No matter how much he practices his roar, Andy's toy Tyrannosaurus Rex is anything but scary. But while he comes up short on fearsomeness, he's got a dinosaur-size heart -- and he makes a dynamite dinner guest. Using the printable template, you can cut pieces from scrapbook paper for your child to piece into a striking prehistoric placemat. When it's done, simply seal the placemat with self-adhesive laminating sheets. Or, you can have it laminated at your local photocopy shop.
Download Rex Placemat TemplatePrint out the template and cut out the pieces. Trace the head, jaw hinge, hind legs, forelegs, and body onto the first shade of green paper, the inner mouth onto the second shade of green, and the underbelly onto tan paper. Cut out the tracings.

Glue the inner mouth onto the head, as shown.

Glue the jaw hinge in place atop the end of the inner mouth. Next, help your child pencil on eyes, nostrils, jaw lines, and teeth, as shown. Then he can trace the lines with marker and color in the teeth and eyes with the correction pen or white paint.

On the hind legs, draw knee lines and wrinkles, and outline claws for your child to color in.
Glue the head onto the body, overlapping the pieces by 1/4 to 1/2 inch (the side edges of the two pieces should line up perfectly).

Glue on the underbelly. Then glue the far hind leg and one of the forelegs to the back of the body and the near hind leg and the other foreleg to the front.
For the placemat, choose a large sheet of scrapbook paper and glue Rex to it. If you don't have paper that's big enough, you can glue paper strips to the ends of a smaller sheet.
Seal the placemat between laminating sheets and it's ready to use.