

This is tough on the arms, but working in a circular motion did the job efficiently. We applied the color lightly because this way, it is much easier to blend and won't result in thick, sticky blobs of pastel which are difficult to blend out.īlending: Taking a sturdy tissue paper that we folded as many times as we could into triangles, we careful blended our colors, starting at the bottom with our lightest color and working our way up to our darkest color. Then the middle color (darker yellow or lighter orange), and lastly, the darkest color (darker orange). We did this same thing also when coloring the night side (so washi tape was applied along the center line on the inside of the day half.)Ĭoloring: Students began with the yellow and lightly colored the bottom third or quarter with their lightest color (yellow).

A small trick that keeps both our sides super neat. This will prevent colors from crossing over into the other side.

Night scenery painting free#
To keep out night half clean and free of warm color, I had the students place a piece of washi tape along the outside of this line, on the night side of their paper. This separates our day half from our night half. Taping off the two halves: We eye-balled the middle of our paper, drew a faint line down the middle top to bottom. We made sure to clean our oil pastels on scrap paper before applying it to our drawing paper, to prevent unwanted color smudges. Students picked 3-4 warm oil pastel colors, starting with yellow and going to orange. This will prevent them from dragging their hands across their paper and smudging their work. We love the crisp clean border it reveals when done.Ĭolors: Since my students are right handed, we worked on the day half first, which is on the left side of the paper. Since I was working with a young group (7-9 year olds), and since oil pastels and soft graphite can be very messy, I took a few different approaches to the project than did the original artist, in order to ensure a clean and neat finish.īorders: To begin, we taped down our borders with artist or washi tape. A tutorial for his 'Day and Night Scenery', can be found here. Like the deer project, this project is also inspired the youtube artist Art Arena. I enjoyed the slightly unexpected and non-traditional methods and mediums used in the Silhouetted Deer with Aurora project (see the blog post here) so much that I did with my bigger kids, that I wanted to do something similar with my younger class.
