I started to make a rattle-y toy for my book, but then it got scrapped. Still, I spent quite a bit of time investigating the best way to make the rattle part of the toy and thought I'd share these thoughts.
Make the rattle
Maybe, like me, you've learned the hard way you can't just stick a jingle bell inside of a plush toy. The stuffing compressed around it muffles the bell. My next thought was to stick it inside a plastic container to allow some air around it, but, to my surprise, the jingle bell rolling around inside the plastic egg became a muffled bell, and you could hardly hear the jingle of the bell.
 |
| a jingle bell rattle |
So, for a jingle bell, I found that the best solution is to glue the bell to the plastic egg (
or whatever container you're using. I used the small eggs that come from those 25 cent machines at the laundromat, but you could also use Easter eggs, prescription bottles, tic tac containers, etc.). So I used a strong glue to attach the bell to the lid of the egg - make sure the glue doesn't seep into the jingle bell and glue the little ball down! When its dry you can close the egg and secure it closed however you like - more glue, duck tape, etc. The result is a jingle bell that doesn't roll around and has plenty of air to make a nice jingle.
 |
| a bean rattle |
If you just want a bean rattle, you don't need to glue anything in place, just fill your eggs part way with beans (or plastic pellets, BBs, buttons, etc). Be sure to leave plenty of space so they can move around. Experiment with different materials to see what sounds they make. Then close the egg securely as before.
Inserting it in the toy
First wrap the rattle in a little batting. You can secure the batting around the egg with a little glue, or by whipstitch around it. Stick the rattle in the fullest part of the toy, and be sure that you put stuffing around it on all sides. This helps it get lost inside instead of feeling like a hard lump.
Those are my tips. How do you make a rattle?