Bang Poster
Here is the first of our onomatopoeic noisy word posters, for BANG. We've made it bright and colourful and tried to show the noise expanding out from the word!
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Here is a useful collection of printable posters to display for 5th November, Bonfire Night, including a set of fireworks "words" and a poster version of "Remember, Remember".
Here is the first of our onomatopoeic noisy word posters, for BANG. We've made it bright and colourful and tried to show the noise expanding out from the word!
This lovely poster really sums up for me the excitement of Bonfire Night! A child is silhouetted against a bonfire in the distance and you can almost smell the fireworks and sparklers!
A big bonfire is often the centre of the public firework displays around the country on Guy Fawkes night - and some still burn a guy too. Here's a photographic poster for your displays or for prompting conversation.
Boom is such a powerful onomatopoeic word and we think this poster captures the BOOM sound perfectly1
Fireworks crackle, and so do campfires and bonfires and sitting room fires. Paper and plastic can crackle too. Crackle is a lovely word to say, and satisfyingly onomatopoeic! Put this CRACKLE poster up in your word corner or for Bonfire Night, perhaps.
Here's a fun poster for Bonfire Night or Fourth of July, with a beautiful background of a sky filled with fireworks! Print with "borderless" settings for best results.
This fun poster shows a London sky filled with fireworks! You can see the London Eye lit up in pink in the middle!
Here is a photographic poster showing a night sky lit up with a wonderful display of fireworks - perhaps at Bonfire Night, or July the Fourth ...
We've tried to make this FIZZ poster look like it is fizzing. What a fun word! What can the children think of that fizzes? A drink? A firework?
Use our gunpowder plotters poster to teach the kids about the men involved in the Gunpowder Plot - most of us have heard about Guy Fawkes and maybe Robert Catesby, but do they know the names of some of the others who were involved? Which part did each of them play in the plot?
Just for fun, here's a printable poster of Guy Fawkes - great for learning all about the real happenings behind Bonfire Night. Of course Guy Fawkes never actually lit the gunpowder! The poster also makes a great front cover for a project on Guy Fawkes or the Gunpowder Plot.
The letters on our POP poster really seem to pop out of the page, and that was our intention! Pop is such a fun word to say, and to spell, and of course it is also onomatopoeic.
Here is a printable poster featuring one of the better-known versions (there are many!) of the Fireworks Night poem or song, Remember Remember. It's a little gruesome, but a fun way to learn about the history behind our 5th November traditions.
Our rockets poster will make a colourful addition to classroom displays for New Year, Bonfire Night, Diwali, July 4th or many other holidays.
This beautiful fireworks scrapbook paper is ready to print and is wonderful for your New Year crafty projects, co-ordinating with the rest of our New Year set. Of course it is also perfect for Bonfire Night, Fourth of July and any other occasion when fireworks come out to play!
Use this stunning scrapbook paper printable in your craft projects or as a poster (add a card with details of your fireworks display, perhaps). You will need the password "ActivityVillage.co.uk" to open and print this paper.
I love this poster, or a little girl wrapped up against a cold November 5th night, enjoying the excitement of a sparkler! What a wonderful memory of children. The poster is perfect for Bonfire Night displays, or perhaps for sparking some conversation...
Sparklers are an essential part of the magic of Bonfire Night fun and can be enjoyed (with care) whether you go to a fireworks display or not. Here's a poster for your displays.
Fireworks are fun but they are also dangerous. If you are not going to an organised fireworks event and plan to set off fireworks of your own, make sure that everyone involved knows all about safety.
Whoosh is one of my favourite onomatopoeic words. You can almost feel the firework whooshing through the sky, or the email whooshing out of your inbox! One minute it is there, and next - whoosh - it is gone!