Showing posts with label autumn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label autumn. Show all posts

Thursday, November 9, 2017

thanksgiving

Wow! I haven't blogged in awhile! So what's been going on with me? My grand children started a new school. We were hit by Hurricane Irma on September 11. My husband had back surgery already scheduled for the end of October so I had to help him clean up on the weekends and get the yard and any of his projects completed. Now we are in the recovery stage. I still have to help him because he cant bend. lift. or twist or drive a car or even ride in a car until December.
Our candle business has had some huge orders come in lately so that has also kept me away from blogging.
Thanksgiving and Fall art is one of my favorite times of the year. I like to introduce and study Native American art. The National Ocmulgee Indian Mounds is in my town. There is a lot of history here and over the years children have found scads of arrowheads.
A favorite lesson is my Easy Native American art lesson. It tells a bit about early Native American art  and can be taught as a review of geometric shapes.
Click on the following link to find the lesson:
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Easy-Native-American-Art-Project-1545675


Saturday, October 31, 2015

Fall Leaves and Colors

Are the leaves changing in your town yet? I was at the beach last weekend and coming back via backroads I noticed the leaves were already changing. They have started in my town in Central Georgia. This time of the year is quite inspirational for me as an art teacher. The young children can be taught how to make secondary colors. Middle schoolers are interested in making earth colors. A variety of media can be used for a variety of products.
I liked to use Georgia O'Keefe's painting of an autumn as an inspiration for creating various products for the many grades I taught.
My bundle of Easy Leafy Fall Art Projects is quite popular.
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Mizz-Macs-Easy-Leafy-Fall-Art-Projects-862114

Friday, September 18, 2015

Time for Apples!

It’s time for Apples!
Apples are in season and they are great for beginning school activities, particularly kindergarten and preschool classes.  For art teachers the apple  is a great beginning observational subject to use.  This art teacher would begin the class reviewing the five kinds of lines- horizontal, vertical, diagonal, curvy, and zigzag. I would explain how artists take the lines and combine them to make drawings and shapes. I would then show them an apple and ask which line I would use to draw the apple. What am I going to look at when I draw the apple? I will be drawing the contour shape or the outside edge of the apple.
While holding the apple with my freehand I draw the apple slowly on the white board or with my tablet and project for all to see.


Students should already have paper and pencils and apples are then passed out. A 9x12 drawing paper could be folded two times, unfolded, and students told to draw their apple with four different views (side 1, side 2, top, and bottom) in each rectangle. Try to fill up each rectangle with an apple.  Each apple is then colored. The apples can be colored with crayons or oil pastels and the background painted with a thin watercolor or tempera wash.



Older children can do a progressive drawing with the apple. First drawing would be a whole apple, second an apple with one bite on one side, third an apple with two bites on each side, and the fourth with only the apple core. Students who don’t like apples are allowed to spit the apple bites out in a cup.

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Fall/Autumn Leaf Art Project

Fall or autumn is one of the most creative seasons of all! I just love all the colors- the earth tones and the fall colored leaves.  There are plenty of art projects that can be accomplished just using leaves!
An Easy Leafy art project for home- Leaf Rubbings!
Supplies needed are crayons, leaves with obvious veins poking out on their underside, paper- thin white copy paper is best. The crayons can be any color. One year my first graders used Crayola Metallic Twistables and their rubbings were quite pretty! A teacher can also use the rubbings to teach fall colors or even how red plus yellow makes orange!
The directions are:
1.       Place the leaf upside down on a flat surface.
2.       Place the white paper on top.
3.       Rub a crayon on its side over the white paper with one hand. Hold the paper and leaf under the paper in place with the free hand.
4.       Remove the leaf when finished.
5.       Repeat the above steps, changing leaves and changing colors of crayons.

Example: