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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: color poems, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 18 of 18
1. Running Behind!

Here's last week's "Elephant."

I still have to finish my "Mother Goose" and now a "Red Head."

Pencil, don't fail me now!

0 Comments on Running Behind! as of 7/22/2008 12:49:00 PM
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2. An Old Sketch


3 Comments on An Old Sketch, last added: 7/24/2008
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3. Elefante Indio


unfinished, no time.
oh well.

4 Comments on Elefante Indio, last added: 7/21/2008
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4. It's An Elephant Boy!

I heard elephant boy on the Howard Stern show the other day and came up with this drawing.

5 Comments on It's An Elephant Boy!, last added: 7/30/2008
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5. Elephant-Man


Inspired by the guy in the elephant suit in Invincible. Not positive if it was originally created by Cory Walker or Ryan Ottley, but it was a cool looking guy.

4 Comments on Elephant-Man, last added: 7/21/2008
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6.

Well, that was different... Read the rest of this post

3 Comments on , last added: 7/18/2008
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7. Inky Elephants

I'm at the zoo every week drawing, and elephants are always a favorite subject. Pen and Ink can be messy, so I just take advantage of that!

10 Comments on Inky Elephants, last added: 7/30/2008
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8. elefante

0 Comments on elefante as of 7/17/2008 7:17:00 PM
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9. éléphant

baby elephant!

1 Comments on éléphant, last added: 7/20/2008
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10. yuk

13 Comments on yuk, last added: 7/30/2008
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11. Elefante


0 Comments on Elefante as of 7/16/2008 10:56:00 PM
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12. grey balloons




linda sarah

2 Comments on grey balloons, last added: 7/16/2008
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13. Mammoth


My computer is dead, so I've been using an old laptop and the color resolution is terrible. So I apologize if this makes your eyes bleed. Nice to see everybody last Friday.

5 Comments on Mammoth, last added: 7/16/2008
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14. *trumpets*

Ancient elephant sketches for an ancient, defunct freelance gig. I was so hoping that this week's theme would be Octopus for my own selfish means >:D

Mah Sketch Blawg is here btw <3

9 Comments on *trumpets*, last added: 7/30/2008
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15. Elephants ahoy!



This is a live sketch in a Moleskine from a trip last year to Thailand. They are particularly fond of elephants in Surin and I even got a ride :)

2 Comments on Elephants ahoy!, last added: 7/17/2008
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16. Pa-cute-derm

5 Comments on Pa-cute-derm, last added: 7/16/2008
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17. Elephant family

This family lives in a special zoo where animals have wheels instead of hooves. O_n

3 Comments on Elephant family, last added: 7/18/2008
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18. Flashy, Clashy, and Oh-So Splashy: Poems About Color

  

Last week, I received the author copies to the last book out of my set of 
6 Capstone poetry books

I think this was the third book I wrote in the series, and it presented a little bit of a special challenge. Because the theme of the book was color, I wasn't quite sure whether the poems needed to each be about a color, or whether color could just figure prominently in the poem in some way, even if it wasn't the actual topic.

My editor, Jenny Marks, and I talked about this a little bit, and it turned out the poems didn't all have to be about the color. Which was good. I was thinking that the same approach would get a little old in 14-16 poems!

The photos Jenny sent me were amazing! So many bold, terrific images with attention-getting colors. I actually had a fairly easy time working on this set, once we confirmed that the poems didn't have to all describe or define colors and once I saw the fabulous images. In fact, I wrote about 20 poems to turn in, which was more than I needed to write.

Jenny provided her usual insight into changes that would make the poems stronger, and I revised. The whole process was incredibly smooth.

The only poems I really struggled with were the white and black ones. In a white poem I wrote, I was trying to refer to white light being composed of all the colors of the spectrum, but both I and the editor wondered if it could be wrongly interpreted to feel like it had a superior tone to it. And I didn't want that.

And for the black poem, I initially had night sky images, and I just couldn't get past the cliches. When Jenny sent me some black jaguar images, I wrote a poem I loved. Unfortunately, it didn't get used!

Here are a few poems from the book. Please note: These are NOT the images from the book. They're just to give you an idea of what the poems are describing.



This Is the Brown

This is the brown
of my tight-braided hair
This is the brown
of my old teddy bear

This is the brown
of the field where I spend
day after day
with my best-brown friend



OK, for this one you just have to imagine a picture of a big pig with a blue ribbon on her!

A Blue-Ribbon Gal

This pig is a beauty, you see that it’s true,
Clippety-cloppety, troppety-slop.
As gentle and light as the morning’s first dew,
Slippety-stroppety, flippety-clop.

I noticed her first at a pig beauty show
Oinkety-boinkety, shuffley-huff.
She twirled a baton and she sang like a pro
Oinkety-ploinkety, truffley-stuff.

She’s graceful and smooth for a pig of her size
Squealety-mealety, chunkety-shove
She won a blue ribbon! She won the big prize!
Wheelety-flop, I’m in piggety love.


It's a really silly poem, fairly unlike what I usually write. Jenny said it was a huge hit, a favorite of the group that was reviewing the poems. Figures:>)





Orange You Jealous of My Color?

I’m flashy
and clashy
and beautifully
splashy
and everyone notices me!


I’m bright
and unwhite,
quite a dazzling
sight—
I certainly hope you agree!


The title for that one, of course, came from the knock-knock joke: 

Knock knock
Who's there?
Banana
Banana who?
(repeat the above until the other person is ready to smack you, and then...)
Knock knock
Who's there?
Orange
Orange who?
Orange you glad I didn't say banana?

I just realized I shared all rhyming poems, but this collection does have examples of haiku, acrostic, cinquain, and free verse, too. When I do a two-day school visit at the beginning of April, this is one of the two books I'll be sharing heavily with the K-3 classes.

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