My art room is exploding with sunflower projects at the moment- I think I have 4 on the go with various grade levels, haha. Some years I am so sick of sunflowers, but I've had a break from them for a couple of years and now they're back with a vengeance, haha!
One of my classes is a mixed grade class of Grade 4-6. They created these whimsical, fantasy-like sunflowers. They could choose whatever colours they wanted and could draw either the whole flower, or just a zoomed in portion.
They started by drawing their sunflower on black construction paper,
then outlining it in white oil pastel.
Then they coloured them in using oil pastels- I enjoy the Pentel brand- inexpensive and effective.
Students needed to mix at least two colours within their petals and try to create a gradation through blending.
The new oil pastels I buy at the beginning of the school year stay in their original boxes. I try to get the kids to keep them as neat and organized as possible, for as long as possible. Once the boxes and pastels get a bit battered and used up, they get relegated to "the bowls"- haha!
I bought shallow plastic bowls at Ikea and keep them stacked in a green plastic bin, also from Ikea.
I use these bins for everything- they are super sturdy and amazing.
I ordered the Crayola oil pastels class-pack last year. I don't like the quality overall, (compared to the Pentel) but love that it comes with extra whites and blacks. I keep these separate for projects and they're pretty handy.
Here are some results from Grades 4 - 6:
4 comments:
Love this project. Beautiful colors and patterns.
Best regards from a Danish art teacher
http://tatjanaknudsen.blogspot.dk/2014/08/sensommerens-smukke-solsikke-pa-flere.html
These are beautiful-love the blending of the colors! It must be Van Gogh flower season-we are making these in 4th grade too, but we are using the bleeding marker technique (wanted to change things up a bit!).
LOVE your site-I have learned SO much from you!!
Tatjana- thanks so much!
Michelle: thank you- yes, I had to really encourage the kids to lay down the colours thickly in order to be able to blend them effectively.
Love the bleeding markers technique! One of my favourites- so easy yet great effects. Thanks for the compliment:) I'm glad my posts have helped you- I am inspired everyday by all the amazing Art teacher blogs out there!
Thanks Gretchen- the sunflowers are artificial :)
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