Thursday, August 25, 2011
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Art Planning Book
It is so hard to find the perfect art planning book with my crazy schedule. So for the past two years I have made one. My fellow art teacher, Martha, actually gave me the idea. If your school has a book maker, Docubind, you are in luck.
- I used a 12x18 piece of white copy paper and design what each week looked like. I did not include teachers names, nor dates. I usually just write those in. they change after each nine weeks for me.
- I design this with pencil first and then sharpie.
- Then I get copies made in the office
- see below
Then cut 2 sheets of poster board little bigger (13x19)for front and back cover
- This is our book maker.
- You will need a plastic spiral thing, that will bind your book. That fits in the top and with lever on left pull down to open spiral up.
With scrap paper I check to see wear the holes will be punched out. The long lever on right does this. It usually takes several tries to get the holes in just the right place, the middle not to far on one side. This machine is used alot by other teachers for different size projects. Practice first.
Practice paper. Holes just in the right spot.
Put your plan book pages in docubinder and punch holes. Not to many in at one time. It took me three times for 40 pages.
- Place cover, then pages, and other cover in spiral.
- Pull left lever to close spiral
- decorate cover and make it your own.
Saturday, July 16, 2011
Water Color Jelly Fish





I began the lesson talking about jelly fish and their shape. I actually drew this on the board. Curved at the top and wavy at the bottom. The inside of this shape was to be painted with lots of water color, puddles inside. Then they were to hold the paper up and watch the paint drip down to the bottom. Note: have something underneath to catch the water color. Some times it took at bit of tapping of the paper to make the watercolor run.

Student were asked to paint 4 or 5 jelly fish on their paper. I demonstrated how to stagger the fish to fit all on the paper.
Next: after all fish are on the paper using a small fish paint more tenticles down to the bottom of the paper to make the drips that were made. It is fine if the paint mixes a little. This adds creativity. See below
Next BUBBLES. Dip brush is water color, wip and tap, tap , tap specks on the paper. travel around the paper with these. Use different colors.
For the final step wait a couple of minutes for paint to dry. Using oil pastels draw more tenticles lightly. If the jelly fish is green use a green pastel. See below
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Kinder Self Portraits
This is such a great lesson because it teaches several important concepts . It takes about 3-4 days to complete but it is worth it.The emphasis at Kindergarten is on:
Personal experience and/or imagination
Exploring a variety of media to develop fine and gross motor skills
Learning care and use of tools and equipment
Following safety rules
Family, five senses, counting, and retelling stories in pictures
Learning about a variety of artists and art forms, including architecture
Art elements - color, shape and line
These concepts are taught with this portrait lesson:
- explore a variety of media
- Create a variety of lines, like thick and thin, curved or zigzag, etc.
- Cut large and small shapes; double layers to produce identical shapesng a variety of media
- create orginial pictures of self
This mixed media lesson was orginally inspired from a lesson on Deep Space Sparkle. I have added my own ideas and even incorporated the story "I Aint Gonna Paint No More". This is great story to end the year with. However I do encourage my students to stay creative and paint over the summer.
NOTE: the handprints were very difficult and messy for my kinders. You'll notice alot with missing fingers. Which is kinda cute. I will think of something different for next year


- Prints of self portraits from famous artists. We looked at Van Gogh's, Rembrandts, Henri Rousseaus
- Oval template
- one sheet of skin colored paper. Students chose their own.
- white paper
- pencils, glue, scissors
- Lesson: Day 1
- discuss what self portriat is. Look and discuss prints.
- Students trace their own oval and cut, on same paper draw and cut out a rectangle for the neck. Glue those on in middle of paper
- Take scrap from that paper fold and draw shape for ear. We drew a D. Students cut with paper folded to make two identical shapes. Glue
- Same with white paper. fold paper, draw oval, and cut to make two shapes. Glue
THIS TAKES THE ENTIRE 40 MINUTES



- We used mirrors to look at our faces to see the colors, shapes and lines of our features.
- Using markers draw eyes, nose and mouth
- I cut different colors of yarn such as light yellow, bright yellow, dark brown, light brown, black, reddish-brown. Students chose some pieces that best matched their hair. The mirrors were helpful for this.
- WHILE THEY COMPLETED THE FIRST STEPS I WENT AROUND AND ADDED THE GLUE TO FORM THE SHAPE OF THEIR HAIR.
- they laid the yarn down neatly in the glue
Day 3
- paint for the shoulders/shirts. See my great technique for paint in the kindergarten still life post.
- brush prints for the back ground
- hand prints on piece of construction paper

Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Mixed Media African Masks
Slab Boxes
These Clay boxes were spectacular. My only regret was to not take more example photos. This lesson was awesome because it covered so many clay concepts such as- slab building
- scoring
- slipping
- glazing
I did this lesson in three classes. Two were for building and the other for glazing.

Materials:
- Masonite boar
- Slab sticks
- needle tool
- slab roller
- Jar of slip
- Clay
- glaze ( I used speed ball low fire glazes)
- optional: square template
Excellent photo showing how to score. This slab for the bottom of the box was measured and cut first.
I reminded the students the three basic "S" rule when building with clay. 1) score 2) slip and 3) smush together.



















