A Note to my students

Dear students at Roosevelt and Amvet,

I miss you all!! ❤️

I hope that you and your families are all staying safe and healthy and are enjoying some imaginative, fun ways to create art at home!

I, along with the other two elementary art teachers of North Attleboro are hard at work coming up with creative, fun and engaging art activities that you and your families can try at home while school is closed.  Be on the lookout for these fun art activity suggestions! They will be posted on the NAPS extended learning webpage SOON. 

I’m also going to be creating some fun NEW step-by-step drawing video tutorials on my YouTube channel soon! I’ll blog these videos once they are filmed and edited and add them to my YouTube channel as well. 

I just added some new photos of students creating art. My “Students Creating Art” link can be found under the main menu of this blog. Check that out after reading this if you haven’t already! 

If you haven’t checked out my Art Games page, you can click on that link under my menu and play free educational art games as well! 

Students, Remember the “What should I draw?” jar in my art room that you could use if you finished an art lesson early?! I’ve JUST included a link to all my original “What Should I Draw?” jar drawing ideas. You can check out that same exact list of drawing ideas found in my jar, HERE! Feel free to copy and print out these for fun drawing ideas to use at home! The link is also in my menu of this website.

1st-5th grade students from both Amvet and Roosevelt North Attleboro Elementary schools- Please Feel free to Email me any photos of any art you’ve been working on while at home! I’d LOVE to hear from you and see what creative things you have been up to!!  My teacher email is mfilmore@naschools.net which is also listed in my contact page of this site.  

Below are some AWESOME 2nd grade Abstract Self-Portraits students finished creating at Roosevelt Elementary School before schools closed for the time being. I wish I took a photo and could share EVERYONE’S, but was only able to capture a handful. More about this lesson with students creating them below the artwork.

This fun self-portrait lesson combines art exploration in abstract art and color theory!

This lesson took (3) 40 minute art classes to finish.

On the first day of the lesson, students learned about abstract artwork and looked at a slideshow of artwork by various abstract painters (Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Joan Miro, Jackson Pollock and William de Cooning to name a few). We discussed how abstract art focuses mainly on lines, shapes, and colors.

ON DAY 1  After viewing the slideshow and doing a quick demo, students drew an abstract drawing using various lines, and shapes on 12×18″ medium weight tagboard. Students then went over all their lines with crayons being sure to press super hard (later on we would do a crayon wax-resist). They then filled out a short questionnaire with questions asking about their favorite things and things about themselves.

ON DAY 2 They painted their drawings using concentrated liquid watercolors creating a crayon wax-resist. Before painting we reviewed what the primary colors, secondary colors and warm and cool colors were. While kids worked, I took each students photo (which I later printed as a high-contrast black & white photo on printer paper).

ON DAY 3   Students glued their black and white self-portrait onto their painting. Then students cut out their pre-printed sentences into strips and added them to their paintings using a glue stick! 

Thank you Bridgette ( http://guerzonmills.com)  for the idea!

I hope you enjoyed reading this blog post and check out other sections on this website for additional art resources and inspiration. And again, be on the lookout for some fun art activity suggestions you can try out at home that us elementary art teachers have created. These art activity suggestions will be posted on the NAPS Extended Learning district webpage soon. Awesome resources are available on that website for students/families to use already!

Stay safe and be strong!…….We will get through this!! 

I miss you all so much!!

💗Mrs. Filmore 

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2nd Grade “Thinking of Summer Self-Portraits” and 1st Grade “Dream Houses”

2ND GRADE- “THINKING OF SUMMER” SELF-PORTRAITS!

Every year, near the end of the school year, I’ve had my students do this quick, fun lesson!

We draw just a portion of our heads large along the bottom of a 12×18″ 80# sheet of drawing paper. I demonstrate on how to draw a “rainbow line” along the bottom and then add eyes and eyebrows.

We talk about different facial expressions and how our eyebrows go up when we get excited!

We went around the room and shared a variety of ideas!  They then drew images on what things they wanted to do over summer break within a large thought bubble. They could incorporate words too, but I told them to focus more on drawing than writing.

I demonstrated on how to draw a few ideas (one being a pair of sunglasses that looked three-dimensional, which kids loved drawing and did a fantastic job!)

Once complete in pencil, they outline all lines with a black sharpie then colored and painted!

One year I had students create a cut out version of themselves. After drawing, they cut out the entire head and neck and then cut the top portion of their heads off and glued it onto separate 12×18″ paper hinged open with the thoughts/images coming out. 

AND NOW FOR SOME CUTE PICS OF KIDS CREATING THEIR ART! ….

I LOVED her t-shirt so much I had to take a pic!

 

1ST GRADE- “DREAM HOUSES”

On the first day of this lesson, I read the book “The Big Orange Splot” by Daniel Pinkwater.

I LOVE this book!! If you haven’t read it to your child, or students you should!

It’s about a man, Mr. Plumbean, who paints his house to “look like all his dreams”. In the beginning of the story, a big orange splot of paint falls on his house. Instead of getting rid of it, he adds to the splot, and paints his home with a ton of bright, vivid colors, and pictures of fun, random things.  His neighbors get upset at him and want all the houses to look the same. Neighbors one by one, try to have a talk with him to change it back, but…. instead… each neighbor gets inspired, and ends up changing all their houses to look like their own dreams!

After reading the story, we discussed how it’s important to be yourself and to not be afraid to stand out. I showed students examples of previous 1st graders dream home drawings, as well as a few of my own, then kids got started!

I had no rules for this art lesson except to add a pattern somewhere within their work! Kids could draw whatever kind of house they wanted! It didn’t have to be rectangular or square like most houses—it could be any shape! It could be a slice of cake, a puppy, a cookie, a robot, a spaceship, a boat, a unicorn, slides coming from the roof to a pool in the yard….you get the idea!

I just wish I took more photos of their artwork….It was on their last art class that they finished them up and time just escaped me!!

Below these kids pics, I posted some other dream houses created by my 1st graders from last year to make up for that!

LOVE THIS STUDENTS T-SHIRT!!! AND FUN MULTI-COLORED HAIR!

SOME PICS FROM LAST YEAR….

 

THANKS FOR STOPPING BY!!

TUNE IN SOON FOR 5TH GRADERS SUPER AWESOME GRID DRAWINGS!!!! ……

 

 

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4th Grade -COLLABORATIVE FLOWER DRAWING!

I was so excited to try this out with my 4th graders as a continuation on learning about Georgia O’Keeffe and it didn’t disappoint! I can’t wait to hang it up on the wall above their lockers with their other flower drawings (see previous post on that below)!

The artwork below was created by Ms. Eagleston’s 4th grade class during one 40 minute art class.  It was a collaborative enlarged flower drawing using oil pastels of Georgia O’Keeffe’s Red Poppy painting. Scroll down below it to view the printed photo of O’Keeffe’s work students observed.

(Photo below of everyone’s drawing glued together. Total image size 30″ x 36″)

 

(Photo below of the printed photo of her painting “Red Poppy No. VI” that has been cropped a little, with a grid drawn on it. Each student received one 1 1/4″ square to draw)

 

 

(Photo below is of Georgia O’Keeffe’s “Red Poppy, No. VI” in it’s entirety)

 

Each student got a tiny 1  1/4” square section of the photo to copy on a 6” square of 80# drawing paper. Each tiny photo had a number written on the back as well as the word “Top” along the top edge, so students knew how to view their image before drawing. Students wrote their corresponding number on the back of their 6″ paper as well as the word “top” along the top edge. This would make assembling the flower a whole lot easier for me later on!

They then drew the lines and shapes first with pencil then colored in trying to best match the colors of the print out.

Once complete, I brought them all home and assembled together on large white paper with hot glue.

PLEASE NOTE: The photos of students working below are from Mrs. Roberts class, and observed a different flower image by O’Keeffe to copy. (Unfortunately I didn’t have a chance to snap pics of kids working on the red poppy flower).

4/10/18 UPDATE!! View Mrs. Roberts classes finished collaborative flower drawing below these “in process” pics! 

Any takers on trying to guess which flower their working on???!!!!!!!

 

(Below is Mrs. Roberts Classes collaborative flower drawing of Georgia O’Keeffe’s “Pink Tulip, 1926”)

 

(This was a bit tricky to create trying to have everyone’s lines connect! In retrospect, I think selecting an image with less line changes/ shapes and colors would have been more successful, but I LOVE this painting so much I wanted to give it a go and see what would happen. Although it’s a bit fragmented, it’s still VERY beautiful and I love the attention to detail students put into each individual section!! Awesome work everyone! )

 

(Below is a selection of the image by O’Keeffe I used to create the grid. )

 

(Below is Georgia O’Keeffe’s painting “Pink Tulip, 1926” in its entirety.)

Thanks for visiting my blog! More to come SOOOOOOOOoooooooon! ….

 

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1st Grade – HOT AIR BALLOONS!

First graders used their knowledge of collage and learned what mixed-media is when they created these wonderfully fun and colorful hot air balloons! Read further below on how we made them and to see in process pics! 

 

 

Sorry, too cute not to post a ton of pics!! 

 

 

DAY 1: ON 9X12” drawing paper, students designed their own hot air balloons by filling them with all the things that lines can do. They traced a large circle template made from cardboard, then added a small box on the bottom of the circle. We reviewed all the different types of lines and once they filled their balloon up, they traced over all their lines with sharpie and colored in with either markers or crayons.

 

DAY 2: Students painted a sky background with blue, purple, and magenta liquid watercolor paint.

First graders learned how to apply the wet-on-wet technique to help spread and blend the watercolor paints on the paper. To create wet-on-wet, students wet their paper with just water first, then applied the paint to that area.

Then students finished coloring in their balloons if needed!

(Roosevelt students painted their sky background with tempera cakes (seen below). Using that medium is much easier when traveling on a cart from classroom to classroom. Still beautiful color and beautiful results though!)

 

DAY 3: Students carefully cut out their balloons and glued them into their sky paintings. They glued on yarn for the handles with “quick-dry/fast grab” clear drying glue, a construction paper basket to ride in, and a few clouds for texture (from poly-fil batting). I took each student’s photo, printed and cut them out ahead of time, then added their picture to their basket for a final step.

I LOVE how they all turned out! It’s definitely one of my favorites that I teach year after year, and I hope you enjoyed viewing them as well! 

STAY TUNED for tomorrow’s post!  (2nd grade BIRCH TREE LANDSCAPES)  and Friday’s post on both (4th grade ENLARGED FLOWER DRAWINGS inspired by Georgia O’Keeffe), as well as 5th grade’s (FALLING FOR FORESHORTENING DRAWINGS)!!! 

Thanks for stopping by! 

 

 

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CURRENT ART LESSONS UNDERWAY!! 1ST–5TH!

Here’s what students are currently working on in Art class!

1st Grade: HOT AIR BALLOON COLLAGES

Students are using the Elements Of Art LINE and SHAPE to create these fun collages! These photos of student art are from last year. To learn how we are creating them and what the learning goals are click HERE

 

2nd Grade: BIRCH TREE LANDSCAPES

2nd Graders are learning about foreground, middle ground and background and how to create a sense of space in art for this lesson. The photos above are of student artwork from last year. Some students are finishing up their Love Monsters this Thursday and will begin this lesson after. To learn more about this lesson and how students will create this, click HERE and scroll down! 

 

*****I will be creating a YouTube video tutorial on the Birch Tree Landscape lesson soon, as well as a few “How to draw animals” videos for the lesson! Stay tuned!!!***** 

 

 

 

3rd Grade: COMPLEMENTARY CREATURE PRINTS

3rd graders will start this lesson soon once the 3D Winter Mugs are finished. To learn more on how these prints were created and what the learning goals are for the lesson, click HERE and scroll down! 

I have a YouTube tutorial on this lesson as well! Click under the main menu on “YouTube Tutorials” and view my video there! 

 

4th Grade: ENLARGED FLOWER DRAWINGS 

4th graders are currently working on this lesson inspired by the artist Georgia O’Keeffe! Photos above are by 4th graders from last year. Students enlarge a section of a flower while observing photos, using oil pastels. I LOVE this lesson and how we abstract the flower by zooming in and cropping just a section of a flower! 

To learn more about this lesson and learn how students will create these beauties, click HERE and scroll down! 

 

5th Grade: FALLING FOR FORESHORTENING 

5th Graders are currently working on these fun perspective drawings! These photos above are by 5th graders from last year and previous years. They learn about the type of perspective “foreshortening”, and draw the person’s expression to match what they are falling into, add details to the hands and feet and create a background using colored pencils. To learn more on this lesson, and view additional drawings click HERE and scroll down! 

 

SPECIAL EDUCATION: MIXED MEDIA FLOWER AND BUGS 

Students created these adorable flowers and bugs using cut paper and cupcake liners! Kids glued green construction paper for the grass and flowers stem and leaves, then painted ovals and/or circles on separate paper with tempera paint to create the bugs. Then they painted a cut paper plate for the large flower head with liquid tempera paint.

On day 2, they glued on their paper plate flower head, then a cupcake liner for the center. They then drew legs for their bugs with marker, cut out the bugs and added them to their flower picture with google eyes!

Once finished, I showed them how to draw flowers in grass and they colored in crayon!

Be sure to check out the previous post on “PULLED STRING ART” my special education classes created below!! They came out so beautiful!! 

To view additional artwork by my special education classes, click HERE

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All You Need Is Love!—Mixed media hearts by my Special Education classes!

My students in my special education classes created these AMAZING mixed media hearts for their Square 1 Art papers!!

I LOVE how they came out!! 

 

This took 2- 40 minute art classes to create with a little left over time each class.

First, students traced a heart on 80# paper, then glued pieces of pre-cut tissue paper with watered down white school glue, overlapping any of the following color combos-red, pink, purple, yellow, and orange.

On their Square 1 sheet, they then traced their heart again and drew lines with oil pastels in whatever colors they wanted coming out from the heart, then painted over their lines with watercolor paint creating a resist.

Once dry, on day 2- the hearts were cut out, glued in place on the Square 1 sheet, and either red or pink oil pastel was added around the rim of their cut hearts!! ❤️❤️❤️

To view other art lessons for special education please click on “special Education” in the drop down menu at the top of this page!

Thanks for visiting my blog!

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AMAZING ART IN THE WORKS! Series #2!

Parents and Students-

To give you a sneak peek into what kids will be creating in art, after returning from winter break, here it is! …

 

Everyone at ROOSEVELT Elementary will finish up their previous lesson before the break, (if needed), then start the Square 1 Art fundraiser drawings!

Then will continue onto the following lessons as AMVET  (read below).

 

BTW–I have only received the Square 1 Art box for Roosevelt so far.  Amvet Elementary will start on them once they arrive! 

 

For students at AMVET ELEMENTARY….

 

1st Grade:

Mixing Primary colors to create Secondary colors 

 

This is a 1 day lesson. Then in the following class, students will be creating “Mondrian Collages” using primary colors.

 

 

2nd Grade:

Finish Monet Inspired 3-D Water Lilies (2M and 2D) 

 

If finished- “Catching Snowflakes” portraits are up next!

 

 

3rd Grade: 

Finish “Self-Portraits with Personal Symbols” oil pastel drawings

 

 

THEN….. Create a “3-D Winter Mug”!!

(**PHOTO CREDIT OF 3-D WINTER MUGS ABOVE AND BELOW FROM MELANIE LABONTE-POIRER —VIA PINTEREST**)

This will be a new art lesson I’m trying out this year! I don’t have a teacher example of my own or students art to post yet– I’m super excited to try it though, and can’t wait to show my 3rd graders!!!! So fun!

 

 

4th Grade:

Finish “Victorian Houses” 

 

 

Then, create “Wayne Thiebaud inspired Mixed-Media Donuts!”

Donuts Inspired by the amazingly talented Mrs. Cassie Stephens! Thanks Cassie! 

Did I mention the sprinkles are created using three-dimensional puffy paint!?! This is one of my favorite lessons!!

 

 

5th Grade:

5th Graders will finish their “3-D OP Art Cone Drawings” if needed

Then….

Will start “Falling For Foreshortening” drawings!

 

 

 

Special Education will start a fun “Mixed-Media Sheep collage”

(photo above by “blps_art” via Instagram) 

*This will be a new lesson I’m incorporating, and do not have a teacher example or students examples yet– Can’t wait to try it out!!  How adorable are these bubble wrap sheep!! 

 

To view more art lessons by grade level, click on the grade level under the drop down menu! 

Thanks for stopping by!!

 

 

 

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HOLIDAY LIGHTS! – 5TH GRADE

This fun lesson only took 2 (40 minute) art classes!

Just enough time for a couple of my 5th grade classes to create them before winter break!!

Steps to the lesson with pics below! 

A big THANKS to artwithmrsnguyen for this fun lesson idea!

Students did such a fantastic job creating these beauties I can’t help but post a ton!!

Day 1 (of 2) 

Step 1: Draw a wavy line in the middle of a piece of 12×18” black construction paper using pencil. Then  go over your line with colored OIL PASTEL (can be 1 color/or a line of a combination of colors!)

Step 2: On a separate piece of black construction paper (cut to 6”x18”) Trace 6 bulbs using a bulb tracer with pencil. (I created these bulb tracers ahead of time from thin cardboard sheets found from the back of printmaking foam board packages-great way to recycle and it’s free!)

 

Step 3: Outline each bulb first, using oil pastel, then fill in -pressing hard- so the color is more vibrant. Leave the rectangular base (bulb socket) black. (***I have small scrap pieces of black paper for students to test out colors first- to see if they like the way it looks on black paper -before using on final bulbs)

Then add a small white curved line near the top to make it look like it’s shiny and reflecting light, a “cursive L shape” for the filament near the base, and 4 white straight lines in the bulbs base using a white oil pastel.

Step 4: Finish the remaining 5 bulbs the same way, using different colors. (If you  want- they can be all the same color or a mix with some the same color)

 

 

Day 2:

Step 1: Trace 6 bulbs along wire line where you want them with pencil using the bulb tracer.

 

Step 2: For each bulb tracing on the wire line-using a white CHALK pastel, draw a thick white line just inside the pencil line a bit, on each of the bulb tracings. Do this with ALL 6 bulbs.

 

Then, smudge with your finger going outward (going away from the bulb and smudging in one direction) to create a glow effect!

Step 3: Then using the same color CHALK PASTEL as each of your OIL PASTEL bulbs—go over the same white line with colored CHALK pastel thickly. Smudge outward again with your finger. Do all 6 bulbs with the chalk on the black paper.

(To avoid blending colors, use a different finger for each color when smudging).

 

 

 

Step 4: Cut out each colored OIL PASTEL bulb from the 6”x18” strip of black paper.

Each time you cut one out, glue the back of it using a glue stick, and glue down in place over the traced bulb with chalk smudges- (glue down matching each bulbs color with chalk pastel smudges). I have students glue them down immediately after cutting so cut bulbs wouldn’t get mixed up with other students bulbs.

 

And there you have it!! So easy and so Fun!!

 

 

 

 

TO SEE MORE 5TH GRADE ART LESSONS, CLICK ON “5TH GRADE ART LESSONS” UNDER THE MAIN MENU!! FOLLOW ME FOR UPDATES! THANKS FOR CHECKING OUT MY BLOG!

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3-D WATER LILIES! 2nd GRADE!

I LOVE these flowers!!!  I also think this may be my new favorite art lesson to teach!

2nd Graders did such a fabulous job creating them– SO proud of their work!!

Step-by-step directions with photos below! As well as a YouTube Tutorial (listed under menu drop down) and you can download a free printable water lily petal tracing template. Read more below!

The art display (almost complete! Waiting on another 2 classes to finish then will add the rest!!)

CLICK HERE TO GO TO MY TEACHERS PAY TEACHERS PAGE TO DOWNLOAD A FREE TRACING TEMPLATE FOR THE 3 PETALS (LARGE, MEDIUM AND SMALL)

This lesson incorporates focusing on 5 of the 7 elements of art! – ( line, shape, color, form, texture) and is inspired by artist Claude Monet and his water Lilies.

This lesson took (4) 40 minute art classes.

ON DAY 1 students learned about Claude Monet and looked at a slideshow of some of his paintings- Especially (of course ) his water lilies!

Students then painted a sheet of 10×10” heavy weight tagboard with turquoise liquid watercolors, adding salt while wet!! This becomes the water background, and the salt, (once dry), will make it look like light is reflecting off of the water.

The blue paper is set aside to dry.

Then, students painted an entire sheet of 12×18” heavyweight tagboard either fuchsia or orange using liquid watercolors.

Kids had a choice of two colors to keep clean up simple—(did I mention I don’t have a sink or access to water within my art room at one school, and teach off a cart at another???)

ON DAY 2 -Create the lily pad

To create the lily pad, students glue various shades of green and yellow and light blue tissue paper (pre-cut into squares) using watered down white school glue (or watered down mod podge)  on an 80# 10×10” piece of drawing paper.

I pre-draw the circles for the lily pads with sharpie to save time.

I use watered down glue (just a smidge of water per glue container) to thin it out to make it more easily spreadable. Kids apply it with a regular tempera paint brush.

Students applied a thin layer of watered down glue, then a piece of tissue, then another thin layer of watered down glue to make the tissue smooth and flat. Students repeated this process until the entire circle was filled, overlapping tissue a little as they glued.

Let dry

ON DAY 3  – Attach lily pad to blue water background, then cut out petals.

Students cut out their green lily pad and then cut out a triangle from their lily pad

Then they glued their lily pad onto their blue paper with a glue stick (using lots of glue) and pressed for 5 seconds to make sure it was flat and glued on securely.

Then after setting aside, students cut out their flower petals.

(Prior to class, I traced 6 large, 6 medium, and 6 small petals using tracers I created, on everyone’s pink or orange painted sheets, to save art making time).

As kids cut EACH petal out, they wrote their names on the backs of each one with a pencil, then put it in a zip lock baggie, with their name on the baggie in sharpie, and was set aside for the following art class.

Students thought it wasn’t necessary to have them write their names on the backs of their petals since the zip lock bags would have their name, but I just wanted to be extra cautious in case petals were misplaced/mixed up with someone else’s or fell on the floor…. Which did happen a few times–  So I’m glad I had them do that extra step!

These baggies were then set aside in a box for later. Each class had it’s own box.

ON DAY 4:  Assemble the flower!

Students finish cutting out petals (if needed) then glue down all the large petals first, then medium, then small.

I show students under the document camera,  how to stack the fish “tail” of each petal (we talked about how the shape of the petals looked like fish)  right on top of each other like when making a sandwich –stacking the next rectangular  fish tail over the previous one each time.

I used “Aleene’s” quick dry (and other types of Aleene’s tacky glue) to attach the petals. It’s important to use quick drying glue that is stronger than regular school glue in order to support the weight of the petals and it helps them pop up.

Another bonus—The glue dries clear!

I bought packs of 5 for $5 at A.C.Moore, (also sold at Michael’s). Each student had their own glue bottle.

(Since the bottles are small, I re-filled the same small bottles with a larger sized one for the following classes). 

Students put a dot of glue per petal’s “fish tail”  (about the size of a pea). I have students count to 5 for each petal, while pressing.

After applying glue and pressing the “tail” down for 5 seconds, bend the petal back at its base with one hand, while pressing the “fish tail” down securely with your other finger. This makes the petal stand up and pop out rather than laying flat. (See photo below— I think this pic explains it better)

Once all petals are attached, then add the yellow felt fringe to the flowers center!

Students roll the fringe, starting from one end —keeping it tight as they roll it up.

Glue the bottom of the rolled fringe (heavily), with the same tacky glue.

Put some glue on the center of the flower as well.

Attach fringe roll to center and hold for 20-30  seconds. Don’t worry if the fringe is squished – you can adjust it once totally dry (20-30 minutes later).

I had students set the finished flowers in the hallway to dry flat for awhile– and hung later at the end of that day!

I could NOT w-a-i-t! To hang these beauties up!!

LOVE, LOVE, LOVE them!!

We haven’t watched it YET, but I plan on showing my second graders one of the cutest videos on Claude Monet that I found via Pinterest, next art class. It’s narrated by an 8 year old girl, a bit long (10 min.)  but so stinkin cute and full of info! I might show just a portion of it

If interested check it out on my Pinterest page under “Art Videos”

Thanks for checking out my blog! I’ll be posting again Thursday 12/21….STAY TUNED!

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VICTORIAN ARCHITECTURE DRAWINGS! 4TH GRADE

4th Graders learned what architecture is, learned about some of the common characteristics found within the Victorian architectural style, and then created a drawing of their own Victorian style house that included those elements!

Students did a great job creating their own houses and I LOVE how unique each one is!

 

 

This student just needs to finish coloring in 1 chimney!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nearly finished and doing an amazing job!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

To Learn more about this lesson, lesson’s goals and see additional Victorian houses, Click HERE! 

Also—ART EDUCATORS— FREE powerpoint lesson and step-by-step drawing sheets for this lesson, available to download and print HERE 

 

 

 

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