My simplified version of Vincent van Gogh's Starry Night is perfect for early finishers! I love to add this to my coloring page collection when my students are learning about van Gogh and Starry Night to help reinforce the characteristics of his work. I proudly watch as they instantly recognize the shapes and swirls and when I hear "hey cool! we just learned about this!" it is music to my art teacherin' ears!
Coloring page inspired by the style of Disney artist, Mary Blair. I use this in my classroom as a reinforcement early finisher activity when teaching about Mary and her unique style.
Simple and easy coloring page to reinforce one-point perspective; even my 5th graders enjoy this one! I left the path in the middle intentionally blank because I like to give my students a creative choice as to what they prefer it to be: is it a dirt path? a road? a street with lines in the middle? I have even had some make into a river!
Great for teaching upper elementary/middle school art students about form and value in a fun and memorable way! First sheet has guidelines for students to map out values from dark to light and second sheet is blank for them to try it independently.
If you and your students are a fan of the ROYGBIV video on youtube, you need this in your life! My littles (K-2) can't get enough of this coloring page and request it often!
This coloring page is meant to be presented horizontally to reveal the hidden word! The word Art is drawn from combining art supplies along with various shapes around it to keep it hidden. Best for older kids but also enjoyed by younger kids too!
The best apology is changed behavior. I tell my students this all the time. Now I hang it in my room as a visual reminder! Great poster for classroom management. Poster is PDF file drawn at 300 dpi and can be printed at any office supply store or printing service. Best on high quality paper and high quality ink when printing.
Lines, lines lines! This simple, easy worksheet is great for teaching line identification and line drawing to Pre-K, Kindergarten and 1st grade. Laminate it or slide it into a plastic protector and use yarn, play-doh or dry erase markers to teach how to create these different types of lines with a variety of media!
Perfect for little early finishers! I break this out with Kindergarten when we make our finger printed ladybugs project to reinforce what we've learned about ladybugs.