Thursday, November 13, 2025

Drawing extensions

 


One of the behaviors we do as an artist is Stretch and Explore.  Artists try things that might be difficult and discover new ideas and ways of working. 


Let's look at ways to Stretch and Explore in the Drawing Studio!

So you made an outline drawing of flowers, that's great!  What could you do to Stretch and Explore? 

 How about drawing a few more flowers and painting them. Cut them out and glue them down as a layer of collaged flowers to your drawing.  The drawing becomes the background and the painted flowers are in the foreground. 
Cut out your drawing and glue it to a vibrant background that might be painted, collaged with striped of paper or colored with markers. 



Try making a drawing with markers.  Mr. Sketch markers are watercolor markers💡.  Try blending your drawing with water and a brush.  











Try drawing with white color pencil or construction paper crayons on black paper.  






Create a drawing in pencil and color in your work with colored pencils.


Paint first! Take your dry painting to the drawing studio and draw on the painting.


Try stippling.  Instead of coloring your drawing back and forth, try filling your page with dots of color.  Or maybe a part of your drawing will be stippled and the rest will be colored in.





Is paper the only thing you can draw on? Draw on cardboard.  Cut out your drawing and turn it into a sculpture.




Create patterns and designs on a piece of paper.  Cut into strips.  Twirl, twist and glue to create a 3D work.





Draw on acetate



Keystage 2
Drawing Skill Builder--One point perspective 

A drawing has one-point perspective when it contains only one vanishing point on the horizon line. This type of perspective is typically used for images of roads, railway tracks, hallways, or buildings viewed so that the front is directly facing the viewer. ... These parallel lines converge at the vanishing point.

When creating One Point Perspective, there is a vanishing point.

Vanishing Point: 
  1. 1.
    the point at which receding parallel lines viewed in perspective appear to converge.
  2. 2.
    the point at which something that has been growing smaller or increasingly faint disappears altogether.




Today we are doing another Skill-Builder.  In your book, you will try One Point Perspective. 

You will need a sharpened pencil and ruler. 








Once you have drawn basic One Point Perspective try to expand this learning with color and details.







https://bsd405.org/art/category/elementary-school/page/2/
https://monicaaissamartinez.wordpress.com/tag/contour-line/
https://craftprojectideas.com/fall-still-life-exercise/
http://useyourcolouredpencils.blogspot.com/2010/09/still-life-vases.html
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/5d/1f/94/5d1f94af3c1960958276dcac81b31018.jpg

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