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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Pamela Dalton, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 6 of 6
1. Giving Thanks + a Giveaway

Looking for a pre-Thanksgiving lesson to do with your students? Consider having them write gratitude poems or songs of thanks. Katherine Paterson and Pamela Dalton's new book, Giving Thanks: Poems, Prayers, and Praise Songs, can be used to inspire their writing. Leave a comment on this post if you'd like to be entered in a drawing for a copy of this book.

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2. 9. The Story of Christmas

Text based on the King James Bible
Illustrations by Pamela Dalton
Chronicle, 2011
$17.99, all ages, 32 pages

In this reverent retelling of the nativity story, illustrations look as if they were pulled from the walls of a church.

Using a technique rooted in 16th Century folk art, Pamela Dalton scissor-cuts designs from a single piece of paper, then watercolors in details and mounts the scenes on a black backdrop.

Each design is a fragile tapestry of paper and has a mural-like quality. Ornate and naturalistic, it conveys a feeling of antiquity that works beautifully with the story, retold here from the King James Bible.

In one spread, readers see the angel Gabriel alighting before Mary, an Easter lily being offered in his hand, and later, three shepherds arrive at the manager to see baby Jesus, each of their gowns elaborately cut in repeating patterns.

At times, Dalton frames scenes with trees, their bows weighted by apples as flowers vigorously climb up around their trunks. Other times, carved stone fences, bridges or rolling paths define the background, as birds and butterflies angle here and there, or stars shimmer in the sky.

Each scene feels like a fresco commissioned for the wall (or ceiling) of a chapel, and is painted in delicate, earthy hues that evoke feelings of profound respect and peacefulness.

The most exquisite cuts resemble intricate carvings and look as if they might tear if they were touched.

On one page, baby Jesus is swaddled on an oval bed of wheat, its stalks as fine as feathers. On other pages, angel wings in tan tones look like thin wood filigree that's been cut with a laser.

Once again, the result is astounding: images that suggest the look of aged materials, parchment or plaster or wood, as if the pictures themselves were as old as the story.

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3. Brother Sun, Sister Moon: Creating the Images

Reading level: Ages 5-8

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Video courtesy of : “Artist Pamela Dalton demonstrates how she created the intricate paper-cut illustrates for Brother Sun, Sister Moon, a reimaginging of St. Francis of Assisi’s Canticle of the Animals by award-winning author Katherine Paterson.”

©2011 The Childrens Book Review. All Rights Reserved.

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4. Brother Sun, Sister Moon

Saint Francis of Assisi's
Canticle of the Creatures
Reimagined by Katherine Paterson
Illustrated by Pamela Dalton
Chronicle, 2011
$17.99, ages 4-8, 36 pages

A two-time Newbery Award winner adapts a beloved hymn into a children's prayer in this stunning book of paper-cut tapestries.

Katherine Paterson (Bridge to Terabithia) rephrases the blessings of Saint Francis of Assisi's Canticle of the Creatures as children today might recite them.

The changes are subtle, just enough to draw children closer to the spirit of the song, and reflect Paterson's deference to the original work. 

When Paterson writes of Sister Moon and her stars, she draws off Assisi's description of them as "precious and beautiful," and writes to God that the heavens "clothe the night with their beauty and, like you, watch over us while we sleep."

Sweet and spare, the verses echo familiar ways children describe nature: water "wells up" and a storm sounds like a lion.

"We praise you for our Brother Wind and every kind of weather, stormy or mild," she writes. "For when he roars he reminds us of your might, and when he comes as a cooling breeze, he tells us of your gentleness."

Paper-cut artist Dalton illustrates using a technique of Scherenschnitte or scissor cuts, cutting each spread from a continuous piece of paper, an amazing process detailed in a video below.

The paper cuts are then painted in earthy watercolors and set against a black backdrop. Like needlework samplers, each is a country scene with gently shaded layers of activity, in this case filled with children and animals living Assisi's message.

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5. 4th of July

Scherenschnitte (Paper cuts) by Pamela Dalton
Find her parade series here

1 Comments on 4th of July, last added: 6/23/2011
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6. Teacher Appreciation Gifts

By Bianca Schulze, The Children’s Book Review
Published: May 31, 2011

5 Reasons Books Make the Best End of Year Teacher Gifts

  1. There is a book out there for everybody and every interest
  2. A book is a personal and thoughtful gift
  3. They are affordable (especially if your child has multiple teachers)
  4. They are easy to wrap
  5. No batteries required

The Art of Selecting the Right Book

A few things to consider when choosing the perfect gift book…

  1. Are you selecting a book for the teacher or his/her classroom?
  2. Will the subject or topic interest the teacher or class?
  3. Is the book age-appropriate?
  4. Check out the latest offerings from your favorite author or illustrator.
  5. Read book reviews.
  6. Ask your local bookseller or librarian to make some suggestions.

And … if all else fails, there is always the trusty bookstore gift card!

4 Picture Book Suggestions for the Teacher’s Classroom

Poindexter Makes a Friend

By Mike Twohy

This is a great choice for any classroom and especially a reading teacher. It makes for a lovely reminder of how much the children grow emotionally and socially within one year and will also be a great read for the teacher’s new class next school year. Bonus if your teacher’s name happens to be Poindexter!

Publisher’s synopsis: Poindexter is a shy, friendly, and perfectly happy pig. There’s just one thing. How is a shy, nice, well balanced pig going to make friends? You never know who you will meet when you check out How to Make Friends at the library!

Add this book to your collection: Poindexter Makes a Friend

Iggy Peck, Architect

By Andrea Beaty (Author), David Roberts
(Illustrator)

Looking for a book for the art teacher? This is a very entertaining book about doing your own thing and remaining in touch with your creativity and passion. Imaginative and very clever!

Publisher’s synopsis: Meet Iggy Peck—creative, independent, and not afraid to express himself! In the spirit of David Shannon’s No, David and Rosemary Wells’s Noisy Nora, Iggy Peck will delight readers looking for irreverent, inspired fun.

Iggy has one passion: building. His parents are proud of his fabulous creations, though they’re sometimes surprised by his materials—who could forget the tower he built of dirty diapers? When his second-grade teacher declares her dislike of architecture, Iggy faces a challenge. He loves building too much to give it up! With Andrea Beaty’s irresistible rhyming text and David Roberts’s puckish illustrations, this book will charm creative kids everywhere, and amuse their sometimes bewildered parents.

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