Tag Archive for 'BunchFest'

BunchFest

Turn Your House Into A Musical Petting Zoo

Make your own music!

Musical petting zoos are appearing in more and more kids’ areas at music festivals. No, elephants and jaguars haven’t learned how to sing a cappella while toddlers pat them, but children can pick up and play with all sorts of instruments, from the didgeridoo to the dulcimer. If your kids are getting bored of just listening to CDs or “borrowing” your iPod, try setting up your very own musical petting zoo, and who knows? They might be asking for djembe lessons for their next birthday.

But your backyard MPZ doesn’t have to feature the exotic collection found at faraway festivals. Has your teenage niece been taking piano lessons for years? She can be in charge of the keyboard station, teaching her younger cousins and their friends the C-scale or letting them “compose” their own songs. Your neighbour the flautist can play a few songs for the little ones, while everyone can take turns thumping out rhythms on that old drum you picked up at Goodwill.

BunchFest

Host a Musical Potluck In Your Backyard

Bringing that festival feeling home…

There are so many awesome music festivals for families in the summer, but sometimes you just can’t drive for hours to hear cool music and dance with strangers who become friends. Still, it’s easy to bring that festival feeling to your own backyard! Just round up your family, friends, favourite food and of course, music. That might sound like a regular backyard barbeque, and maybe it kinda is, but you can still inject the zest of the fest into the smallest of summer get-togethers. Here’s how:

1. Host a potluck on the grass instead of an indoor dinner party or a sit-down barbeque. As well as giving you less work to do, not knowing what’s for dins gives you some of the unpredictability that you find at festivals.

BunchFest

Promote Your Family Band With DIY T-Shirts

Bunchfest wants to help you find ways to help you create that festival feeling right in your own backyard.

You’ve attracted crowds with your fab gig posters, wowed them with your songs and now everyone’s clamoring for a memento. The answer? T-shirts. Everyone likes ‘em, everyone wears ‘em, and when you put ‘em on, way more people know about your band (or your festival). All you need is to make them.

You’ll need:

  • White paper
  • Markers or Fabric Crayons
  • Iron-On transfer paper
  • Scanner/Printer
  • Iron
  • T-shirts (light colours work best)

Steps:

1. Make some decisions! Are the T-shirts for your family band or for your festival? What’s the band/fest’s name? What design do you want to have?

BunchFest

Family Fun at the Hillside Festival

Bunch’s Creative Director Rebecca Brown and her family hit up Guelph’s Hillside Festival this weekend. In addition to being the powerhouse behind Bunch, Rebecca is a stealth photographer extraordinaire, and snapped these pictures of family fun happening around Hillside.

Music’s not the only thing that can turn your world upside down!

 

Baby’s snoozin’, Mama’s groovin’, and they’re both happy!

 

“They are the best band of all time!”

 

Maybe Baby wants sunglasses to fit in with his fam…

 

Music + summer + ice cream… Does it get any better?

 

Dad’s reliving his youth!

 

You don’t have to be a grown-up to rock some pretty sweet tats!

 

We must, we must protect our ears!

 

And finally, give it up for all the Hillside musicians who make the weekend amazing for the entire family!

BunchFest

Make a Gig Poster For Your Family Band

Bunchfest wants to help you find ways to help you create that festival feeling right in your own backyard.

The posters that hang in record shops and music venues serve two purposes: they let you know when awesome shows are happening in your city while providing a pop of colour in an interesting font. Gig posters have become so cool, that fans collect them not only because they’re Arcade Fire superfans, but also because the artwork is stellar. We at Bunch HQ love pretty much anything that comes from Burlesque of North America; they’ve really nailed the gig-poster-as-frame-worthy-art thing. Here’s their booth at Pitchfork Music Festival this year:

If you’re kids are at all rock show or art-inclined, a gig poster is a great activity to kickstart your at-home festival. Bunch families made some really excellent gig posters at the They Might Be Giants show at Luminato this year. We started with four basic patterns: lopsided ovals, squares, starbursts and curvy stripes, and supplied markers and pencil crayons.To make your own…