The official Beatrix Potter™ Challenge Badge · 4. Beatrix Potter It is suggested that Rainbows...
Transcript of The official Beatrix Potter™ Challenge Badge · 4. Beatrix Potter It is suggested that Rainbows...
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The official Beatrix Potter™ Challenge Badge
BEATRIX POTTER™ © Frederick Warne & Co. , 2017. Frederick Warne & Co. is the owner of all rights, copyrights and trademarks in the
Beatrix Potter character names and illustrations.
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The official Beatrix Potter™ Challenge Badge
This pack has been written for all sections, please feel free to add or modify
any challenges to suit your unit.
A picture of the badge is above. Badges are £1 each plus p&p and the order
form and branding approval and copyright permission can be found at the
end of this pack.
We advise that you complete risk assessments for any activities you
undertake especially outside your meeting place and remind you that the
necessary child/adult ratios must be in place
Thank you for your support and we really hope that you enjoy completing
the challenge. We would love to receive photos and feedback!
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1st Birmingham Rainbows with kind permission from Frederick Warne and
Co. All images remain copyright and may not be used except in relation to
this challenge without the express written permission of the copyright
owners.
This challenge badge is divided into four sections:
1. Peter Rabbit
2. Jemima Puddle-duck
3. Mr. Jeremy Fisher
4. Beatrix Potter
It is suggested that Rainbows complete 4 challenges one from each of
the first four sections, Brownies complete 6 challenges from the first four
sections and Guides, Senior Section and Trefoil Guild complete 8
challenges including 2 from section 4.
The Books can be ordered from the Penguin Random House website:
https://www.penguin.co.uk/ladybird/friends/peter-rabbit/
If people like this badge, and there is the demand, we may write another
challenge badge using other stories such as Squirrle Nutkin. Do let us
know if you would like this when ordering your badges. If you have a
favourite book you would like us to include please let us know and we
will do our best to include the most popular stories.
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Section 1:
The Tale of Peter Rabbit™
Characters
Peter Rabbit
Mrs. Josephine Rabbbit (Peter Rabbit’s mum)
Flopsy, Mopsy and Cotton-tail
(Peters siblings)
Mr. McGregor (owner of the Garden)
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Section 1: Challenges for Peter Rabbit
• Using a large A3 sheet or bigger make a collage / paint a picture of
the girls version of Peter Rabbits home with his mum and brothers
and sisters in the sand bank underneath the root of the very big fir
tree (include the different rooms in the warren and where everyone
lives and sleeps) you can then display this when completing this
challenge
• Use the instructions of Peter Rabbit’s mum not to go into Mr.
McGregors garden, for a discussion on beliefs and right and wrong
linking back to the promise. In the resource pack are
suggestions for this activity, Why adults might give instructions
like this. What are they trying to do?
• Make a savoury pie (if time is short use frozen ready to roll pastry).
Maybe chicken (recipe in resource section)
• Find a garden space (even a hanging basket or school gardening
space or help someone who can no longer manage their garden)
and plant carrot seeds in with flowers. Plant several different
varieties and see which grow best
• Investigate the competitive world of gigantic vegetable growing.
Carrots can be grown in drain pipes to encourage them to grow
straight. Depending on the time of year any manner of vegetables
can be sown if you can find a wall to lean your drain pipe on. If you
have a local show, enter your vegetables and see if you can win a
prize.
• Taste test a number of different raw vegetables – give each one a
score out of 5. Which is the most popular, which is the least
popular?
• Lay out 10 vegetables or photos of them - How many vegetables
can the girls identify.
• Identify fruits or vegetables which are all the colours of the Rainbow
and colour a Rainbow with pictures of them see resource pack
for a suggestion
• Have a pillowcase with a number of different vegetables in, Give the
girls a set time to “furtle” in the pillowcase and then ask them to
write down all the vegetables they think are in the pillowcase.
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Include a couple of more unusual vegetables to see if they can guess
what they are.
• Play a game of disappearing rabbits. All of the bunnies hop around
the room, when the leader shouts Mr McGregor’s coming all hunch
down on the floor heads in and close their eyes. One girl is then
covered by a blanket or coat. Can the remaining girls guess who is
under the blanket. The person who guesses correctly gets to make
the bunnies hop and shout when Mr McGregor is coming on the
next round!
• Make a vegetable soup, Use vegetables which are in the reduced
section at the supermarket or ask for donations from shops or
parents. Any vegetables will do. You just need veg, water, vegetable
stock and possibly salt and pepper to taste. Have one group make
the soup and another make bread ( there are lots of non=proving
recipes) and then all share a meal at the end of the meeting. Invite
parents to come too for small charge to cover costs or fundraise..
• Invite someone from a local food bank to come and talk to your
unit. In advance ask the food bank what items they are short of and
ask the girls to bring these items to the meeting to donate. (We did
this and the lady was excellent – running interactive role plays and
bringing activity sheets). To increase the number of donations have
a joint meeting with another unit or another section.
• Design a poster or leaflet to advise other girls of your age group
about the benefits of eating lots of vegetables.
• Teach the unit the song “Mr Peter Rabbit had a fly upon his nose”
(words and actions in Resource section)
• Organise a trip to a farm to pick fruit or organise the farm to fork
or healthy eating modules at your local Tesco (there is a GG badge
for taking part in the Tesco programmes)
• Play catch Peter Rabbit.
• Make your own mini or full size scarecrow. If this is not possible ask
companies to donate or the girls to bring in an old CD which can be
decorated and used as a bird scarer. Talk about why farmers use
scarecrows. Some towns have scarecrow festivals. Find out if there
is one happening near you and arrange to go and see all the
entries. If you are feeling brave, why not enter your unit’s
scarecrow and see where you come!
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• Discuss why Mrs Rabbit gives Peter Rabbit herbal tea and his sisters
who listened to their mummy bread butter and fresh blackberries
for their tea. Was she right to do this? Is there a reason why she
used camomile tea? If you were Mrs Rabbit what would you have
done.
• Obtain a number of different herbal teas for the girls to taste and
score out of five. For older girls do not reveal the names of the tea
and see if they can guess what flavour the teas are supposed to be.
• Investigate what else was happening in 1902 when this book was
first published. And display your research in an innovative way.
• Write a book review for Peter Rabbit as if you are a world
renowned book critic.
• Make a wordsearch for another girl in your unit to solve.
• Make a bookmark using some of the images in the resource pack.
And gift it to another girl
• Find pottery or decoupage animals rabbits and decorate them as
brightly as possible.
• Make Rabbit sun catchers with black paper and tissue paper. Older
girls can make suncatchers on acetate with glass outline pens,
tracing a picture underneath the acetate and then filling the
different sections with glass paints.
• Cut out a number of carrot and bunny shapes and have a treasure
hunt. The treasure could be a bundle of carrots with their green
tops on which the girl then swap for a prize. For older girls why not
use this as an opportunity to use tracking skills.
• Make bunny cookies / biscuits and decorate with icing and
strawberry lace whiskers! (recipe in resource pack)
• Adapt a challenge from Rainbow Roundabouts with girls making a
jam sandwich whilst blindfolded and another girl giving them
instructions. Once all the sandwiches are made, cut them with a
large bunny shaped cookie cutter before eating them all up!
• Hold a garden party / fete or tea to celebrate 150 years of Beatrix
Potter (Brownies could obtain their hostess badge) and invite
another unit, parents or a local community group to join you.
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Section 2: The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck™
Characters
Jemima Puddle-Duck
Farmer’s wife
Farm animals, ducks, hens, cows
Mr. Tod (who gives Jemima a place to lay her
egg)
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Kep the Collie Dog (he helps Jemima
escape from the fox)
Kep and the two fox hounds
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Challenges for Jemima Puddle-duck
• As with Peter Rabbit, make duck shaped, biscuits, cookies,
sandwiches.
• Find out what was happeneing in 1908 when this book was first
published? Make a poster showing all of the events you have found
and present them to your unit / six or patrol.
• Jemima Puddleduck’s book was written at the farm Beatrix Potter
bought in 1905 called Hill Top. It is in the lake district. Organise a
unit or division event to visit Hill Top and the Beatrix Potter
Museum.
• Jemima’s eggs are often taken by the Farmer’s wife. Older girls
could investigate the difference between battery hens and free
range hens and organise a formal debate with girls arguing for and
against free range hens becoming mandatory.
• How many egg dishes can the girls name in two minutes? Is egg in
anything they wouldn’t expect (e.g. egg powder is in many quorn
products).
• Teach the girls to poach / scramble / fry or boil eggs. Depending on
the age one to one supervision in the kitchen may be required. Talk
to them about pans, scrambled egg and putting the pan in water
and what difference this might make (preparation for making
breakfast on overnights/ pack holidays / camps etc)
• Using wrapped chocolate eggs have a “duck egg” hunt. To ensure
that all the eggs are not gathered by one or two girls we split them
into teams with a “shopping list of what they are looking for” e.g. 5
cream eggs, 5 packets of mini eggs.
• Use the situation with Mr Gentleman Fox, where he pretends to
help Jemima but really is plotting her downfall, to discuss Stranger
Danger for your age range. What would they have done? What
should they have done? How can they keep themselves safe?
• Talk about the natural world and the food chain. How does this
work? How are animals made to ensure that they are adapted to
being able to predate their prey (where are eyes located, aero- or
aquadynamic, camouflage, sense of smell)
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Section 3: Mr. Jeremy Fisher™
Characters
Mr. Jeremy Fisher
The Stickleback
The trout
The Water Beetle
Sir Isaac Newton and Ptolemy
Tortoise
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Challenges for Mr. Jeremy Fisher
• Using natural material (including a grass roof with buttercups) make
either a collage of or 3D model of a damp little house under the
buttercups for Jeremy Fisher to live in
• Jeremy Fisher likes having his feet wet, organise a unit swim either as
part of a normal meeting or a special event Adults and older girls ould
include a sponsored swim for charity or set a target - in six weeks
time I will be able to swim X lengths ( Roundabout Keep Healthy and
Swimming badges)
• Design a swimming costume incorporating your favourite colours and
one to camouflage Jeremy Fisher from the trout.
• Find out about “old wives tales” concerning how to avoid a cold and
remedies to make you feel better (are any of these backed up by
modern science)
• Create a pond, all you need is a strong washing up bowl, stones
making a slope from the bottom to the top, and a water plant. This will
increase the wildlife in the space / garden massively. Keep a record of
any visitors to your pond.
• Have a fish race (draw fish shapes on A4 paper or cut them out) give
each team different colour fish. Give each team member a fish and
each team a newspaper, they can use it however they like to get all of
their fish over the finish line You can also have one girl / leader as the
frog who will be trying to catch the fish if they come near her (make it
harder by asking her to only move like a frog / toad)
• Design your own umbrella / wet weather clothing to ensure you don’t
have to stay in when its raining.
• Go out in wet weather gear and just enjoy the rain, see how much rain
water you can collect, dance in the rain or whatever the girls want to
do.
• Jeremy Fisher takes ginormous hops down to the pond, Who can jump
the furthest . highest. Try jumping from a standing start and also with a
run up. Which is easier?
• Make a lily pad boat and see whose boat floats the best (you can use
anything from a stream to a paddling pool) If using a stream you could
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adapt Pooh sticks and see whose boat reaches a finish line or is the
first to appear on the otherside of a bridge.
• Jeremy Fisher has a butterfly sandwich for lunch. Putting out a number
of different breads and ingredients first for tasting, and then ask girls to
design the best sandwich they can think of. Ask them to bring the
ingredients next week and make the sandwiches or choose the three
favourite designs and make them the following week.
• Find a local park / nature reserve and go pond dipping. Can you find a
water beetle. Or a stickleback. If you live near the coast go rock
pooling with an Instructor. Draw all the creatures you find.
• Use the behaviour of the shoal of fish to look at kind and helpful
behaviour and why the fish are making fun of Jeremy Fisher.
• Why does Jeremy Fisher let the stickle back fish go? (view BBC Autumn
watch on-line “Google” Si the Stickleback)
• Find out about different types of fish that live in the UK.? Cook and try
a trout or a recipe with trout or another fish (e.g. fish cakes, ). Learn
to identify 5,10,15 different fish depending on your age. (play Kim’s
game with pictures of the fish, or the pairs memory game)
• Ask girls to bring in a number of items, corks, balls, cups, etc and try
and guess which ones will float in a washing up bowl or paddling pool?
Are you right? What happens to the water when something big and
heavy is added? (What happens when you get in the bath?)
• Form a market research group and try out different shower gels or
bath foam. You could decant them into water bottles for a blind test
or scoring could be given for packaging, including how appealing is it,
how practical is it, is there lots of unnecessary packaging, the scent
(does it smell like its name), how bubbly is it? Score them out of 10 for
each category, Older girls might want to write up their reviews as if
for a magazine. (see if you can get their results published)
• Make a rocket with coca cola and mentos to simulate Jeremy Fisher
coming out of the trout like bubbles from soda
• Have a “bubbles “ evening. Make your own bubble mix, experiment,
which mixture gives the best, the most bubbles. Make your own bubble
wands from chenille sticks, make lots of different shapes. Who can
blow the highest bubble, the most bubbles, the furthest bubbles.
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• Either design a new fishing kit for Jeremy Fisher or suggest a new
watery hobby he might want to undertake e.g. canoeing, scuba diving,
water polo. Try out as many as you can!
• Don’t forget to check whether participants need to be able to swim 50
metres to take part, any age restrictions or whether additional
parental / consent is required.
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Section 4: Beatrix Potter™
Beatrix Potter aged 5 at Dalguise, 1871 by Rupert Potter. Image courtesy of a private collector
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Section 4: Challenges related to Beatrix Potter’ s childhood.
• Helen Beatrix Potter was born in 1866 in Bolton Gardens South
Kensington London. Research what this area was like in 1866 and
compare it to where you live or meet now? What are the
differences / similarities. Was your meeting place built? Are there
any buildings you recognise as still being there today?
• Beatrix Potter used to love taking holidays in Scotland and the Lake
District whilst she was growing up. Theme an evening on one of
these . You could ask girls to bring in examples of landmarks,
activities, places to stay things to do and the girls to act as tour
guides for their six, making a map of the area and sticking on
pictures in the right place as the girls visit them. They could stop off
at points on the journey to complete themed activites even in
another meeting such as boating or canoeing on a lake, reservoir or
canal, swimming in a lake or taking part in watersports or
organising a day or night hike in the countryside.
• Beatrix was educated at home by several governesses. Her talent
for drawing was discovered and encouraged. Her first projects were
to re-write / illustrate her favourite fairy tales such as Cinderalla,
Sleeping Beauty and Alice’s adventures in Wonderland. Watch a
film of one of these or ask the girls to either re-write the start or
end of the story (or a signicant scene such as Alice playing chess or
the tea party), re-write a scene as if it is a film and act it out in their
group, patrol or six. Find copies of the stories on line of from the
girl’s bookshelf / kindle, ask them to reimagine and re-draw one of
the scenes, e.g. the ugly sisters trying to get into Cinderella’s shoe,
Cinderella’s ball gown and the glass carriage as she arrives at the
ball. At the end compare how different the ideas are.
• Beatrix loved animals and had a very large number of pets. She had
a hedgehog, rabbits, mice and bats. She and her brother also had a
lot of insects. Arrange a visit to PetsatHome (Brownies get their
Friend to Animals badge – Pet section) to see handle and learn to
care about all their animals. Choose an animal you would like as a
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pet or cuddly toy and make up an adventure story, why not “write”
it as a storyboard as if it is a film or cartoon,
• Make a collection of paper plate animals (lots of ideas on
pinterest), try and make them as realistic as possible (e.g.
hedgehogs could have painted art straws for spikes) or chenille
sticks for antlers or antennae.
• From 1881 - 1887 Beatrix kept a journal where she wrote her
opinions her thoughts and practised her drawing. However she also
wrote it in code which was not cracked unti; 1954. Keep a diary for
a week recording what you did, what you enjoyed, who you saw
etc. Search on-line for the many “codes” either ask the girls to
learn the alphabet in one of them (e.g. braille, morse code,
exchanging letters for numbers) or ask them to decode a short
message in groups using the code and then to write a sentence in
the code for another group to decipher. (e.g. the jewels are buried
under the oak tree!)
• Beatrix produce very accurate drawings of fungi which captured her
imagination. In 1897 she wrote a scientific paper that was presented
to the Linnean Society, however women were not allowed into their
meetings and therefore on 1 April 1887 a male member of the
society presented it. Discussion topic: How do you think this made
Beatrix feel? How did society view women in 1897? Were they
recognised at all in society? Are there any societies still in existence
today who ban women from becoming members?
• Beatrix loved to use watercolour paints. Try to paint a picture in
watercolour maybe a country landscape or a flower or insect. Who
can mix the most different colours? One groups could use
watercolours, one pastels, one chalk, one acrylics and then talk
about the different mediums and how they affected the final picture
• Learn about primary and secondary colours and the colour wheel.
See how many different colour green / pink/ orange items you can
find outside. Can you mix paint that matches that shade in order to
paint it?
• Arrange a trip to one of the living history museums such as the
Black Country Museum and book a lesson in their schoolroom.
Would you prefer to go to school in 1870s or today? What rules
were in place to stop bad behaviour or morale decline? What
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happened if you broke a rule? Do you think these punishments were
more or less effective than the punishments schools are allowed to
use today.
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Order Form
Name:__________________________
Unit __________________________
Section Rainbows / Brownies/ Guides/SS/ Trefoil G
Please send my badges to
______________________ Post Code
This challenge badge is £1 per badge
UK Postage for 1-10 is
UK Postage for 11-30 is
UK Postage for 31-50 is
I would like to order ______badges @ £1 each
Adding Postage and packaging
I enclose a cheque made payable to 1st Birmingham Rainbows. For
___________
Please send your cheques and a copy of this form to 22 Blakemore
Close, Harborne, Birmingham B32 3DZ.
Resource 1: Beatrix Potter Word search
Can you find these words?
JEREMY MR TOD BEATRIX
FISHER WATER POTTER
PETER BEETLE DUCKS
RABBIT MINNOW HENS
MOPSY TROUT COWS
FLOPSY JEMIMA KEP
COTTONTAIL PUDDLE DUCK ISAAC NEWTON
Resource 2: Recipe for Chicken Pie
• Rating: • Serves: 6 • Cook Time: 45 minutes • Prep Time: 20 minutes • Effort: easy
INGREDIENTS
• 200 g dry cured streaky bacon, finely chopped • 2 large skinless chicken breasts, chopped • 150 g petit pois, frozen • 150 ml chicken stock • 150 ml double cream • 50 g parmesan, grated • 320 g all butter puff pastry, at room temperature • 1 egg, beaten, for glazing
TIPS AND SUGGESTIONS Swap the peas or petit pois for shelled broad beans, or small cubes of courgette.
You can also use chicken thighs in place of chicken breasts.
METHOD 1. Preheat the oven to 200C/180C fan/gas 6. Fry the streaky bacon in a large pan until crispy. Add the chicken pieces and
fry until golden all over around five minutes.
2. Add in the peas, stir, and add in the chicken stock. Simmer for a few minutes until some of the stock has reduced. Stir in
the double cream and parmesan cheese. Season well with freshly ground black pepper and let it simmer for five minutes.
Set the filling to one side to cool down a little.
3. Spoon the cooled filling into a 20cm round pie dish. Roll out the pastry and then carefully place it over the filling onto
the pie dish, trimming around any excess pastry from the edge. Press the edges down gently and then brush the top with
egg. Make a small hole in the centre to allow the air to escape.
4. Bake the pie in the oven for 25-30 minutes, until golden and serve.
(courtesy of the goodfood channel)
Resource 3: I can eat a Rainbow
Red strawberry, apple, pomegranates, radishes, cherries, raspberries, tomatoes.
Orange – oranges, pineapples, peppers satsumas, tangerines, peaches, apricots, butternut squash, carrots, mango, sweet potato
Yellow – lemons, melon, sweetcorn, peppers, star fruit
Green – runner beans, peas, apples, pears, lettuce, cabbage, broccoli, advocado, kiwi, grapes, peppers, brussel sprouts, celery, cucumber
Blue - blueberries
Indigo - aubergine Red grapes, red onions, red cabbage
Violet - plums, figs beetroot
Resource 4: Discussion topics / questions on the rights / wrongs of discipline (warning: please check these questions before using them as some of them may not be suitable for some girls)
1. What do you think about withholding a nice meal as a form of punishment for a child? 2. Was this ever used to punish you? Have you ever used it? Why / why not? 3. Do you think Peter would have gone to Mr. McGregors garden if he had known what had
really happened to his dad? 4. How would you explain a dangerous is out of bounds to a a) five year old, b)ten year old, c)
fifteen year old? Would your advice change if the child was a girl / boy? If so why do you think this is?
5. What do you think Peter thought the reasons were his mum had banned him from the garden?
6. Do you think Peter considered that his mum was looking out for him / just spoiling his fun? 7. Do you think Peter’s punishment would have been the same if the book had been written
today? Why / why not? 8. Re-write / re-imagine / re-enact the story from either the perspective of Mrs. Rabbit or
Peter or even Mr McGregor. 9. Why did Mr. McGregor shoot Mr Rabbit? Was this justified? 10. Why did Mr. Rabbit go into the garden? Is it the same reason Mrs McGregor makes him into
a pie – they are trying their best to feed their families on meagre resources?
Resource 5: Words for Little Peter Rabbit had a fly upon his nose Words in grey are the actions. Words to the song are in black. Action: make rabbit ears above head with both hands and wiggle them back and forth. Little Peter Rabibit had a Action : Wave arms as if they are insect wings Fly upon his Action: point to nose Nose. A fly apon his nose, A fly upon his nose (actions as above_ Little Peter Rabbit had a fly upon his nose; Actions as if boxing Biffed and he boffed it Waving arms as if wings And it flew away. Patting where a rabbit tail would be with right hand Powder puff Use fingers to indicate curly whiskers coming from your face And curly whiskers , Powder puff and curly whiskers Powder puff and curly whiskers And he biffed it and he boffed it and it flew away. Repeat verse one. Words can be missed out on subsequent rounds until just actions remain or singing faster and faster, louder and louder etc.
Resource 6: Outline images of Beatrix Potter Characters for Suncatchers
For more Betrix Potter resources and activity sheets,
please visit:
http://www.peterrabbit.com/play/
Re: Branding Approval –
Thank you very much. I promise I will make that clear. It is a full challenge pack that is clearly from our unit and the write up makes it clear too. Helen From: Branding Matters <[email protected]> To: "'[email protected]'" <[email protected]> Sent: Thursday, 15 June 2017, 10:21 Subject: RE: Branding Approval - Second email
Hello Helen Thank you for contacting us. I can confirm that your badge meets our branding requirements, as it contains the name of the challenge, the name of your unit and the correct trefoil. Please do make sure that both people purchasing the badge, and Beatrix Potter license holders are aware that this badge has been produced on behalf of your unit, and in no way does this constitute a partnership with Girlguiding as a whole. Girlguiding itself owns some images given to the association by Beatrix Potter herself, and I would like to ensure that there is a clear distinction between your badge, and the products which Girlguiding has produced. You have obviously worked hard to ensure you have the permission of the licensee for Beatrix Potter, and therefore if they are happy, and the above agreement is clear, we are happy for you to produce the badge. Good luck with your challenge. Best wishes Rebecca Rebecca Marlow Communications and PR Administrator Girlguiding 17-19 Buckingham Palace Road London SW1W 0PT Tel: 020 7834 6242 Ex 2154 www.girlguiding.org.uk
Copyright Permission: Hi Helen Thanks for the email
1. I can confirm that we have given you permission for this project and to create and sell the Official Beatrix Potter challenge badge to the members of the Girl Guides
Very best Thomas Thomas Merrington Creative Director Penguin Ventures