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Posted

I've gone through the usual painting activities with the children (printing with a variety of objects and body parts :D , sponge painting, with string, mirrror painting, bubble painting, with marbles, colour washes over crayon, etc.) Frankly I'm getting bored with the same old things :o and wondered if any of you had any inspired new ideas for me. :)

Posted

We are going to try using old anti- bacterial bottles filled with various coloured paints to create massive spray paint pics round stencils.

 

Don't know whether it will work but it's worth a try! :D

Posted

Dear Beau,

I would really recommend the 'Little book of messy play'. that has loads of great ideas such as riding a scooter through paint and then painting with it, ( we had great fun indoors and outdoors doing this and we also mixed our colours as we rode !) also filling gloves with paint, tie up the top and hang it, pierce the fingers with needles and then swing over paper and also using spray bottles with paint in to make different effects. They do a whole series of books which are all good from www.featherstone.com They also do a 'Little book of Science through art'

I really like too the 'Dip and dab' colour mixing method....dip a brush in water dab it on a sponge so it is not too wet, dip it in a yghurt pot of powder paint and then mix in a mixing palette. It is a great way for children to explore colour mixing. My Nursery children will spend ages fascinated by this simple way of colour mixing and getting very quick results.

Best wishes

Galleon

Posted

that sounds like a fab idea and would love to try it out .............. but reckon I might have to cover everything (including all children/adults/equip) in protective sheets!!!!!!! Mind you .... it would certainly liven up the decor!

 

No, I'm only joking ...... it's a great idea - thanks!!!

 

Janice :o

Posted

sorry for my confusing comment - it was meant for dartybunny! :D

Posted

I love mess...about the scooter and paint idea, when we did it indoors we sectioned off a little corner with tables and put covers and newspapers on the floor and tied plastic bags round our ankles. The pictures of the adults and the children doing it were entertaining too !

Best wishes

Galleon

Posted

Well I have done some mad messy painting activities over the years and making splats is one of them. We asked parents to bring in empty halves of egg shells. We filled them with paint and asked the children to throw them on to a large sheet of paper on the floor. The collage we made was amazing and the children and adults had so much fun.

Posted

If one of my work colleagues (sp) saw these ideas she would have a blue fit just imagining us doing them.

 

Don't worry we do loads of messy things.

 

The children really enjoyed toe painting on Monday. Dipping toes in the paint was great fun I would recommend it !!

Posted

Hi,

Some painting activities we have done recently include:

1) Using the polystyrene circles that pizzas come on (OK we live on frozen food :o ) to make imprints and use for printing. Alternating the colours works well.

2)Making paint with chalk (broken up and crushed with little rolling pins) mix with liquid starch and use it for painting.

3) Rip up tissue paper and put into little bowls of water. Use the coloured liquid to paint with.

4) Back to the pizza trays!- cover with silver foil, draw a simple line drawing with blunt pencil (don't tear the foil) and paint with glitter paint (fairly transparent with glitter already added)over the top. We did fish with lots of wavy lines for the sea, and used blues and greens to paint with. Looked great!

5)Sprinkle icing sugar-water over the paper first before painting with pastel-coloured paint.

6)Make the paint really thick by mixing with flour, and use a lolly stick to spread it onto cardboard (unfold cereal boxes and use the inside). Good for textures.

7) Mix paint with sand.

8) Paint as normal, then sprinkle salt over the picture.

 

Hope these help! :)

Posted

A couple of ideas that we tried recently.

1. We collected used tea bags and dried them. The children dipped them into paint and dropped them onto paper from a height. The floor needs to be well covered as it can be very messy!!

2. Children squirt blue green and white paint onto paper. They then place a piece of cling film over the complete sheet of paper and use their fingers to spread the paint over the entire paper, mixing the colours. When these are dry you can use as the background for an underwater picture. The children had great fun covering cut out fish with glue and adding glitter and sequins.

Posted

I have seen some beautiful pictures in one of our local nurseries using icing sugar wash. They did paintings of a vase of irises. Wash a white piece of paper completely with icing sugar dissolved in water. Then paint over it using brushes either with poster paint or food colouring. The result is wonderful! They look like water colour paintings and are very effective.

Just a tip if you do the paint in spray bottles. We did this one year for bonfire pictures. It is very good but watch the consistency of the paint, the nozzles can get clogged very quickly!

Linda

Posted

Last year I had a really crazy idea for painting with balls and coits as part of our sporty theme prior to sports day. NOONE VOLUNTEERED TO HELP ME!!!!! Can't understand it!!! I have photos to show just how fab it was but, with hindsight, it did get a little out of hand and would probably have been better out of doors. I covered the floor with a huge roll of paper from our local scrapstore (ex newsprint I think). The children then rolled balls, coits etc in paint trays and had a very happy and messy time rolling back and forth. OK we had to strip the children and hose them down afterwards (not literally) but it certainly was a whole body experience.

PS it took ages to get the pink and purple stain off the floor. If you can't do these things when you're little when can you?

Posted

One that we did recently was the "paint on the table" with a variety of materials to add. I can't remember them all but we had shampoo, flour, uncooked rice, and herbs to name but a few. The children were free to add as many (or as few!) as they liked - they mixed either with their hands or a variety of brushes, spoons and other untensils,

 

When they had tired of experimenting (eventually!!) they spread the paint for one last time, made a pattern or picture (again with fingers or brushes etc) then put a sheet of paper on top and took a print.

 

It was very very messy ( but hey! who cares!!) and we happened to do it the day Mrs Ofsted arrived and she was very impressed!

 

THe interaction between the children was fantastic and the language/conversation that resulted was superb.

 

 

MM must do it again - sooooooooooon :D

Posted

wow - these ideas just get better and better !!!!!!!

 

Geraldine - really like that idea - think that would work with using VERY large trays as well wouldn't it ?????? - they could still take a print of it.

 

Thanks for that!

 

Janice

 

(Need to somehow engineer it that Ofsted see that one !!!) :o

Posted

A little correction - The website for the Little Books is www.featherstone.uk.com just in case anyone is wondering where the site is!

 

Nicola

Posted

Thanks for all the ideas - I'm really fired up again now. :D:D Think I might have to send out a little reminder to parents not to send their kids in their designer clothes before I get started though. :o

 

Keep the ideas rolling - I'm making up folders of all the ideas I get for the different areas (art, sand, water, playdough etc.) so I can refer to them easily when I'm doing my planning. In the absense of any other members of staff it's the next best thing! And everytime I do my planning I get to think of all my friends on the site too. :) Aaaaaw - sweet! :(:(xD

Posted

bubble jack

what didi yuo do with the broken egg shells on the paper- did it form part of the art work Sounds a lovely idea- I have a climbing frmae that the chidlren could stand on to throw the egg shells

Posted

just noticed the spelling mistakes- must be the wine last night given me a wooly head :o

Posted

This is nowhere near as exciting, but for Holi this year we taped huge sheets of paper together and covered the floor. We then got lots of squeezy bottles (old ready mixed paint or washing up liquid ones are great), then just had loads of fun squirting paint all over the place!!!!!!!! :o

Seemed a better idea than throwing it at each other, given parent's pathological inability to dress their children suitably (sorry! But, honestly - designer gear? xD With me around? :( )

When we'd finished that (and our reserves of paint...) the children then printed off sections so they could take some home and we could save some in Festivals Folder, the actual paper was carefully lifted, allowed to dry and then displayed 'as is' for our Holi display - seemed to sum the festival up!

 

Noone wanted to help me tidy up...........? :(

 

Sue :D

Posted

Has anyone tried this one? Use old film pots with holes pierced in the lid and fill them with powder paint. Put paper in the bottome of a tray, washing up bowl or whatever. Sprinkle the paint on the paper using the film pots, then add ice cubes and wibble the tray about..........

a bit like marble painting but different.

Let me know how you get on. We did it outside on the hottest day of the year and the ice kept melting too quickly but it was fun.

Posted

We just tried painting with straws. Blob of wet paint on paper is blown along. It is quite tricky. We also used the technique after Guy Fawkes night - it made marvellous fireworks. This time we used brown paint to make the three little pigs house of sticks in the act of being blown down.

 

The house of straw was more exciting. We cooked a packet of spaghetti, cooled it, then mixed up a large plastic container of straw coloured paint. The children picked up a small handfull of spaghetti, dunked it into the paint then printed with it repeatedly onto a large sheet of paper. I've used some sheets to build a 3D 'house of straw' onto a display.

 

Most of the children really enjoyed the spaghetti activity. Quite a few found the straw one too tough for what they were trying to achieve. Maybe printing with twigs would have worked better on reflection!

 

Angela

  • 3 months later...
Posted

Rain Pictures

 

Children scooped tablespoons of different coloured powder paints onto a sheet of sugar paper. These were placed outside on a low bench by the entrance so that the children could watch as the raindrops splattered and mixed the powder colours.

 

Carefully bring the very wet paper indoors and dry.

 

We used black suger paper and flourescent powder paints.

 

The children were very disappointed when it stopped raining!!!!

 

Peggy

Posted

It was my first day back at work today and the rain has been torrential all day so I had a little laugh when I saw your suggestion Peggy. :D I think if I'd tried this one the paint would've been washed off in 5 seconds! Certainly one to bear in mind for those many days I have light showers though. :)

Posted

Hi there Carol! :D

So how was the first day back? Meant to ring or PM, but just haven't had time, Quality Assurance deadlines looming, having to mop up bits and bobs that we have been pushing to one side - you know!!! :o

 

Catch you later!

 

Sue :D

Posted

I love some of those ideas. We put bubble wrap on the tables and get the children to paint it and take prints. Toothbrushes or other brushes with stiff bristles dipped in paint and flicked, paint with glitter added. We dont have children come in designer gear exactly but we still get complaints if the paint doesnt wash out. We also have to answer to the committee who are (like most parents these days) unable or unwilling to let the children get messy and make me feel like I'm doing something wrong. It's lovely to read about other peoples artistic endeavours and know that I'm not going too far when I even suggest getting the paint out. Would a sterile environment be to madam's liking? :o

Posted

Rea I always tell parents that I am an advocate of messy play and ask them to send their child in old play clothes. I explain to them the benefits of messy play. I must admit sometimes parents do forget and need a little reminder but I don't feel it my fault at all!!!!

I started explaining the benefits because I had children coming in designer gear but they were forbade to access the activity by their parents.

Posted

back from the wild (south)west!!

 

Don't know where I got this from but it was great, 2 trays with 1 colour in each. Make handprints with 1hand in 1 colour and the other hand with the other colour and then rub your two hands together and voila......instant colour mixing.

 

Also mix black paint with white glue until runnyish. Fold paper in half and open out. Paint designs on 1 side and then fold to print. Open out and leave to dry, then fill inthe outlined areas with different colours. Not sure why the glue but tht was the original instruction.

 

Cx :o

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