Monday, October 26, 2009

Bubble Painting

 

I followed the recipe given by Sandy Maudlin to do bubble painting in my young student class. It was 2 oz acrylic paint, 3 oz dish soap, and 6 oz water. Mix thoroughly. I had thought you’d need a big bowl to blow bubbles, but we had to use smaller ones, like Cool Whip containers, and they worked fine. Blow bubbles through a straw, and when they get over the top of the container, gently lay the watercolor paper over them. Use several colors.

Here are two projects our class did with the bubble paints. First we did a painting of a bear in a bathtub and bubbled over it. In the other painting, we bubbled the paper first, then decided on a painting to put over it. This one was of a butterfly.

teddy-bubbles

butterfly-bubbles

PS: I DID warn them not to suck in…but one of them did.  YUCK.

“Stained Glass” Fish

 

fish-supplies Our class did a simple but effective way to learn what colors will do when mixed together.

Supplies needed are simple: a spray bottle, coffee filters, paper plates, magic markers, frames for “stained glass” objects (we used fish purchased from Dick Blick, but you can cut your own), and some iridescent medium for watercolor.

 

 

fish-marker

First put the coffee filter on the plate. Using regular magic markers, scribble patches of color, using several colors.

 

 

 

fish-spray-bottle

Put a little (about a tsp. ) of iridescent medium into about 4 oz. of water in a spray bottle. Saturate the coffee filter until the colors run together.  (The iridescent medium will leave a sparkle when it dries.)

 

Dry completely. It only takes about a minute with a hairdryer.

fish-hairdryer

 

 

 

 

fish-glue

Carefully pop the “stained glass” forms apart. Apply glue to the inside of one side. (These came from Dick Blick) Then gently lay the dried coffee filter on top of the glue.

 

 

 

 

fish-trim

Trim the excess filter away from the form.

 

 

 

 

Apply liquid glue to the inside over the filter. Make sure to apply glue to all the lines. Then carefully lay the second part of the stained glass pattern over the first.

 

fish-glue2

fish-together

 

 

 

 

Thread some fishing line through the hold in the top. Hang near a light for a fun sun catcher.

finished-fish fish-final

Monday, October 19, 2009

Ludlow Hill Park


Here is a very bad image of the painting of Ludlow Hill Park I put in the Sharon Woods Art Show. I framed it before I had a chance to scan it.

My class of girls from the summer has started up again and I'm very excited about it. They are so fun! We've done some bubble painting and some light catchers. I'll try to get some photos of their projects, but I usually get so caught up in doing them, I forget to take photos.
The show at Sharon Woods was a lot of fun. I really enjoy seeing all the different artistic styles and meeting the artists. One of the five paintings I put in was this yupo version of Lawrenceburg's Ludlow Hill park early morning.