Scotland & Ireland Fall 2016

Art Lessons Online

We found out last minute about a homeschool co-op deal for one year of access to this site with video art lessons (and worksheets) –

Draw3d.com

The kids are hooked! The oldest five sit down with paper and pencil and draw away and I’m really impressed with their efforts! Watching some clips I feel like this site will help Kit and me become better artists, too! 🙂

Sadly the deal ended last night (we found out 3 hours before!) and the year subscription is normally $100.

Monday Cuteness

This one was napping in her OWN BED (for the first time ever) so we pulled out the paints again:

And the kids are loving the BBC Typing program and I love that they’re learning to type properly!

BUSY, busy day with doctor visits (chiro and eye) and prepping for doula clients (two texting me with updates!) and much fun. And mess.

Art Day

We’re painting green dinosaurs! And while we were focusing on that a little someone climbed the chair and pulled the Valentine Train down off the counter. 🙂

After Christmas we saw the gingerbread village and train were on sale dirt cheap – like $.52 each! So we bought one and dyed the frosting pink (and it came with red) and made a Valentine Village! Very fun, and cheap.

Art Supplies To Make

Art Supplies to Make
Homemade Art Supply List
Along with a good supply of crayons, markers, chalk and lots of paper, your children (or grandchildren) will also love playing with these homemade art supplies and games. You can purchase many of them at the store, but why not save some money and teach your child how to be even more creative by making their own supplies? 
Children love seeing how things are made, and they love the time you will be spending with them while making these projects. If you don’t have kids at home, try making up a batch of something just for yourself, I won’t tell if you don’t!
I have been collecting these recipes for 13 years, many of them are scribbled on a scratch piece of paper. Enjoy!
Glitter 

Mix together 5-6 drops of food coloring and 1/2 c. salt, stir well. Cook in microwave for 1-2 minutes or spread out on a piece of waxed paper to air-dry. Store in an airtight container, as with all of the art supplies in this article.
Sidewalk Chalk 

1 c. plaster of paris
1/2 c. water
2-3 T. tempera paint

Mix plaster of paris and tempera paint, then add water and mix well. Pour into molds and let dry for 24 hours. Remove from mold and let air dry for 2-7 days depending on size. You can use paper cups, plastic butter tubs or food trays, candy molds, muffin tins, or even toilet paper tubes covered with foil on one end.

sidewalk paint/chalk
You need:
-liquid food coloring (like what you find in the spice section at the grocery)
-box o’ corn starch
-water
-minimum 8 oz individual containers for each color
Method:
-Measure 1/4 cup cornstarch into each cup.
-Add 1/4 cup water to each.
-Drip in 5-10 drops of food coloring.
-Stir it up. At first it will seem as though the cornstarch just won’t mix in, but all at once it comes together. Just don’t put the water in first or it’s significantly tougher to get it to mix up.
-Add more color for intense colors, less for pastel shades. Our box has recipes on the back for additional shades and we found that the ‘egg dying’ recipes worked great for this.
-The finished paint may seem thin, but it paints on just great. You can use more cornstarch next time if you’d prefer a thicker paint.
-We tested on the driveway, fence, and brick, and the paint came off of all the surfaces just fine.
Finger Paint 

1 envelope unflavored gelatin
1/2 c. cornstarch
3 T. sugar
2 c. cold water
Food coloring
Dishwashing liquid
White shelf paper

Soak gelatin in 1/4 c. warm water and put aside. Combine cornstarch and sugar in medium sized pot. Gradually add remaining water and cook slowly over low heat, stirring until well blended. Remove from heat and add gelatin. Divide into containers, adding a drop or two of d/w liquid and food coloring to each.
Paint 

1 c. liquid starch
6 c. water
1/2 c. soap powder
Food coloring

Dissolve soap powder in water, add starch and food coloring.
Edible Peanut Butter Play Dough 

This recipe is especially good for toddlers because they can play with the dough and then eat it. (Be sure to wash hands and work area!)  It’s also one of my favorite candies, when made with peanut butter and powdered sugar!
1 c. peanut butter
1/2 c. honey
1 c. plus 1/2 c. powdered milk

Mix ingredients and roll into balls.
Cook Play Dough
1 c. flour
1/2 c. salt
2 tsp. cream of tarter
1 c. water
1 T. oil
food coloring

Mix first three ingredients together and then add last three. Cook on low heat, stirring constantly, until it forms a ball and becomes dull.
Kool-Aid Play Dough 
(no cooking required)

3 c. flour
1/2 c. salt
1 pkg. unsweetened Kool-aid
1 T. alum
2 c. boiling water
Mix together first three ingredients then add boiling water. Knead dough with up to an additional 1 c. of flour until it becomes the right consistency.
Jell-O Play Dough
(no cooking required)

4 c. flour
1 c. salt
2 pkgs. unsweetened Jell-O
4 tsp. cream of tartar
2 c. boiling water
2 tsp. cooking oil or baby oil

Mix together first three ingredients then add boiling water and oil.  Mix together well and knead until dough becomes the right consistency. 
Sticky Putty 

3/4 c. plus 2 T. water
1 tsp. Mule Team Borax
8 ounces white glue
Food coloring

Heat water over medium heat and add borax, stir with wooden spoon until dissolved. Add glue and a few drops of food coloring, stirring constantly until glue and water mix. Pour into a plastic bowl and cool.
Modeling Clay 

1 c. cornstarch
1 and 1/2 c. water
16 ounces baking soda

Combine cornstarch and baking soda together in large saucepan. Stir in water and cook over low heat until the mixture becomes thick and forms a ball. Remove from heat and cool. Knead the dough on a countertop dusted with cornstarch until smooth.
Air Dry Clay 

3 c. flour
1 c. salt
1/2 c. white glue
1 c. water
1 tsp. lemon juice

Mix together until well blended. Mold into shapes or roll out and cut with cookie cutters. Let dry overnight before painting.
Papier-mâché 

Mix one part flour with about 2 parts of water until you get a consistency like thick glue. Add more water or flour as necessary. Mix well to get out all the bumps.
Goop 

2 c salt
1 c. water
1 c. cornstarch

Cook salt and 1/2 c. of water for 4-5 minutes. Remove from heat. Add cornstarch and remaining 1/2 c. of water, then return to heat. Stir until mixture thickens. You can also add food coloring to this.
Multi-colored crayons 

Peel broken crayons and melt carefully in a small aluminum pan at 350 degrees for 15 -20 minutes. Cool and break into new multi-colored pieces, or carefully pour melted mixture into small waxed paper cups and remove paper when cooled.
Disappearing Paint 

Mix 1/8 tsp. “bluing” (laundry additive) with 2 cups water. Paint the sidewalk and watch the blue color disappear.
Face Paint 

Mix poster paints with cold cream.
Cinnamon Clay
This recipe is great for Christmas ornaments or scented hearts around the home.

1/4 c. white glue
1/3 c. applesauce
3 T. cinnamon
1 and 3/4 c. flour
1/4 c. water

Mix ingredients together until dough forms a ball. Knead dough for 1-2 minutes, adding a little more flour if needed. Roll dough out and cut with cookie cutters. Bake at 300 degrees for 10 minutes.
Crazy Putty 
(this putty bounces)
3/4 c. of white glue
Add enough liquid starch until a ball of dough is formed, then add food coloring and knead dough until it’s completely worked in.
Slime 

1 c. glue
Liquid starch
Food coloring, if desired

Add starch to glue slowly until mixture becomes the right texture; slimey!
Lap Desk 

Make a pillow out of scrap material, fiberfill and some poly/plastic beads to make it squishy. Attach a lap tray or board with strips of Velcro.

Artist Study Outline – CM

2007-2008 TERM 1 Leonardo Da Vinci (1452-1519) Italian High Renaissance (composers: Russian National)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonardo_da_Vinci
http://www.artchive.com/artchive/L/leonardo.html
A lovely website of DaVinci’s art
Notebooks, translated into English
     1. Genevra, which is in the NGA 1474-1476
     2. The Virgin of the Rocks 1483-86
     3. Lady with Ermine 1483-90
     4. The Last Supper 1498 “One of the most complex paintings in the Western tradition in depicting
          a variety of psychological reactions and internal states all focussed on asingle, non-reacting center,
          the figure of Jesus of Nazareth. In thebewildering variety of reactions immediately following Jesus’s
          announcement of his coming betrayal, Leonardo in visual terms manifests what Pico della Mirandola
          and others were saying about the variety and unpredictability of human beings.” See more here.
     5. Mona Lisa 1503-06  detail and text
     6. Self-portrait c. 1512
Book suggestion: Katie Meets the Mona Lisa, by James Mayhew.
     (For Canadians: This picture book also appeared in The Art Issue of Chickadee magazine,
     a special issue which still shows up regularly at yard sales.)
Video suggestion: “Leonardo: A Dream of Flight,” one of The Inventors’ Specials by Devine Entertainment.
For special interest: Study of Cat Movements and Positions 1517-18

2007-2008 TERM 2 Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669) Dutch Baroque (composer Handel, Baroque)

2007-2008 TERM 3 Jan Van Eyck (1395-1441) Flemish Northern Renaissance (composer Saint-Saens and Berlioz, Early Romantic)

2008-2009 TERM 1 (?) (composer Bach, Baroque)

2008-2009 TERM 2 (?) (composer Liszt, Romantic)

2008-2009 TERM 3 Vincent Van Gogh (1853-1890) Dutch Post-Impressionist (composers Mahler and Bruckner, Late Romantic)

2009-2010 TERM 1 Raphael Sanzio (1483-1520) Italian High Renaissance (composers Vaughan Williams and Elgar, 20th Century British)

2009-2010 TERM 2 John Singer-Sargent (1856-1925) American (composer Grieg and Sibelius, nationalists)

2009-2010 TERM 3 Claude Monet (1840-1926) French Impressionist  (composer Ravel, Impressionist)

2010-2011 TERM 1 Albrecht Durer (1471-1528) Italian Renaissance (composer Beethoven, Classical/Romantic)

2010-2011 TERM 2 Caravaggio (1571-1610) Italian Baroque (composer Vivaldi, Baroque)

2010-2011 TERM 3 (?) (composer Chopin, Romantic)

2011-2012 TERM 1 Jean Honore Fragonard (1732-1806) French Rococo (composer Mozart, Early classical/Rococo)

2011-2012 TERM 2 (?) (composer Mendelssohn, Romantic)

2011-2012 TERM 3 Norman Rockwell (1894-1978)  American Illustrator (composer Bartok and Hindermith)