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Twice Recycled Eric Carle Art

Eric Carle inspired Art

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Do you have piles and piles of ambiguous blobby paintings?  We sure do.  River is a prolific abstract artist and it is just impractical to keep every single one.
So how do I mitigate the paper use?  First I give her paper that I have already used, I am a compulsive list maker.
Second, I find ways to then use her paintings again.  This activity is perfect for recycling paintings and gives you a style that looks something like Eric Carle’s works! I saw something like this on a library display board years ago.
I made one here as an example based on Eric Carle’s  “The Very Hungry Caterpillar.”

How to:

Materials

Scissors

Glue

Tempera paint

Paper

Canvas or firm background paper (Bristol board will do)

Utensils for painting with (think outside the box, forks, old tooth brush, sponge, cardboard, cotton balls, you can use your fingers or feet!)

 

Procedure

1. Have your  child make a bunch of abstract process paintings on a fairly thick paper, we did this over several days. (Abstract process paintings are paintings that aren’t supposed to look like anything and are all about the experience of painting.)

2. Each painting should use different colours, you may wish to limit their colour palatte by only giving them a couple of colours at a time.  Otherwise everything will  be muddy.

3. Let them experiment making marks on these paintings give them different tools for each one.

4. Once it is all dry cut shapes out of the paintings.  Make a variety of sizes and types and throw in some organic shapes for good measure.  You can let your child help with safety scissors.

5. Using regular glue make pictures with the shapes.  To get the Eric Carle feel emphasize layering the picture.  So add plenty of layers and details.

5.  This can be a great opportunity to bring in math discussion and exploration,  talking about shapes, patterning, and symmetry.

6. Show us your work! Tag @readwithriver

 

#bookishplay #kidsartactivities #kindergartenart

 

 

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The Top 10 Books for a Baby Shower

One of my dearest oldest friends is about to have her first baby and I couldn’t be more excited. Now, obviously the baby shower that was envisioned is out of the question but sending something special is still a must.  

In my experience it seems that people choose books for baby showers a lot like they choose the clothes.  Impractical, fussy, not really designed for everyday use.  Noone wants to button 56 buttons up on pajamas at 4 am, Karen, I don’t care if that’s what you did with your babies 500 years ago.  Oh yes, please tell me more about your horrific birth story and how sugar is the devil.

So I set about picking the top ten books I think every house absolutely needs. I chose them based on which books my children enjoyed the best as babies and that are still enjoyed regularly in our home today.

  This was a hard choice and I also opted to put only one book from each author. Honestly I could make a top 50 of essentials but maybe that is excessive.

  I couldn’t get great photos of this because Willow was too excited at seeing all her favourite books in one place. Normally I seperate them throughout the house strategically. Of the hundreds of books we have, these ones are always the top requests. So she kept on grabbing them off my photo spread and forcing me to read them again and again. It took over an hour. I gave up trying to photograph them all, they’re pretty worn looking anyway.  Here is my list in order of dire necessity.

The Top 10 Best Books for a Baby Shower: picked to read (and not just to treasure)

1.”I Took the Moon for a Walk” Carolyn Curtis & Alison Jay @barefootbooks

2. “The Very Hungry Caterpillar” Eric Carle @philomel @penguin

3. “Go to Sleep Little Farm” Mary Lyn Ray Christopher Silas Neal @houghtonmifflinharcourt

4. “Mortimer” Robert Munsch & Michael Martchenko @annick

5. “Oh No, George” Chris Haughton @candlewick

6. “We Love Each Other” Yusuke Yonezu @minedition

7. “Slinky Malinki Open the Door” Lynley Dodd @puffin

8. “The Going to Bed Book” Sandra Boynton @littlesimon 

9. “Alligator Pie” by Dennis Lee illustrated by Sandy Nichols @harpercollins

10. “Claire Beaton’s Nursery Rhymes” @barefootbooks

11. “Cats” Matthew Van Fleet & Brian Stanton @simonandschuster

A further note.  Many of these authors have books that I would consider equally excellent, I was just narrowing it down.  For example most of the classic Munsch books “The Paper Bag Princess,” “Thomas’s Snowsuit,” “David’s Father.” Or many of the Eric Carle books, “Brown Bear Brown Bear” are also favourites in this house.  Perhaps I will make a list of my top fifty eventually.  For now, this list is a good starter pack for any baby’s layette.