Admission:
paint a picture of Ohio from 1803 to 1920.
Be sure to stop by Grime Homestead, in particular, for a taste of the short-lived fads and crazes that characterized the 1920s.
Children can sit down for a game of mah-jongg, a game of skill popular at the time, or try their hands at yo-yo tricks. (The yo-yo was introduced to the United States in the ’20s and improved upon in 1929 by Donald Duncan, whose company still makes yo-yos today.) $11 to $17, or free for children 5 and younger; parking: free. 419-4462541, saudervillage.org
Information:
fossils from shale.
$9 to $11, free for children 2 and younger; parking: lots nearby
419-2442674, imaginationstationtoledo.org
Admission: Information:
Families can get in touch with their artistic side with a stroll through the museum. Exhibits include “Framing Fame: 19th- and 20th-century Celebrity Photography” through June 4, and “The Berlin Painter and His World,” an exhibit of ancient Athenian vase-painting by the artist known as the Berlin Painter, July 7 through Oct. 1.
Inspired by the exhibits, children can visit the Family Center, located in the education wing of the museum, where they can make their own works of art in line with the theme of the day.
free; parking:
Admission:
$7
Information:
419-2558000, toledomuseum.org