Showing posts with label Remembrance Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Remembrance Day. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Poppy Printmaking










As we move forward to Remembrance Day I have been trying a few printmaking projects with the students.






This one was done on a black painted background but black construction paper would work.















This one is just on plain white paper.












MATERIALS REQUIRED:

- craft foam, white or lighter colours work best.  You could also use scratch foam or a foam plate or container
- pencil
- cardboard
- acrylic or liquid tempera paint
- paintbrush
- pencil crayons
- paper for printing on

PROCEDURE:

I really like using craft foam for printmaking.  Kids can just draw on it with a pencil, pushing hard enough that they can feel the design with their fingertips.

Scratch foam also works good and if you can't get your hands on that you can cut the middle out of a foam plate or container.

Here I just drew out pieces of a poppy.  Flowers, leaves, buds, and centres.  Adding contour and texture lines will enhance the print.





I buy sticky foam.  I cut the shapes out, peel and stick to some cardboard, cut out the general shape from the cardboard and then add a handle to the back with more cardboard.

I use my glue gun to stick on the handle as I'm impatient and want to get printing right away.

You could also use a loop of masking tape and tape the foam to the cardboard if you don't have sticky foam.  You could also tape them to the clear Plexiglas blocks if you use those for printing.



You can use printing ink if you have it but I tend to use acrylic paint.

I add just a touch of water to help it flow.  Now you could use a brayer to apply or a paintbrush.

If using a paint brush make a circular motion when painting, that way you won't get brush marks on the print.






Flip stamp over, place where you want on design and press.
































The second print from the stamp, (without reloading with paint) is called the ghost print.  Sometimes that is the better print.

I work with 2 pieces of paper and sometimes I mix first prints and ghost prints together in a composition.

Here I'm giving my stamp a spritz with water before doing the ghost as I waited too long between prints.












That one turned out pretty good!













Continue printing.  I added some stems with a paintbrush.  Printed on the leaves and buds.
Finally I added the centre in black.

When the print is dry you can add some extra details and shading with pencil crayons if you want.










Another great thing you can do with sticky foam is cut it into thin strips and "draw" out your image.  I used cardboard as the base.


This will give you an outline of your  image.

See you next time.

Gail



Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Poppies in the Art Journal











Looking for a poppy themed art project for the art journal…..or maybe the bulletin board.


This is a very easy poppy project, no special supplies.










MATERIALS REQUIRED:

- paper or journal page
- reference photo
- black washable markers, the regular crayola, Mr. Sketch, etc.
- disk tempera paint
- red paper, optional
- glue, optional
- fine sharpie or your favourite pen if you want to add text to your page

PROCEDURE:

A big thanks to Mrs. Werbicki who was the inspiration for this project. She used this technique a lot, doing leaves, then pumpkins, and finally poppies in Grade 2.

Provide students with a reference photo to point them in the right direction.

Have them draw some poppies.  I like to stress that poppies can be irregular, no perfect petals.
We also tend to see them at different angles, not all straight on.  We may only see half of one, the side view of another.

This will make the drawing look more realistic right off the bat.

Add a pod or 2.





You now need those washable markers. Most kids have them with their school supplies.










Outline all the flowers.









Using disk tempera start painting in the poppies.  We work from lightest colour to darkest.

We want variation in the colour of  our poppies so paint some parts yellow.









Add some orange and then some red. The colours all start to mingle and we get that variation I mentioned.








Add some green for the stems and pods.  Finally add some black in the centres.


I also splashed some paint on my background.









Here is where the magic happens.  The water in the paint makes the marker start to smear creating   a great soft look.







Take some red paper.  Here I have some extra painted paper I had.  I ran it thru my cuttlebug with an embossing folder to get some nice texture.












Cut out the letters for Poppy.










Glue the letters on your page and then add some text, a poem, or just your thoughts on Remembrance Day.





That's it.

Gail

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Poppy Inchies



I recently completed these Poppy inchies with a Grade 5/6 class in honour of Remembrance Day.

The students made all 4 and then picked their 3 favourite to be mounted on 1"x 4" boards that are cut in 12" lengths.






Here they are up on the bulletin board. We completed them in two 1hr. sessions.

Please note: Like all my inchie projects each one of these squares can be done as a large project.





MATERIALS REQUIRED:

- 1"x 4" fence board cut into 12" lengths, you could also use black paper
- 4 watercolour paper inchies, we used 3"x 3" inchies
- cereal or cracker box cardboard, about 3" square
- scraps of corrugated cardboard
- drywall filler
- masking tape
- acrylic or tempera paint in red, blue, black, green, yellow and white
- disk tempera in red
- black and red paper scraps
- white paper, about 3" square
- old book pages
- tacky glue
- black button
- black pony bead
- black pencil crayon and/or fine black sharpie
- oil pastels in yellow and orange

PROCEDURE:





We started by painting our boards with black acrylic paint.  We painted the front and the 4 sides.

Set aside to dry.



Now when I do inchies with the kids we work on several at once, when one stage is drying we are working on another step/inchie.  But it's easier for me to explain the steps for each inchie one at a time.





We will start with our Georgia O'Keeffe inchie. I tell the kids that O'Keeffe took a bee's eye view when painting flowers.





Give each student a length of masking tape, about 6 inches or so.

Have them cut it into 3 pieces.







Have them cut each piece in half lengthwise using a wavy or curvy line.







Choose 3 and tape off 3 corners.  Make sure the tape goes from one side to the other.  It's OK if a white corner peeks out.









Take the orange and yellow oil pastels. Make a outline next to the tape.  Then do a inner outline.








Using disk tempera paint inside the tape.  The kids can mix up a second shade of red to add. Just add a touch of blue for a darker red or a touch of yellow for a lighter red.



Set aside to dry.





Remove the tape.


Use a sponge and add some black acrylic to the one corner that had no tape.










Using black pencil crayon add the stamens.








Now we will do the inchie based on Irish painter John Nolan's work.










Draw a horizon line in the upper 3rd of the inchie.











Paint the upper portion with blue acrylic.  We used a nice electric blue.








Paint the bottom portion with green acrylic.



Let dry.







Mix a lighter blue (original colour + white).

Add some of this to the upper edge of the inchie.











Add some yellow and lighter green (original green + yellow) to the meadow.





Let dry.








Using a very small brush add some poppies to the meadow.  I asked the kids to make tiny ones in the distance, a few medium ones and then a few large ones in foreground.



Let dry.






Using a fine sharpie add the stems and a few buds.









This inchie is based on a project I did 2 years ago.







I gave the kids 2 small pieces from a newspaper or phone book.  They glued them randomly to our next inchie.









With the leftover paint from the last inchie dilute it a bit with some water and then paint this wash over the square.


You want to still see the bits of paper.





Let dry.








Take the piece of white paper and paint red.









Using a little piece of cardboard (this is not that 3" piece), add some lines to the red paper with  dark red acrylic paint.








With the red and black papers cut 2 circles out for the flower (1 large than the other) and a stem for the poppy.

Glue onto the inchie.







Glue the black pony bead into the centre.










I printed "is for poppy" off the computer and we added a P stamp to our inchies.








Our final inchie.








Take the 3" or so piece of cardboard and cut out a poppy shape.







Add some drywall to the front for texture.



Let dry, it takes about 4 - 6 hrs.






Cut your old book page in half.  Spread some glue on your inchie.









Stick your book page on the inchie.







Trim to fit.











Take some black acrylic paint (maybe the leftover paint from the O'Keeffe poppy), water it down a bit and give your book page a wash.








You can also splatter a bit of that black paint as well.





Let dry.








When your drywalled poppy is dry paint with red acrylic.  We used 2 different reds.







Cut a circle out pif a scrap of black paper, glue to the center.  Add a black button on top of the black circle.





Pick your 3 best and glue on your black board.


Great work Grade 5/6!







Gail