KidWatch › Channel Safety › Kidscraftsbythreesisters
Sweet, genuine kid creators making messy crafts together - harmless fun with a few loose ends parents should know about.
Best for ages 6+
This is a channel run by actual kids, which gives it a charm you just don't get from polished adult-produced content. The sisters and their rotating cast of friends stumble through recipes, crack each other up, and occasionally make a total mess of things. It feels real, and kids respond to that.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
This is a channel run by actual kids, which gives it a charm you just don't get from polished adult-produced content. The sisters and their rotating cast of friends stumble through recipes, crack each other up, and occasionally make a total mess of things. It feels real, and kids respond to that.
The content is almost entirely craft and sensory activity tutorials. Think slime, playdough, bath bombs, sand recipes. The girls walk through steps together, bicker a little, giggle a lot, and generally keep things moving. Instructions can be a bit scattered, and some recipes have small inconsistencies, so this is better watched as entertainment than as a precise how-to guide.
The tone is genuinely sweet and age-appropriate. There's no mean-spirited humor, no inappropriate language, and the kids are clearly having fun. It's the kind of channel your child might actually want to recreate stuff from, which means expect a messy kitchen afterward.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The recipe instructions are inconsistent and hard to follow, with one host accidentally adding too much water mid-video. Kids trying this alone could end up frustrated or waste materials following along.
The first step involves boiling water, and while the host briefly mentions getting parental help, the caveat is easy to miss. Young kids may attempt this step without adult supervision.
The channel suggests lemon juice as a substitute for citric acid, which doesn't work the same way chemically and could lead to a failed or unpredictably reactive batch without explaining why the substitution is imperfect.
The recipe calls for saline solution containing boric acid, which is a common slime activator but worth noting for parents of very young children who may put slime in their mouths.
Subscribe and like reminders are scattered throughout the video, including mid-tutorial, which is a little heavy on the engagement prompting for a kids' channel.
What Parents Should Know
Watch the craft videos with your kids the first time so you can catch any steps that need adult help, like boiling water or handling chemical ingredients.
Keep in mind the recipes aren't always precise, so treat them as a starting point rather than a strict guide and have extra supplies on hand.
Check any ingredient substitutions the hosts suggest before attempting them, since some of the swaps aren't chemically equivalent and could affect the result.
If your child uses slime activators containing boric acid, make sure young kids wash their hands thoroughly and aren't putting the slime near their mouths.
Talk to your kids about the subscribe and like reminders woven into the videos so they understand that's just part of how YouTube works and not something they need to act on every time.
This channel is a genuinely good starting point for getting kids interested in hands-on making and science, just plan for the mess ahead of time.
Recommended for ages 6+.
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