![]() ![]() Mix with a bit of water, let it sit for 15 minutes and you have a clear, sticky gel that not only works well but cleans up beautifully.īy cutting in half many fruits and vegetables, you have a perfect stamp in which to make a glorious painted garden. To avoid this, I would highly suggest using Elmers Paste. The school had to get a special cleaner to remove the mess. That stuff would not come out of the carpet. The sculptures worked well (as I knew they would) but the MESS! Oh my goodness. But when I taught the lesson to my students, it was a disaster. I tested it out with my own dino and it work really well. I was so enraptured with the thought of my fourth grade class making huge dinosaur sculptures that I just assumed the flour-water paste would be fine. ![]() What you may not know is that it can be itchy for some kids and absolutely will not come out of carpet. It's easy, dries to a hard finish and is pretty cheap. You can make a paste out of flour and water. I had never experienced making official 3-D sculptures (apart from the shoe box Barbie doll houses in my closest) before and was thrilled to learn that the gooey mess I created would harden enough to last for years. My finest memory of creating art as a child was making papier-mâché sculptures in a museum art class. And since I didn't know them and learned the hard way, I want to share them with you. What I didn't know is that there are some basic strategies that every art teacher should know. If it looked fun and doable, I would try it. Like many of you, when I first began teaching, I had no idea if a project I read about in a book would work with my students. If you have taught art for any length of time, no doubt you have accumulated a few misses in your teaching strategy. ![]()
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