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By: Michelina Ouellette,
on 2/29/2016
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Michelle Can Draw
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W is for Walrus, watermelon, watercress, wizard hats, and waterlilies! WOOT!
By: Katie Cusack,
on 7/26/2015
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Scribble Chicken! Art and Other Fun Stuff
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In class this week we created bakery art, learned about the profession of Baker and the yummy creations they make. Our Scribble Kids created collage portraits of Bakers holding their wares.
First we learned all about proportion and how to correctly place features when drawing the face. The students were to place their eyes half-way down the face, with the eyebrows slightly above them. It’s amazing what placement can do to make things look more realistic! We also added a ‘connecting shape’ to our circle faces to create the jaw.


Then we added chef hats and bodies for our characters. The kids had great fun creating textured eyebrows. I was surprised there were no mustaches in this class.

After gluing the head and shoulders down on 12×18″ paper, we added arms to the characters. Then there was a hand drawing demo that was challenging for some children, but they will get it with practice! Finally we added plates with hand drawn delicious baked goods.
Here are our final artworks!

Baker by Sophie, age 7

Baker by Connor, age 6

Baker by Lexi, age 5

Baker by Owen, age 9

Baker by Ruby, age 8
The post Bakery Art appeared first on Scribble Kids.
By: Katie Cusack,
on 7/23/2015
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Scribble Chicken! Art and Other Fun Stuff
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Congratulations to 3 Little Scribblers this week at our doughnut art class. They used our ages 3+ training scissors for the first time, cut out circles (a challenge for newbies) and frosted them with purple homemade puffy paint and sprinkles. Nice work, girls!

Little Scribbler Doughnut
The post Little Scribblers Doughnut Art appeared first on Scribble Kids.
By: Katie Cusack,
on 7/2/2015
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Scribble Kids traveled to France and learned about art, history and culture!
Here are some of my students (with signed photo releases) working hard on their projects 

Hard at work!

Coloring a ‘Rose Window’
We learned about the Eiffel tower and Post-Impressionism today and studied a painting by Georges Seurat of the Eiffel Tower, which you can see below.
Eiffel Tower, by Georges Seurat
We began our own Eiffel towers with a guided drawing in oil pastels.

Eiffel Tower Beginning Sketch
Then we added color mixing ‘dots’ just like Georges Seurat’s paint strokes. This created optical color mixing! Here are some of my student’s final art.. things got busy so I wasn’t able to photograph everything, unfortunately:

Eiffel Tower by Jeffrey, age 7

Eiffel Tower by Emelia, age 6

Eiffel Tower by Katie, age 7

Eiffel Tower by Samantha

Eiffel Tower by Gabby, age 6

Eiffel Tower by Avery, age 6

Eiffel Tower by Vivian, age 5

Eiffel Tower by Anne, age 6
We also worked on French poodles! Class was so busy I only got one photograph. Only half done here, but VERY cool!!

Poodle in progress
So cute and fluffy!
Here is the recipe the children sampled of French yogurt cake. It’s very easy to make.
French Yogurt Cake (Gateau au Yaourt)
Flour, baking powder, salt, sugar, lemon, Greek yogurt, vegetable oil, eggs, vanilla, butter
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1 cup sugar
1 tablespoon finely grated lemon zest
3/4 cup whole-milk Greek yogurt
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 large eggs
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
Coat a standard (8 1/2 x 4 1/4″) loaf pan with nonstick vegetable oil spray. Dust with flour; tap out excess.
Whisk 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, 2 tsp. baking powder and the kosher salt in a medium bowl.
Using your fingers, rub 1 cup sugar with the lemon zest in a large bowl until sugar is moist. Add the yogurt, vegetable oil, eggs and vanilla; whisk to blend. Fold in dry ingredients just to blend.
Pour batter into prepared pan; smooth top. Bake until top of cake is golden brown and a tester inserted into center comes out clean, 50 to 55 minutes. Let cake cool in pan on a wire rack for 15 minutes. Invert onto rack; let cool completely.
The post Scribble Kids France appeared first on Scribble Kids.
By: Katie Cusack,
on 7/2/2015
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Kids art India class
We learned about the history, culture and art of India today and had a lot of fun!
Our main project today was recreating the ‘painted elephant festival’ of Jaipur, India. Here are some cool examples of painted elephants from the festival:



We created 3-dimensional paper sculptures with collage elements and decorated them with colored pencil ‘paint.’
Here are some of our final creations:

Elephant by Katie, age 7

Katie with her elephant

Elephant 1

Elephant 2

Elephant 3

Elephant by Sean, age 5
We also enjoyed a traditional Indian snack recipe, with mixed reviews! (It used a lot of spices the children were not familiar with, plus it was vegetables). I did not include the tofu or the peanuts in our recipe.
Corn Chaat
Corn, tofu, onion, tomato, carrot, coriander, lemon juice, salt, pepper
Prep time
5 mins
Cook time
10 mins
Total time
15 mins
A quick salad snack made with corn, indian cottage cheese and raw veggies
Author: Swasthi
Recipe type: Snack
Cuisine: Indian
Yield: 2
Ingredients (240 ml cup used)
· 1 cup of corn kernels (boiled)
· 10 paneer or tofu cubes
· ½ small onion finely chopped
· ½ small tomato finely chopped
· ½ carrot grated
· 1 green chili (optional, skip for kids)
· Few coriander leaves / cilantro chopped
· Chat masala powder as needed
· Amchur if needed (your chat masala will already have amchur, so add only if needed) or lemon juice
· Salt as needed
· Pepper powder if needed
Instructions
1. Wash corn under running water. If using corn on the cob, soak them in salted water for sometime. Any pesticide residue will just get rinsed well. Boil the corn cobs or corn kernels in a large bowl filled with water. If using cobs, remove the kernels after boiling. Drain water completely. If you are using tender corn, you can alternately steam the corn to retain nutrients.
2. Cut paneer to small chunks. Tawa fry paneer in just one tsp ghee.
3. Add all the ingredients and toss well and serve corn chaat immediately while hot. If desired you can top it with crunchy roasted peanuts.
The post Kids Art India appeared first on Scribble Kids.
By: Katie Cusack,
on 5/10/2015
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We had an amazing time this past Saturday being ‘inventors!’ In this kids art class we learned about shape versus form while creating their own robot designs.
First the kids invented their robots, by creating 3 designs. I provided reference robo-parts for inspiration, and the kids came up with some very cool ideas!

“Girl Robot” by Maura

Dexter’s Robot in a Robot Arena
We chose our favorite design and then painted a flat gray value over the robot’s shape. Since this was a 1 day workshop and not an ongoing class, we were unable to store our wet art. Luckily Mrs. Scribble had her trusty hair dryer! I dried the paintings while the students created a second artwork: designing a futuristic world for their robots to live in. They LOVED this part.
Next we added white shine, or reflected light ‘stripes’ onto our robots. I showed them how to draw the stripes always on the same side of their robot, on every robot body part. Then we added black stripes for the shadow side of the robot, on every robot part. Finally we added an outer shadow around the robots.

Robo-Puppy Shadows and Highlights by Maura

Robo-Cat by Thatcher
Value is always a challenge for young children, and even more so using paint. Generally I prefer using pastels or oil pastels when teaching value, as it is slightly more forgiving than paint. If I do this lesson again, I’ll paint a demonstration robot along with them. I also let the kids go a little wild adding color to their robots at the end, but I encourage creativity. Process is what counts, as kids learn by doing and I never want to stifle that.
View the final art below!

Robo-Puppy, by Maura age 6

“Girl” “Thatcher is a BOY”
The post Kids Art Class – Rocking Robots! appeared first on Scribble Kids.
By: Katie Cusack,
on 4/25/2015
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We had the fiercest artists around today at Peninsula Art Academy!

By Marymaking
I got my jungle jaguar inspiration from Mary Making. She created her own jungle jaguar using paper collage and colored pencils. I love the mixed media approach, but we didn’t have time for watercolors to dry today.
I decided to go a step further and teach the kids how to create a foreground, middle and background using collage elements. But first, we created our jaguar close-ups with a guided drawing that explored blending and shading. So proud of how much the kids absorbed!

Maura’s jaguar drawing
Next the kids cut out their jaguars, and I gave them big construction paper to create their ‘background’ rain forest.
We used oil pastels and colored pencils to draw our jungle scene. Then we added the ‘middle ground’ or the middle of our scene, by collaging paper leaves and water. Finally we added the ‘foreground’ of our pictures, and glued our super-big jaguars and leaves in front.
The kids used their imaginations with the rain forest scenery, but we also had reference images for inspiration!

Dexter’s jungle jaguars are fighting!

By Thatcher, age 7

By Maura, age 6

By Dexter, age 10
The post Jungle Jaguars at Scribble Kids! appeared first on Scribble Kids.
Hi guys, I know I haven't been around much, I hope you're all doing well!
I wanted to pop in and show you some pictures of this year's Christmas parade.
This is the fourth time we participated and I think it may have been the most fun for the people involved. The idea was to build a herd of reindeer to walk (and sing and dance - however the mood strikes) in the parade.
We came up with a template and a patient friend cut out a whole bunch of them from recycled cardboard. Most of the the decorations came from thrift shops, although there was also paint and duct tape involved. We had a fun time and won the city prize for "most creative entry, so we were doing something right! And then there was pizza, of course.
I neglected to post a picture of this earlier, but I did think it deserves a mention:
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6-9 year old class |
This crazy installation is made up of yards of finger crochet from a group of girls who were first reluctant to learn and became crocheting fools once it clicked for them - fun!
Here's a peek at some work from camp!
We started with a simple flat wire sculpture. I really wanted students to get the feel of working with different gauges of wire (and realize the difficulties). Some kids strung beads and sequins inside their shapes, but I love the confident simplicity of this little house.
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wiresculpture, Aine age 6 | | | | | |
|
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circus parts, mixed media, Nora age 8 |
These are a few samples from day 2. We made a wagon, talked about movable parts, and started creating our "Acts" for the show. The glue gun was a lot more popular than wire, I'm sure Calder would have appreciated one himself!
This class was kind of funny too. I came up with the idea with older kids in mind, but the way it worked out we were a group of 6-9 year old's. I had had great plans of room size fiber installations and free form crochet/knit/weaving projects, but for these smaller people we took it down a notch.
These snakes were knit on an oversized "knitting Nancy". Although a few of the kids grumbled a bit about the time it took to make them, as soon as the eyes and tongues were added they were in love.
The girl faces were embroidered on a hoop, then hand sewn into little pillows and stuffed.
By the end of the week everyone's patience and attention span had magically expanded and they were crocheting fools. (picture of the "magic tree" installation to follow later)
Despite my outward rejection of comic books (most of my college art colleagues were obsessed with comic books, not me), I have a soft spot for sequential art.
I haven't officially drawn any comics, but I'm impressed with those illustrators that do, and I continue to find new treasures on the internet (
web based comics, who knew?) Here are just a couple of people I like to look at, preparation for this kids art camp week kept drawing me into this whole new world.
Noelle Stevenson,
Jillian Tamaki,
Gemma Correll,
Eleanor Davis etc.
The pictures below are from a week of art camp with 10-12 year old's. These guys had crazy ideas, worked hard and just about blew me away. Great job kids!
This was an adorable group of 5, most of them around the age of 3. We explored collage, charcoal, paint and sculpture projects and had some crazy times. To be honest, the water bucket was the most popular item, along with chalk paint and storytime projects.
Here's my inspiration of the day while I keep working away at assignments, projects and planning.
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(Nora,8) |
We're also gearing up for the annual local Art Festival. My part is designing the map and the "mystery mural" (more on that later), and coming up with the hands on art experiences - fun!
Have a nice weekend!
Some more great work by these kids, way to go!
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age 11 |
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age 10 |
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age 6 |
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age 8 |
Just can't get enough...notice the bird has caught a fish!
...just powering through spring break, teaching art camp for kids ages 6-12. What an amazing group, it's never been this fun! The theme of the week is paper, and we've made our own, played with pulp, made some marionettes and today built a complete paperland. Here's a peek:
I'm so proud of these guys (and the ones I didn't show are great too), awesome job, and kind of inspiring...
By: Tatjana Mai-Wyss,
on 4/1/2014
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Just checking in, happy April to all of you, no fooling!
 |
guest image by Nora, age 8 |
At the moment I'm busy finishing up a project and taking a
course. Aside from life as usual and a bit of teaching.
I can point you to an amazing
cake recipe though, thanks for being friends!
I'll be back soon.
By:
Nina Mata,
on 3/11/2014
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Beautifique
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Working on a quite a few things this month. Including this nautical themed illustration. And what started off at a day in the beach for these kids..

ended up a day in the backyard..

then a flight on a magical bath tub and a bird stealing their lunch..
I don’t know what sparks these ideas in my head..they just demand to be created sometimes. hehe. Can’t wait to see them finished though.
Until next time!
HAPPY TUESSY KIDS!
Highlights For Children
And a new style I've been working on this year:
To start the week off right, here are some things making me happy this monday.
Inspired kids drawing:
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Nora, age 7 1/2 |
Random morning thriftshop score; hand pieced and quilted, all cotton, twin size, vintage quilt - $4 bucks
Back to the drawing board now; before the school bus pulls up, I hope you got a good start on your week!
By: Tatjana Mai-Wyss,
on 9/5/2013
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Kids Art Center classes are back in session - nice work guys!
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owl monoprint |
Just in case you were wondering where I went....
Spring Break Art Immersion, always a good time!
Back soon for Illustration friday, and to show off some promo ideas.
'Hope your week was full of art - and a bit messy.
Here's a peek at yesterdays "shadow play" art camp
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first articulated movable puppets |
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homework |
After working hard to organize the kid space of the Arts Festival (lots of fun!) I'm regrouping and trying to get back into this space, and my life as an illustrator.
I'll be here more often, thanks for sticking around :)
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Love your newer style....very free and light looking! 'Course I luv your "old" style too! (grin) I can so sympathize re-inventing your style....I'm doing much the same myself. It looks like you kept the parts of your style that are really "you" and spiffied up other things to make a new you! Bravo!