Showing posts with label oil pastel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil pastel. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Winter mittens and cap

Made by a student of grade 2
You need:

  1. coloured construction paper

  2. markers

  3. white sheet

  4. glue

  5. scissors

  6. oil pastel

Students draw a face on a large sheet of white paper and colour it with oil pastels. Be sure the eyes are not on top of the head, but in the middle. The space between the two eyes is as wide as an eye.

From coloured paper students cut mittens and a hat (or trace templates first and cut them). Draw patterns on the hat and mittens with marker. The patterns on both mittens should be similar, as well as the patterns on the hat.

Paste hat and mittens on the drawing. Make sure the thumbs point to each other!

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Snowmen mandala



You need:
  1. white drawing sheet 

  2. compasses

  3. scissors 

  4. crayons or oil pastels 

  5. indian ink

  6. brush

Step 1.

This lesson is a variaton on 'Autumn leaves mandala'. Click the link for full description.

Focus in this lesson: make sure the snowmen are really coloured white with crayons or oil pastels, otherwise they will turn completely black with ink after step 2.


Step 2.
Crumple the picture into a ball. Make flat again. Paint the entire drawing with indian ink. Rinse the ink immediately after it in the sink and let the work dry. The ink will rest in the folds of the paper  and creates a great "antique" effect.
Made by a student of grade 3

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Autumn leaves mandala



You need:
  1. white drawing sheet A4 size

  2. compasses

  3. pencil

  4. oil pastels

Draw a circle with a diameter of 20 cm. Draw within about 1 cm another circle (the edge of the mandala). Cut out and fold into 8 pieces. Draw against one of the folds half of an autumn leaf using black oil pastel.





Fold the sheet and press firmly with the hands to get a print of the leaf on the other side of the fold. Trace this half with black oilpastel. Repeat this and draw the other three leaves. Colour the leaves and background with oil pastels in warm colours. Colour the edge with a nice pattern.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Paper batik autumn leaves



You need:
  1. white drawing sheet A4 size

  2. oil pastels

  3. brown tempera

  4. liquid soap

  5. brushes

Step 1

Ask students to bring autumn leaves. Outline some of them on the white sheet and draw veins in them. Colour the leaves and background with oilpastels, press heavily.





Step 2.

Wrinkle the sheet into a ball; make sure the picture is on the inside.





Step 3.
Smooth the paper out.


Step 4.
Use brown tempera with a tiny bit of liquid handsoap, and paint over the entire paper.


Step 5.
Then rinse the paper under cool water. The paint sticks in the little crinkle wrinkles giving it that batik look.


Leave the work to dry and press it flat between two books. Paste or staple it on a coloured background.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Same animal, different colours

Made by a student of grade 1
You need:
  1. two white drawing sheets A4 size

  2. oil pastels

  3. liquid water colour

  4. brush

  5. jar with water

A lesson about cool and warm colours.
Draw an animal on a white drawing sheet. Be sure it's not too small. Ask the teacher to make a copy of this drawing. Colour the first animal with oil pastels in warm colours, the second one in cool colours. Paint the background with liquid water colour, using warm and cool colours as well.
Paste both drawings below or next to each other on a large white sheet. 




Monday, September 5, 2011

In the style of David Hockney



I found this terrific lesson on the blog 'Use your coloured pencils' of Anne Farrell. I used this lesson to tell about artist David Hockney and his swimming pool paintings.



You need:
  1. white drawing sheet A4 size

  2. coloured paper for background 

  3. oil pastels

  4. liquid water colour, blue and green

  5. brush

  6. jar with water

The successful British artist David Hockney was born in 1937 in Bradford, England. He studied at the Royal Academy in London. His first works were anecdotal and ironic. In 1964 Hockney moved to California, where he developed a more realistic way of painting. The main themes at this time, are pools, landscapes and portraits.

From 1966 David Hockney increasingly used photographs for his paintings. He made ​​collages containing just photographs. After 1980, Hockney's work became a more expressionistic character. His work shows influences of Picasso Besides paintings, Hockney also makes drawings and etchings. 


Look at artwork of David Hockney, especially those with swimming pools. Discuss with the students how people look like under water - flowing hair, lighter skinWhat causes the shimmering

surfaces on the water and what do they look like?
The students draw one or more people in swimsuits and colour them with oil pastels. Use white oil pastel to draw a water pattern in the background, consisting of wavy horizontal, vertical and diagonal lines.

Paint the picture with blue and/or green diluted coloured ink. The swimmers and the white lines will not resist the ink.

Artworks made by students of grade 4

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Sunflower batik



You need:

  1. white drawing sheet A4 size

  2. oil pastels

  3. pencil

  4. tempera paint brown or black

  5. liquid soap

  6. brushes

Draw some sunflowers on the sheet and on the edges. Colour them with oilpastels, press heavily. Wrinkle the sheet into a ball; make sure the picture is on the inside.





Smooth the paper out. Use black or brown tempera with a tiny bit of liquid handsoap, and paint over the entire paper.





Then rinse the paper under cool water. The paint sticks in the little crinkle wrinkles giving it that batik look.





Leave the work to dry and press it flat between two books.



Made by students of grade 4

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Sunflowers in five different materials

You need:

  1. sunflowers or pictures of them

  2. white drawing sheet A1 size, cut in strips of 30 by 65 cm

  3. five different colouring materials, like colour pencils, tempera paint, watercolour paint, oil pastels, crayons, coloured ink, aquarell pencils etc.

  4. brushes

  5. pencil, ruler

  6. coloured paper

  7. scissors

Look with the students at some sunflowers or pictures of them. How thick is the stem, what can you tell about the leaves, how are the petals divided, what colours do you see in the heart of the flower, etc.



Divide the sheet with thin lines into five strips of 13 cm high. Draw some sunflowers. Make sure the flowers themselves are drawn at the demarcation of the strips. Make sure too that in each compartment at least half a sunflower or leave is drawn.
Choose five different colour materials. Use in every compartment a different material. Consider yourself the order of the materials, for example from bright (markers) to less bright (aquarelle pencils).
Paste the work on a coloured background. Or cut the five compartments and paste them with some space between on a coloured background.
Made by students of grade 5

Sunday, August 14, 2011

African adire

Made by a student of grade 4
You need:

  1. white drawing paper A4 size

  2. crayons

  3. liquid watercolour

  4. brush

  5. ruler

  6. pencil

Yoruba women in Nigeria make a type of resist-dyed cloth that they call adire. They make some adire by folding, tying, and/or stitching cloth with raffia before dyeing. This is called adire oniko, after the word for raffia, iko. They also make another type, adire eleko, by painting or stenciling designs on the cloth with starch. Both types are dyed in indigo, a natural blue dye.

The dye-resistant starch can be either painted freehand or stenciled onto the fabric. When freehand painting, the artist usually paints a grid of squares or rectangles onto the fabric first. Then she fills these squares with geometric and representational motifs.
Stenciled patterns are even more diverse. New motifs, both geometric and representational, are constantly being created. They can include everything from simple shapes to elephants, keys, letters, and skyscrapers. The metal stencils are made by men, who sell them to the female adire artists.



Show some pictures of african adire and discuss them. Show African symbols and talk about their meanings.



Students use pencil and ruler to divide their sheets in squares of 5 by 5 cm. Draw with a yellow or white crayon symbols and/or patterns in these squares. Paint the sheet using coloured ink.



Sunday, July 3, 2011

ATC's from Australia



We received an envelope full of the most beautiful artist trading cards from Anna Pietrolungo and her students on Essendon North Primary School, Australia. The envelope came just in time, because my 6th graders will leave our school this week.

Thanks a lot Anna, for these beautiful cards. My students were very excited and will get one of these cards on their last day of school.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Filled with fruit

Made by a student of grade 3


You need:
  1. white drawing sheet A4 size

  2. oil pastels

Choose four fruits and draw many of them on the drawing sheet. The fruit should overlap. Colour them with oil pastels and outline with black.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Three spring flowers, three materials

 
Made by students of grade 3


You need:

  1. three white drawing sheets 10 by 10 cm

  2. coloured origami sheets 12 by 12 cm

  3. coloured cardboard 14 by 38 cm

  4. tempera paint

  5. brushes

  6. crayons

  7. colour pencils

  8. tulips, daffodils, bluebonnets or pictures of them

  9. glue

Students scetch three different spring flowers on three sheets of 10 by 10 cm: bluebonnet, tulip and daffodil. Colour the flowers with three different materials: crayons, tempera paint and colour pencils. Paste the drawings on coloured origami sheets and paste them then on coloured cardboard.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Easter eggs with lines



You need:

  1. cardboard egg shape 10 cm high

  2. pencil

  3. white drawing sheet

  4. several colour materials, like markers, colour pencils, crayons, chalk pastel 

  5. coloured paper 20 by 14 cm

  6. gekleurd papier 14 cm hoog, 20 cm breed

  7. glue

  8. scissors

  9. fine black marker 

What kind of lines do we know? Let students draw them on the blackboard: straight - horizontal, vertical, diagonal; angular, like zig-zag and curved lines.

Students have to make four Easter eggs. Ouline the template with a pencil. Draw straight lines in the first egg, curved lines in the second one and zig-zag lines in the third one. The fourth egg may is made with lines of their own choice. Trace the lines with a fine black marker. Colour them with four different materials: colour pencils, markers, chalk pastel and crayons. Cut the eggs and paste them on a coloured sheet.





Made by students of grade 3

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Charming chicken

Made by a student of grade 5


You need:

  1. blue and yellow construction paper A4 size

  2. oil pastels

  3. glue

Draw a chicken on blue construction paper, using the tutorial on How to draw a chicken. Make it a charming chicken by colouring it in bright colours. Mix colours to create smooth transitions. Draw a horizon line and colour the ground. Draw somethin on the horizon line, Teken een horizonlijn en kleur de grond. Teken iets op de horizonlijn, for example a fence or a farm. 

Tear the edges of the blue sheet away and paste the chicken on a yellow undersheet. Draw eggs around it.



Made by students of grade 6

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Patterned hearts like Jim Dine

You need:

  1. drawing sheet A5 size
  2. crayons
  3. liquid water colour
  4. brush

Fold the sheet of paper into quarters. Cut a heart out of a piece in the hearts: Trace this heart four times with a pencil. Draw patterns in the hearts with crayons: stripes, circles, zigzag lines etc. Draw different patterns around the hearts.

Paint the whole sheet with liquid watercolour. The crayon will resist the ink.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Searching for the chameleon

You need:

  1. white drawing sheet A4 size
  2. oil pastels
  3. scissors
  4. small pieces of foam
  5. double sided tape
Start the lesson with this poem about a chameleon.


Has anyone seen my chameleon this morning?
He has to be hiding somewhere.
He asked me if we could play hide-and-go-seek,
and then disappeared into thin air.
I've looked high and low in the yard and the house
and it seems like he's nowhere around.
He's probably hiding right out in the open
but doesn't yet want to be found.
I'm guessing he looks like a leaf on a bush
or the back of a sofa or chair.
He could be disguised as a book or a bagel.
Regardless, I don't think it's fair.
If you come across my chameleon, please tell him
I give up. He beat me today.
He's clearly the champion at hiding so, next time,
it's my turn to pick what we play.
Kenn Nesbitt
Draw shapes of your choice on the sheet. Leave about 1 cm white between the shapes. Colour them with three or four different colours of oil pastels.

Draw a chameleon on another sheet and colour it the same way as the first sheet: coloured shapes with one cm white between them. Cut it out with a one cm white around it. Use small pieces of foam and double side tape to paste the chameleon on the background. The chameleon will be slightly higher.


All artworks are made by students of grade 6

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Artist Trading Cards

Some weeks before Christmas, I was contacted by Amy Baldwin, art teacher at St. Pauls Lutheran School in Millington (Michigan). She wrote me she was a fan of my weblog. We emailed for a while, wondering if we could do a little project together. I read about exchanging ATC's on many art blogs, so I proposed to let our students make those little cards for eachother. This seemed to her very nice, so we got started!

Amy's students made ATC's for my students, my Dutch students did the same for hers.
A couple of days before Christmas I sent an envelope filled with 50 ATC's of my 23 students to Millington.

Yesterday we received the big envelope, full of ATC's! How exciting for my students to get those beautiful cards from the other side of the world! They admired the cards and were surprised about the Dutch words on some of them. Thank you very much Amy and thank you all, St. Paul's students!

Friday, December 17, 2010

Come on, let's make a snowman!

You need:
  1. blue construction paper A4 size
  2. oil pastels
  3. pencil
  4. white tempera
  5. brush

Students sketch a part of a snowman on blue paper. Sketch the hat and scarf and other items too. By choosing an incomplete snowman, students are forced to draw big. An additional advantage is that there remains some to imagine, because wwhat would your snowman look like if he filled the complete sheet?

Tell students that they begin to colour with white. This is to prevent the other colors will mix with white, and to be sure the white crayons will remain white! When the artwork is ready, outline everything with black oil pastel. Paint snowflakes around the snowman with white tempera paint and a sturdy brush.

Made by students of 10-11 years old

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Cityscape at night


You need:

  1. black construction paper 20 by 20 cm
  2. oil pastel
  3. white tempera paint
  4. some drops of dishwashing detergent
  5. brush
Students draw the outline of simple houses on black paper. Behind the high ones, in the front the lower ones. Colour the houses with oil pastel. Draw and colour a behind the houses.
Mix some drops of dishwashing detergent with tempera paint. This keeps the paint to stick to the oily chalk. Outline the houses and moon with the white paint. Finally paint windows and doors.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

April showers will bring us flowers

You need:

  1. white drawing sheet

  2. water colour paint

  3. ruler

  4. white crayon or oil pastel

  5. paint brush

  6. water

Characteristicly Dutch weather in spring is a weather type with showers, alternated with sunny periods. Those typical spring showers are called 'Maartse buien' (March Showers) in Holland, while English meteorologists speak about 'April showers who bring us flowers'. In this lesson children will draw typical spring flowers (tulips, daffodils etc.) during a rain shower.

Sketch some spring flowers on a white sheet. Make sure your lines are extremely thin. Use your ruler to draw white crayon lines with about one centimeter between them. Make sure your crayon has a sharp point. Paint your drawing with watercolour paint. Use a lot of water to make bright colours. The crayon will resist the water paint, so your shower will be very clear!