This week, I've been helping with set design for our summer mission team. I've been on this team for the past few years and each year, we have a different 'theme' to decorate to.
This year, it's 'art gallery'/'art studio'.
For the studio part, we have oversized paintbrushes, crayons, paint palettes, paint cans, an easel...
For the art gallery itself, I've had fun designing random canvases (on cardboard, lids mostly - it's cheaper and we're on a budget) to hang up on the walls. If you want to use cardboard, just make sure you prime them with white first - otherwise you'll get holes in your painting, particularly if your cardboard is 'shiny'.
Hopefully I'll be able to show you once everything's up and done on mission, but I thought this particular one might be a fun, relatively quick activity with a class:
All it involved was basic experimentation with patterns and shape (I just started with random circles...and then began patterns around it), then acrylic to fill out the colour patterns...and finally, it was all outlined with permanent marker.
TIP: Make sure your paint is completely dry before you outline it - so you end up with a clear outline, instead of just scratch marks.
I rather enjoyed putting this one together - it was really random to begin with, but the more I look at it, the more it grows on me. I wasn't sure how it would look at first, but it's pretty ok now :)
MissT
Showing posts with label colour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label colour. Show all posts
Monday, 9 December 2013
Watercolour Weaving
Here's a lesson I did as a casual (or 'sub'), when I was meant to be doing weaving with my Stage 3 (year 5/6) class. This was to be a precursor to them actually doing some wool weaving to create a little mat which would eventually be a bookmark.
This was the first lesson, and I had been told what to do, seen a sample from some other stage teachers...but couldn't find any coloured paper. As they say, necessity is the mother of invention - so we went one step further.
And just quietly, it turned out great :)
Here's a couple of snaps of the weaving half-way through. Unfortunately, I didn't manage to get a picture of the completed products, but that's ok: this gives you a general idea.
This was the first lesson, and I had been told what to do, seen a sample from some other stage teachers...but couldn't find any coloured paper. As they say, necessity is the mother of invention - so we went one step further.
And just quietly, it turned out great :)
Here's a couple of snaps of the weaving half-way through. Unfortunately, I didn't manage to get a picture of the completed products, but that's ok: this gives you a general idea.
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