Thank goodness we live in an age where we can get inspiration from teachers all over the world! Most art teachers are alone in their building, so we do not have the opportunity to collaborate with our peers as much as the other teachers do. I'm so blessed to live in an age where an art teacher clear across the country or world is accessible in mere seconds! We can all share our great ideas, and not have to leave the comfort of our pj's if we don't want to! Anyway.... As I was scrolling through Instagram, I came across this beautiful project from Art with Mrs. E. Her 4th graders did such a great job, I wanted to try it out with ours as well!
We will be starting this when we come back from Christmas break!
I love this technique of spreading chalk to create the look of the Northern Lights. Here's how I did it.
Materials:
First start with black paper, and a piece of 90lb white paper. Tear that 90lb piece of paper 3 or 4 different ways horizontally. Then, use chalk pastels to add color to the top of the tear. Rub in an upward motion to spread the chalk onto the black paper. Oh, and add a thick white line in chalk for the snowy ground!
Add more color than I did in this picture! I realized I didn't add enough when I starting spreading it, and not much color was coming off!
Here's a new video showing how to
color and spread the chalk onto your black paper
For some reason the warm colors spread and colored better than the cool did.
I did 4 layers, but you could do more or less, or even do them going in a different direction! Maybe vertical instead of horizontal! I'll try that next!
The next class the students can add paint to their picture, by painting black evergreen trees, their reflection in the water, and stars or snow in the background. Now that I've completed mine, I'll do the stars before I do the trees next time! Whoops! Guess my trees will just have snow on them!
When I instruct the students to do the stars, we will rub the bristles with our fingers to create the stars, so our paint dots are much smaller!
After they paint the black trees, add the reflection of the lights with chalk to the water, in a horizontal motion. Then, add the reflection of the trees in a horizontal motion with black tempera paint.
Stay tuned for some awesome art!
Hope you and yours have the happiest of holidays, and a wonderful New Year!
Last week we had a 1-2 hour delay, each day, so I haven't had 4th grade until today! Mrs. Fambrough's class is off to a wonderful start, and as usual, Mrs. Stacey is so very proud of them!!
Dr. Fambrough's class did a great job today, too!
Lovely! Would this work with regular colored chalks instead of chalk pastels? Also, does the black tempura paint right on top of the chalk to make the trees?
ReplyDeleteHi Marci!
ReplyDeleteYou know, I've never tried it with regular colored chalks! These chalk pastels seem to be a bit more fragile than regular chalkboard chalk, have more color options, and may lay down more color than regular chalk. I'm not exactly sure though!
& I used tempera paint to paint the trees, and haven't had any issues so far! Thanks for stopping by! Let me know if you have any more questions, and I'll be glad to help as best I can!! :)
Love this project! Can't wait to try it with my fourth graders:)
ReplyDeleteI love this idea! I'll be trying it with my own 4th grade class!
ReplyDeleteMarci McElroy
We do not have chalks--would Craypas (oil pastels) work the same?
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
Deletewhoops! I spelled something wrong! It doesn't quite have the same effect. Plus, the oil pastels won't rub off the paper onto the background like the chalk will. Sorry! :)
DeleteSo I lied! I had to do some improvising for another project, because my chalk is hidden away in storage (I'm on a cart this year) and I found that you can use oil pastels for the aurora borealis! I used Crayola neon oil pastels, used the same technique and it worked! Not as well, but it'll do in a bind! The lighter colors worked better! Neon yellow, green, and pink worked the best.
DeleteLovely! Will be doing in my art class. But just a note; the trees are reflected in the frozen ice on the lake, not on the water.
ReplyDeleteCould be a reflection in a frozen lake or water. It's whatever you want it to be. “However you think it should be, that’s exactly how it should be.” -Bob Ross
DeleteCan you explain what you mean regarding rubbing the bristles for the snow?
ReplyDeleteto sprinkle the tiny drops of paint onto the background, for the appearance of snow, I rubbed the bristles of my paintbrush with my index finger, to make the paint sort of fly off and land on my paper. It has to be kind of watery for that to work though. You could use a toothbrush for that application technique as well.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete