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Art With Children Paint With Water Onto Paper Thensprinle

Written by Sarah Baldwin of Bella Luna Toys and Moon Kid

Westet-on-wet watercolor painting is a technique taught in Waldorf schools and enjoyed by many homeschoolers. It's a satisfying artistic feel, and the beautiful results can be turned into lovely gift cards, book covers, newspaper lanterns, or whatsoever number of cute objets d'art.

Why Moisture-on-Wet?

The intent is to give immature children an feel of color, not form. Because the wet pigment is laid on wet paper, the colors flow, blending into one some other in cute, unexpected ways.

I recommend painting with ane colour at a fourth dimension to get comfortable with the technique. Single colors can be painted as "clouds" of colour with varying intensity on the page, allowing some white to shine through here and there. You'd exist surprised how beautiful a painting with only one color tin be!

Discovering the Magic

Photos by Madrona Wienges

After painting with each of the primary colors singly, try the diverse 2 color combinations: red/yellowish, red/blueish, and yellow/bluish. Children will be excited as they experience how secondary colors are formed when combining 2 colors.

"Look, Mama! There's ORANGE in my jar!" Permit them observe the magic for themselves. In that location'southward no need for any further explanation at this age.

After experiencing the single colors, then 2 colors, five- to vi-year-olds can be introduced to painting with all 3 primary colors.

What You Will Demand

  • • A sink, basin or tray in which to soak your paper. I've found that an inexpensive kitty litter tray (new, not used!) works well.
  • • Heavyweight watercolor paper (I recommend 140 lb. weight, and the size I like is 11"x15".)
  • • 1-3 shades of watercolor paint: Cerise Red, Ultramarine Blue and/or Lemon Xanthous (I recommend Stockmar paint, just artist'south watercolor pigment in a tube works well, too.)
  • • A watercolor paintbrush with apartment bristles (1 to i.5 inches wide)
  • • Pint-size jar (or larger) for water
  • • One pint-size for mixing paint
  • • I babe food jar for each colour of paint
  • • A flat, waterproof board or counter on which to work
  • • Two sponges (one make clean and paint-complimentary, and the other to wipe the painting lath make clean later)
  • • A rag

Preparation

1. Submerge paper (one sheet at a time, so that they don't stick together) in water and let it soak while you prepare everything else. Paper should soak about ten-15 minutes.

two. Mix your pigment(due south). When starting out, I recommend painting with i color at a time. Put a dollop of paint in the bottom of a pint jar (a tablespoon or so), and add together water until the jar is about 3/4 total. Mix well. (I like to use a chopstick for this purpose.) You can test the intensity of the shade on a chip of paper. Add more paint to make stronger, or more water to soften.

3. Pour a minor corporeality of mixed paint (only enough to cover the bottom) into babe jars (one for each painter). Remaining paint can be refrigerated to apply again later.

four. Lay a slice of soaked paper on a painting board or other apartment, smooth, waterproof surface. A kitchen counter works well, only continue in mind that the painting should not exist moved from the surface until dry. Well-nigh watercolor newspaper has a rougher side and a smoother side. Lay paper down with rough side up.

5. Wipe excess water off paper with clean, clammy sponge. Brand sure there are no puddles of water on the paper, and wipe abroad any air bubbles. Newspaper should have a sheen to it, merely non exist soaking wet.

Now you are ready to paint!

Painting!

Photo by Jennifer Jo Lickiss Tan

You want to model this technique for young children, then make sure you take set all supplies for yourself and your child/ren.

Have each painter's identify set up with:

  • • a painting lath and newspaper
  • • jar of h2o
  • • jar(s) of paint
  • • a rag

I await to hand the child his or her brush until after I've told a "color story" like this one:

"One morning, Tippy Brush woke up and looked outside his bedroom window. It was a crisp fall morning. As he looked outside his window, he saw bright red leaves falling from the maple tree and blowing in the wind, filling the heaven with their color. 'Oh, I want to play with blood-red today!' he thought.

So Tippy jumped out of bed, but before he went outside, he had a nice foot bath…

[Here I would demonstrate rinsing the bristles clean in the jar of water]

…and dried his anxiety clean with his towel [the rag]. And then Tippy ran outside and cried, "Good forenoon, Red! I've come to play with y'all!"

[At this point Tippy (my brush) dips his "toes" (the bristles) in the blood-red paint.]

The red leaves were happy to accept a playmate, and Tippy joyfully danced among the falling ruby leaves, until there were piles of bright red leaves all effectually."

[Here I would apply the red pigment to my paper, placing scarlet here and in that location, letting the colors dance on the page.]

Subsequently telling the story, I would manus out the paintbrushes and let the children paint freely.

When finished, permit the paintings to dry out thoroughly before removing them from your board or counter.

(All the to a higher place-mentioned supplies can be purchased from Bella Luna Toys, but similar products can be found at your local art supply store.)

Take questions? Leave them here and I'll practise my all-time to answer them. Have you tried it? Share your experiences with us!

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Source: https://simplehomeschool.net/painting-wet-on-wet-waldorf-watercolors-for-children/

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