First graders just love knights. We traced a template, then drew in details. We used silver tempera, metallic watercolors and fabulous embellishments to create our knights. Intruders beware – the castle is safe!
First graders just love knights. We traced a template, then drew in details. We used silver tempera, metallic watercolors and fabulous embellishments to create our knights. Intruders beware – the castle is safe!
These beautiful chalk pastel stencils take only one 40 minute session!
Materials:
Instructions:
Fold the small rectangle in half. Draw a half heart on the fold and cut out.
Now take the stiff brush and brush the colored pastel into the stencil ‘window’.
Lift up the stencil. Students will ooh and aah if they have never tried this process before! Now shift the stencil and repeat the process. Encourage students to overlap.
Now take the positive shape and color the edge with pastel. Place on the background paper, and brush the color outward onto the paper.
We reused our die-cut stencils for three classes. We just colored and colored again around the edges. Tell the students to relax – it’s going to look beautiful.
This method would be very interesting with cut paper snowflakes or doilies.
Minimize the mess: ask students to tap their excess chalk pastel dust onto a piece of newspaper.
What to do with all those used colorful stencils? Try this used stencil collage project. Double the art fun!
This method came from the San Diego Museum of Art 2010 Educator’s Art Fair. The lesson can easily be adapted for all grades K-6.
Need a group art project? 4th grade just completed a pointillism mural based on Seurat’s “Sunday Afternoon at the Island of La Grade Jatte”.
Day 1:
Introduce pointillism. We discussed how Seurat made paintings in a whole new way: instead of blending colors, he placed different colors of dots side by side and let the viewer’s eye mix them.
Close up view:
I passed out some greeting cards with pointillist art and let students examine them closely. They really need to see the art works up close to appreciate how many dots Seurat put in his paintings (tip: pass out magnifying glasses for a close up view). I added some great close-ups to this Seurat Powerpoint (sadly I am not sure who posted this Powerpoint).
Days 2-3:
Group project. I purchased the downloadable pdf mural ‘Sunday in the Park’ from Art Projects for Kids ($8). The pdf contains a 28-piece mural (perfect size for a 4th grade class!) which you print onto cardstock. Each student ‘dotted’ their respective part of the mural, using the coloring guide included in the download.
We carefully assembled the mural by attaching long strips of masking tape on the seams (note: get a helper for assembly!). Bonus: it folds up like a map! Easy to store until the art show.
The kids really enjoyed this project. I did notice there was a lot of variety in the assembled mural – some students made a near-solid dot pattern with almost no white paper showing. Others had sparsely dotted areas. Next year I will use this pointillism practice worksheet from Miss Young’s Art Room blog.
Options:
Want an individual project based on ‘Sunday in the Park’? There is a great post including download on the Practical Pages blog.
Try out different materials for pointillism:
How do you teach pointillism to your students? Leave a comment!
UPDATE 10/17/13:
NEW!!! Pointillism art project – make pointillist FOOD using watercolors, q-tips and markers! AWESOME pointillism video! Click here.
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Pinterest saves the day! My ancient clay cutting wire tool broke in the middle of 5th grade clay today.
Fortunately, I had pinned some great DIY clay tool photos from The Teaching Palette.
I made my wire cutter on the fly from Two binder clips and 26 gauge floral
wire (left over from wire sculpture).
Thanks Teaching Palette for a great blog post. And thanks to Pinterest for a quick way to retrieve it.
I finally made a project from a Pinterest pin!
I made the button stamps, originally from the Martha Stewart website. Here is the pin:
Http://Pinterest.com/pin/274367802268427792/
I used buttons on corks. I used hot glue and the held up just fine with the 2nd grade’s free play clay today.
I also made stamps from cork and some small white fired clay decorations. They made a nice texture as well. Thanks Pinterest!