or fancy foods, but everyone wanted a great cracker. In 1934, the National Biscuit Company (now Nabisco) tried recipe after recipe before they developed what they knew would be the finest, tastiest cracker on the market.

They named their luxurious, but affordable, cracker the RITZ® Cracker (probably because anything glamorous, classy, or fancy was called "ritzy" back then).

It was popular everywhere - from the most modest home to the elegant Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, where it's still a regular feature on the menu. from

ezinearticles.com

I printed the potato chip bags on regular computer paper.

If you overlap the back about 1/8th of an inch when you glue it, the bags will be the right size. I stuffed the bags with tissue paper before I sealed the top of the bags.

After the bags were all made I sprayed them several times with a high gloss spray. I used ''FolkArt clearcoteHi-ShineGlaze''

When the bags are very dry, you can crumple the bags a bit to make them more realistic.

 

 

Animal Crackers Turned 100 years old 2002!

Over the past 100 years, 53 different animals have lived in the Barnum's Animal Cracker box.

We've bitten off their heads, chomped off their toes and staged circuses on the coffee table — animal crackers are, after all, the No. 1 exception to the annoying "Don't play with your food!'' rule.

from pittsburghlive.com

 

The little potato chips, which you can barely see, are made from polymer clay, translucent with a tiny bit of a gold colored clay.

I applied some tan color powdered eyeshadow to the finished chips. The open bag of chips is lined with tinfoil which is folded over the top of the bag.

 

Fig Newtons

A Fig Newton is a soft cookie filled with fig jam. A machine invented in 1891 made the mass production of Fig Newtons possible.

James Henry Mitchell invented a machine which worked like a funnel within a funnel; the inside funnel supplied jam, while the outside funnel pumped out the dough, this produced an endless length of filled cookie, that was then cut into smaller pieces.

The Kennedy Biscuit Works used Mitchell's invention to mass-produce the first Fig Newton Cookies in 1891
.
from inventors.about.com