Back to School Art Ideas: Self- Portraits E-book

Just in time to help you get off to a great new teaching year. I have put together five lessons in a 21 page PDF e-book, that you can adapt to any grade level in the elementary school. Click on the images below to download.  I hope you enjoy it and have a wonderful year of many great teaching moments!

Cover

Cover

Progressive self-portrait lesson

Progressive self-portrait lesson

Scratch Art in Kinder

Kids love scratch art because it’s like magic for them. All you need is scratch paper which is easy to find in art and craft stores and a scratching tool. Of course if you prefer to make your own paper -which I love to teach my kids how, see this fun and easy tutorial.
For this lesson, my Kinder kiddies were learning about Fairy tales so of course what do you think happens when you combine castles, fairies, princesses, battles, knights in shining armor and some dragons? You have a sure winner!

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Oil Pastel Cats in Grade One

Get your oil pastels ready because this is a really great lesson you can adapt for any subject matter. The kids voted on cats but you can do dogs, fish, butterflies, etc.

We looked at several cat pictures and talked about what we liked about them. We discussed characteristics such as what they look like, colors, shape of the eyes,etc. It is so important to discuss all this prior to beginning a lesson because it sets the mood for the kids. If you can create a slide show with different kinds of cats then this is a bonus! Google images has plenty of pictures for kids to look at. Don’t forget to also show cats in art so they see how artists also liked to draw, paint, sculpt cats.

I gave out 12×18 white paper–because I believe kids need a lot of space to draw. All our cats were to be drawn in a sitting down position. You can do running cats, sleeping cats, cats on a chair, on a rug, etc. After a quick demonstration how to ‘sketch’ the cat face and get proportions right, the kids were eager to start on their own cats.

Details were added like stripes, patches, dots and  zig-zags . The cats could also be unreal and have details such as swirls, different shapes on them, etc. The pencil lines were outlined with a black marker and the cats colored in with oil pastels. If your students want to color in a purple cat, blue cat, let them go wild–this is art class!

The background was painted with watered down tempera paint and left to dry. Final details such as bows, ribbons in the ear and borders were done with scrap pieces of tissue paper.

Didn’t these turn out gorgeous?

My son's cat!

My son’s cat!

Psst…

Art Lessons for Kids is on Facebook  and we are GROWING. Hit the  ”Like” button to show your LOVE  and join the conversation. You can also follow my adventures on Twitter (@Ms_Alejandra) or see what I am pinning over at Pinterest.

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Become whole again and change your life.  Let me show you how.

Become whole again and change your life. Let me show you how.