Thursday, March 27, 2025
Mask Making from Every Day Objects
Costume Design Project: The Hundred Dresses
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Food inspired one student's dress designs: mochi, banana splits, onigiri, candy apples etc. |
To incorporate literature and career education into our art project, I read my students a book from 1944 called "The Hundred Dresses" by Eleanor Estes. It's a Newberry honor book and top 100 teachers pick to read aloud. This sweet story tells of an impoverished girl who was bullied for saying she had 100 dresses, and after she moved they saw that she had 100 amazing drawings of dresses. My students and I made a goal to create 100 dress designs for our next exhibit.
One students obsession with architecture was his fashion line inspiration |
Each student was to pick a theme for their designs. Some students were inspired by food, animals, seasons, or architecture. They could base their designs on a color pallet, a culture, or a decade. It's a great chance for each kid to explore their interests and express themselves.
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From celestial orbs to seasons of the year, there was lots of ideas for fashion themes. |
Netflix has an amazing series called "Abstract," so we watched the episode about costume designer Ruth Carter (minus a few minutes with bad language). It gives a great look into the process and the career of costume design. Most art students have no idea how much research professional artists and designers put into their job.
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animals can have always inspired fashion: zebra, peacock, clown fish and mantis shrimp |
David Byrne's cult classic "True Stories" has a scene of a fantastic fashion show. I show that 4 minute clip to my students for inspiration, and then a behind the scenes documentary which is only 5 minutes. A quick discussion helps students generate ideas and push boundaries. When it comes to costume ideas, creativity counts.
P.S. This project was modified to accommodate students with no vision. Some made their drawings with Wiki Stix, while others mixed and matched heads, torsos and legs to create images using Fashion Plates. I want to give a shout out to my sister, Carolyn, for sending me this favorite childhood toy (she bought a new one for me). It's a perfect tactile solution for blind students to participate in the project independently.
Costume Design Unit: Hats!
Friday, February 28, 2025
Muted Color Relief Sculpture
Last week, my students helped to create boxy, relief sculpture using saturated colors. This week they helped make a relief sculpture using curvy shapes and muted colors.
A color can only be as bright as it is when you buy it in the bottle. You can however make the color more dull by essentially contaminating it. There are two ways to mute a color: by adding gray or by adding its opposite color and the color wheel (its complement). If you want to make a bright orange into a rust color, add a little blue. A bright yellow can become a brown mustard with a little purple mixed in.
Every student chose a color to mute and then paint on curved cardboard shapes. I didn't limit them to part of the palette like last week when it was just pink or colors with lots of yellow. The fact that all the colors are moving towards grays and browns means they have the intensity in common, and that's enough to look good tother.
Monday, February 10, 2025
Analogous Painted Box Tactile Sculpture
Friday, February 7, 2025
Adjusting Color and Learning about Color Science.
Students practice finding the right hue, saturation, and value to get match a target color on the smart board |
When color range is too wide, it looks chaotic |
Adding blue to the yellows makes the composition analogous. |
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the dark background make the colors look like they're glowing |