Friday, May 19, 2017

Beautiful Valentine Craft for Kids: Heart Strawberry

Strawberries are a favorite around here.  The kids could eat them all day, especially during the peek of strawberry season.  Have you tried making fruit leather or dehydrating them?  Amazing, although on their own they are great too.  Today, I’m sharing a simple heart strawberry that is super cute, although admittedly not as tasty as a sweet bowl of strawberries! We were inspired by these adorable Doily Strawberries from Glued to My Crafts. Peppa Pig Coloring Pages


Materials Needed:


  • Red, green, white and black paper
  • Scissors
  • Glue
  • Circle Punch ~ optional, but my kids love using ours!


Instructions:

Start by cutting out a large red heart, 3 smaller green hearts and a few tiny white hearts. Glue all the hearts together and add a stem.  Easy peasy!

You could also add a little character to you strawberry by gluing on a sweet face.  We love punching out circles for our eyes, but goggly eyes would look great too.

Heart Strawberry Card:

We turned our little heart strawberries into sweet cards.  The kids wrote “LOVE U BERRY MUCH” on the inside of the card.  Adorable!  Create a simple backdrop by weaving brown paper to look like a berry basket.  Easy and so cute!

Thunderstorm Art Project for Preschoolers

Incorporate this thunderstorm process art project into your collection of weather activities for kids! This stormy art activity is made using paints and construction paper and is perfect for toddlers, preschoolers, and kindergarteners. Such a fun way to explore color mixing!

Theo, my preschooler, has been very interested in colors. Recently, he asked me why the color gray wasn’t  in the rainbow and where it came from. This seemed like the perfect opportunity for some color mixing! http://everfreecoloring.com

We got out our black and white tempera paints to explore making different shades of gray. We decided our gray paintings looked just like storm clouds, so we added some raindrops and lightning bolts to make these thunderstorm collages!


Materials for Thunderstorm Art


  • Black and white tempera paint (This is my favorite tempera paint.)
  • Paint brushes (This is a nice set for little hands.)
  • White art paper
  • Construction paper in blue and yellow
  • Scissors
  • Liquid glue


Directions for Thunderstorm Art

1. Place some black and white tempera paint onto a paper plate (or any other container for holding paint). mixing black and white tempera paint to make gray Superman Coloring Pages

2. Have your child use a paint brush to paint with both the white and black tempera paint on his/her paper.
mixing black and white paint to make gray. Theo loved exploring all the different shades of gray he could make right on his paper. Paint your entire paper gray.

3. Cut out some blue raindrops and yellowing lightning bolts from construction paper. Glue them to your gray painting to create a thunderstorm!

If your paint is still pretty wet, you can just press the paper pieces right onto the paint. When the paint dries it will hold them in place. Since our paint was already beginning to dry, we used liquid glue to glue our raindrops and lightning bolts onto our paper.

Let your painting dry, and hang it up to enjoy!

Superb Art Project for Kids: Your Imaginative Self

There are so many ways to approach self portraits with children: observation, inspired by a particular artist, symbols of interests and activities, the list goes on. This time, I wanted to create an engaging, multi media self portrait that could be completed in just one session with my little artists. I wanted children to think about what their imagination looks like or feels like. What ideas look like. The materials list for this project is a little long, but that’s mostly because you can take this project in any direction, using such an array of different materials. http://everfreecoloring.com

Before the list, I have to introduce you to my secret art class weapon.. your mind will be blown: actual bingo dotters. The washable kiddo dotters out there are just great, don’t get me wrong. But you’ve got to check these out! They are neon, opaque, and seriously have lasted almost an entire year.. that’s over 50 birthday parties, a summer of camp, and many, many toddler classes. It’s shocking how good they look on so many surfaces, and in so many applications. Highly recommend! P.S. they come with disco ball caps. I peeled the labels off of mine for aesthetic reasons.


Supply List:

~ Watercolor paper, cardboard, or card stock
~ Painter’s tape or masking tape (optional, we used it to make a border)
~ Black and white photo of your child (just printed from your printer onto regular paper)
~ Neon tempera cakes (or watercolors if this is what you have and don’t want to buy the neon cakes)
~ Gold tempera paint
~ Brushes
~ Sunsational Bingo Dabbers
~ Dot markers (if you already own these and don’t want to buy more)
~ Oil pastels or chalk pastels (offered but no one really touched)
~ Collage material
~ Glue stick or school glue
~ A brayer or roller (optional)

So back to this initial prompt (apologies for extra long disco ball dotter love letter), What does your imagination look like? Well, all of ours look different and you’ll see that in these artworks. There’s no right or wrong way to approach this! teenage mutant ninja turtles coloring pages

Process:

Earlier in the day, I had the children pose for a quick photo that I took on my phone and sent to our regular inkjet printer. I let them know we’d be jumping into our own artwork with these photos later. You could definitely also do this with magazine collage or another photo of your child. We started by taping a masking tape border so the artwork would really pop and feel “finished” no matter what technique the artists explored. Some children dotted, others began with paint, everyone immediately took their own path.

Each one truly started to feel representative of that child’s imagination. As the artists worked, we cut out their printed out black and white photos and we played around with where each photo “belonged” in the artwork. Lately, I’ve been into giving a kids a roller or brayer when doing collage or gluing like this. Not only is it fun to roll, but it gives everything an added nudge to stay stuck. After this step, some kids chose to continue to paint or dot around their photo, while others embellished with a little fabric and collage.

Besides a quick gluing and rolling demo, and some tape peeling, I was pretty hands off in this project and the kids were really in the zone, trying all sorts of brushstrokes and playing with the fun collage materials. I did challenge these guys to push their color to the edge of the tape, so the results would be a bit more dramatic.

Here are a few questions to prompt your child:

~ If you close your eyes, what colors come to mind?
~ What lines, shapes, or colors represent your imagination?
~ What would it be like to be inside your artwork? What would it feel like?
~ If your imagination was a place, what would you see?

I tried something similar with another group last summer, I was inspired by a mixed media hat project by Small Fry Studio that included a closeup black and white photo, cropped like this. My students didn’t really latch onto the hat idea (as it happens), but they did love filling the space with imaginative doodles, little bits and bobs, and tons of color! This is what gave me the idea for the What’s Does Your Imagination Look Like? prompt.

I hope you’ll give this project a go. It was so much fun to chat with the artists and learn why they chose each color and brushstroke to represent their imaginations. I have a feeling these will be great conversation starters at home too.