Centers Archive

Fashion Inspired

One of my 8th graders, Laura B., (2009-2010) was really into fashion and drawing clothing. She did all her projects during the trimester as fashion related, but used many mediums.

She used the fiber center and some of her own ties to create a tie skirt. (Most of which she worked on at home.)

  • Title: “All Tied Together”
  • Medium: Fabric, Sewing utensils
  • I loved doing this project because I stuck with my challenging idea. My sewing skills got much better.

She used drawing center to draw many clothing ideas.

  • Title: “Summer heat”
  • Medium: Pencil, rubbing plates, colored pencil
  • Using the rubbing plates was fun and I could come up with ideas off the top of my head with this drawing.

She used paint center to create some fabric print samples.

Finally she brought all these ideas together in a design poster for a line of clothes. She used fabric scraps she found in our fiber center and added designs and prints to them in the paint center, she used the printmaking/ stamp and collage centers to enhance the background for her poster and she used drawing center to create her illustrations.

  • Title: “Bold Shimmer”
  • Medium: Stamps, markers, pencil, fabric, glitter, beads, feathers, colored pencil
  • This was the most fun project only because I had such great ideas and it turned out looking great.

Art Room Scavenger Hunt

The first week of school was a whirlwind of setting expectations, helping new kids find their way around and getting to know names. I love this time of year but struggle sometimes how to get things started right. This is my 10th year teaching and my 6th in this same school. For the first time in a long time I get to teach all art. I have taught a combination of computer tech one trimester or period here or there along with art for the past several years. But this year we have a full-time computer teacher so that has been placed in her hands. I am a little sad, since I do like teaching that, but happy to focus on art for a change.

The first day kids stay with their morning class for several hours while the school citizenship program is taught and overall school expectations are set. In the afternoon, we have an all school pep assembly that sets school spirit for the fall sports. That leaves the middle of the day for kids to fly through their other 6 periods at a blinding pace of 15 minutes in each class. Since they have already been sitting listening to a lot of talking for the citizenship program, and I can barely begin anything in such a short time frame, I did something compleltely new this year. We started the year with a Scavenger Hunt! Better than me giving a tour of the room and the art centers, they had to go around looking at the posters and the centers to figure out some simple but important things! “Where are the scissors kept?”  “In which center can you find the yarn?” and about 20 total questions. I told them they could help each other, look at anything in the room (but not to touch supplies yet) and they could ask me too if they needed help with finding something. The hunt was set up on a gameboard style worksheet that I found on the internet. (That link and my version I will add to this post at school next week!)

It was so fun and exciting for me to just stand back and watch as the kids explored the classroom. AND useful, as it came into play the very next day. “Teacher, Where are the scissors?” I am asked. “Remember where you found them during the scavenger hunt?” I answer. ”OH, yes!” eyes gleaming as they dash to the main supply center. I am sure had I done my usual thing of walking around the room and pointing things out, they would have forgotten. The additional sensory clue of the kids actually walking around the room and finding the items themselves made a bigger impact. It was also the perfect short activity for that odd 15 minute class.

We have a high turn-over in our school too so I will have new kids complete this same hunt with a classmate when they join my class throughout the year.

I REALLY love when you do something new and it works so perfectly!

Stuffed Patchwork Dog Pillow

Did you find some small scraps of fabric and need a project to use them? Here is the pattern and directions for a totally cute patchwork doggie pillow. This is an intermediate project, not for total beginners.

 063009-dogpillow

All these links were screened and found acceptable for middle school students, however since most of them go to outside blogs there might be other material on the blogs that is not acceptable. Please notify me if the link is broken or the content is no longer school appropriate.

All About Sculpture

Definition:  Sculpture is any art that is 3-DIMENSIONAL using a technique of adding or taking away from a 3-D form. 

A sculpture (medium) can be made from:

  • EARTH: clay, wood, sticks, marble, stone, dirt, rocks, sand, snow, ice, bone, cement, concrete
  • FIBER: paper, Paper-Mache, fabric, yarn, origami, hair, thread, leather, cardboard
  • METAL: copper, bronze, silver, gold, iron, aluminum, foil, steel, platinum, wire, tin
  • GLASS: stained glass, vases, tiles
  • Plastics: fiberglass, tape, glue, foam, Styrofoam, rubber, Wax
  • FOOD: candy, gum, chocolate, fruit, butter
  • Recycled stuff: machine parts, rubber, cans/tin, plastic bottles

What techniques do sculpture artists use? 

  1. Carving: taking stuff away to get the art (Relief)
  2. Casting: making a mold to get the art
  3. Assembling: putting stuff together to get the art
  4. Modeling: shaping and adding clay together to get the art

 The Power Point of Images for the Sculpture Lesson

A fill-in-the-blank SculptureWS Worksheet (I mostly use this for my SPED and ELL kids)

See the Sculpture Center for more about sculpture.

4th of July Wind Chime

Celebrate the holiday or change the colors and designs to create a favorite country or sports team. You will need some beads and bells for a colorful piece of art.

Step-by-Step directions here

All these links were screened and found acceptable for middle school students, however since most of them go to outside blogs there might be other material on the blogs that is not acceptable. Please notify me if the link is broken or the content is no longer school appropriate.

Making your own Stencils from Photos


How To: Stencil Graffiti Art 101Awesome video clips here

All these links were screened and found acceptable for middle school students, however since most of them go to outside blogs or websites there might be other material that is not acceptable. Please notify me if the link is broken or the content is no longer school appropriate.