Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Art for children


Art for children: it ain’t what you make…

These photos were taken last week while L was painting and really remind me what art for children is all about. She had so much fun playing with the paint and was very focused on what she was doing. There was no chatting – which is unusual for L! – she was really in the moment, enjoying and creating.
Art for children is all about the process. It’s about making your mark, trying new materials, experimenting with the colours, shapes and feel. It’s about gaining confidence and taking risks. It’s about fun and enjoying the moment.
There was no end product in L’s art – she was not interested in keeping the final painting at all. For her it was all about the doing.
We’re resolving to try lots of new art materials this year and to try all sorts of techniques.
Just for the doing.
http://nurturestore.co.uk/art-for-children

I came across this blog on PINTEREST. I think its serves as a great reminder to us that it is about the experiences for the children, not the finial piece of art. We shouldn't place boundaries on children of what their art should or shouldn't look like. The title says it all "Art for children: it ain’t what you make…" it isn't what we make, it is what they make. We also need to remember to let the children explore with various mediums with their art, and let them get messy. Who know's maybe they are the next Pablo Picasso's of our future.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

100 Ways To Be Kind

100 Ways to be kind to your child CreativeWithKids.com Tell to your child:


1. I love you.

2. I love you no matter what.

3. I love you even when you are angry at me.

4. I love you even when I am angry with you.

5. My love for you can reach you wherever you are.

6. If I could pick any 4 year old (5 year old...) in the whole wide world, I'd pick you.

7. I love you to the moon and then around the stars and back again.

8. Thank you.

9. I enjoyed playing with you today.

10. My favorite part of the day was with you when we… Tell them:

11. The story of their birth or adoption.

12. About how you cuddled them when they were a baby.

13. The story of how you chose their name.

14. A story about yourself when you were their age.

15. A story about how their grandparents met.

16. What your favorite color is.

17. That sometimes you struggle too.

18. That when you're holding hands and you give three squeezes, it's a secret code that means, "I love you".

19. What the plan is.

20. What you're doing right now. Play:

21. Freeze Tag

22. Uno

23. Crazy 8s

24. Gin Rummy

25. Memory

26. Go Fish

27. I Spy- especially in the car when you’re tired and feeingl snappish.

28. Catch Pretend:

29. To catch their kiss and put it on your cheek.

30. That their tickle tank is empty and you have to fill it.

31. That their high five nearly knocks you over.

32. That you are super ticklish.

33. That you are explorers in the backyard.

34. That it's party day! Decorate for no reason! Try:

35. To get enough sleep.

36. To drink enough water.

37. To eat decent food

38. Wearing earrings or whatever makes you feel pretty.

39. Calling friend the next time you feel like you are about to lose it with the kids.

40. Giving a gentle touch to show approval.

41. Dancing in the kitchen.

42. To get your kids to bop to the music with you in the car.

43. Showing your kids that you can do a somersault or handstand or a cartwheel

44. Keeping that sigh to yourself. Just jump in and help clean up cheerfully.

45. Using a kind voice, even if you have to fake it. Read:

46. A book of silly poems.

47. A book and then act it out. (Like "I'm going on a Bear Hunt")

48. Your favorite childhood book to them.

49. When the afternoon is starting to go astray.

50. Outside under a tree.

51. In the library kids corner.

52. The comic book they love that you're not so hot on.

53. About age appropriate behavior so you can keep your expectations realistic. Listen:

54. To your child in the car.

55. To that Lego description, and think how important it is to your child.

56. For that question that indicates your child really needs your input.

57. A second longer than you think you have patience for.

58. For the feelings behind your child's words. Ask:

59. Why do you think that happens?

60. What do you think would happen if______?

61. How shall we find out?

62. What are you thinking about?

63. What was your favorite part of the day?

64. What do you think this tastes like? Show:

65. Your child how to do something instead of banning them from it.

66. How to whistle with a blade of grass.

67. How to shuffle cards- make a bridge if you can!

68. How to cut food.

69. How to fold laundry.

70. How to look up information when you don't know the answer.

71. Affection to your spouse.

72. That taking care of yourself is important. Take Time:

73. To watch construction sites.

74. To look at the birds.

75. To allow your child to help put ingredients in the bowl.

76. To walk places together.

77. To dig in the dirt together.

78. To do a task at your child's pace.

79. To just sit with you child while they play. Trust:

80. That your child is capable.

81. That you are the right parent for your child.

82. That you are enough.

83. That you can do what is right for your family. Delight your child:

84. Clean your child's room as a surprise.

85. Put chocolate chips in the pancakes.

86. Put a love note in their lunch.

87. Make their snack into a smile face shape.

88. Make sounds effects while do something.

89. Sit on the floor with them to play. Let Go:

90. Of the guilt.

91. Of how you thought it was going to be.

92. Of your need to be right. Give:

93. A look with Kind Eyes to your child.

94. A smile when your child walks into the room.

95. A kind touch back when your child touches you.

96. The chance to connect before you correct so that your child can actually hear your words.

97. Your child a chance to work out their frustrations before helping them.

98. A bath when the day feels long.

99. A hug.

100. Your turn- how can you be kind to your child today?

Monday, February 13, 2012

Make Your Own Paint With Water Pages




Make your own water color paper

Just opened the tube of paint and put a little dot of each color on the pages. Then let the paint sit to dry.
After a couple hours the dots had hardened up nicely.






Spice Painting

Spice Painting

I thought it would make a great group activity as well! So I told everyone to raid their spice cabinet for old spices (no hot spices) and bring a bottle or two of white glue. I poured a bit of glue into tiny plastic cups and added water to dilute it, then we let the kids help add the spices to the glue. Then the fun began!



http://www.playcreateexplore.com/2011/12/childrens-art-group-spice-painting.html

Turning School Glue Into Paint



It simply takes a few drops of food coloring, in a half empty bottle of glue. The amount of food coloring, depends on the shade you want, but a few drops go a long way.

Fresh glue can be added on top of the food coloring, to fill the bottle up to 3/4s of the way full, leaving room at the top, so the glue can be mixed together with the food coloring. I usually turn the bottles upside down for a while, to let the color blend all the way through...