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SemonsteinDesigns

Rated 5 out of 5, based on 4 reviews
14 Followers
Indiana, United States
About the store
Hi, I’m Karen—yes, that Karen, but I only ask to speak to the manager of art supplies. Honestly, if the art room had a manager, we’d need a meeting about inventory, color theory, and whoever keeps putting marker caps back on like that. I create engaging middle school and high school art lessons with a modern twist: digital art projects, brainrot-inspired activities, pop art, sketchbooks, elements & principles resources, and low-prep lessons students actually enjoy.
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All resources

Preview of Hybrid Creature Combos Art Lesson | Pencil Shading | Depth | Value | 6-12 | Edit

Hybrid Creature Combos Art Lesson | Pencil Shading | Depth | Value | 6-12 | Edit

Create the ultimate middle school graphite drawing challenge with this highly engaging Brainrot Hybrid Creature Project! Students combine two creatures into one original “brainrot-style” hybrid character while mastering advanced value shading, texture, composition, and storytelling skills. EDITABLE SLIDES: This project blends surreal creature design with serious technical drawing practice, making it perfect for middle & high school art classes that need both creativity AND rigor. The project m
Preview of POP ART FOOD FRENZY COLLAB PROJECT MIDDLE SCHOOL PAINTING CANDY | COLOR THEORY

POP ART FOOD FRENZY COLLAB PROJECT MIDDLE SCHOOL PAINTING CANDY | COLOR THEORY

Pop Art Food Collaborative Painting Lesson (6th Grade / Middle School) Bring bold color, teamwork, and creativity into your art room with this Pop Art Food & Candy Collaborative Painting Project! Students will design, plan, and paint a large-scale pop art inspired composition while working together to create one unified artwork. This lesson is designed for 6th grade / middle school art and focuses on collaboration, planning, and expressive painting skills. 📌 What’s Included: 14-slide PowerP
Preview of FREE RESOURCE Japan Koinobori Koi Festival May 5 Lesson Carp PowerPoint EDITABLE

FREE RESOURCE Japan Koinobori Koi Festival May 5 Lesson Carp PowerPoint EDITABLE

🎏 Japanese Koi Windsocks Art Lesson (Children’s Day) | Grades 4–8Celebrate Japanese culture with this fun and meaningful Koi windsock (koinobori) art lesson inspired by Children’s Day (May 5)! This engaging resource introduces students to the symbolism of the koi fish—representing strength, perseverance, and success—while connecting art to global traditions. ✨ What’s Included:📊 Editable PowerPoint Lesson🐟 Koi Windsock Templates (printable for smaller projects)🐉 Legend of the Koi Becoming
Preview of Vincent van Gogh Watercolor EDIT Art Lesson | Slides, Project, and Rubric 6-8

Vincent van Gogh Watercolor EDIT Art Lesson | Slides, Project, and Rubric 6-8

🌸EDITABLE Floral Watercolor Art Lesson & Art History CombinedDrawing, Texture & Ombre Painting 17 Slides - Example Student Art Included : PPTX fileBring nature into your art room with this engaging floral watercolor lesson that guides students from planning sketches to a polished final painting. Students explore flower forms, texture, line, color blending, and depth while practicing thoughtful craftsmanship and creative choice.This project is perfect for grades 6–8, but can be easily adapted fo
Preview of President's Day Art Slideshow - Portraits Personality Presidents 18 Slides

President's Day Art Slideshow - Portraits Personality Presidents 18 Slides

📚 Portraits, Personality, & Presidents – Middle School Art Slideshow This engaging, student-friendly slideshow introduces middle school students to how artists use portraits to show personality, mood, and respect, using historical examples in a neutral, classroom-appropriate way. Students explore how facial features, color, details, and backgrounds help tell a story about a person—without political discussion. Featuring examples connected to George W. Bush as a painter and artistic portrayals
Preview of Emotion Monsters Art Project | SEL Character Design Lesson for Middle School Art

Emotion Monsters Art Project | SEL Character Design Lesson for Middle School Art

Turn abstract emotions into powerful, imaginative creatures!In this engaging middle school art project, students choose a feeling and transform it into a Behemothian Personification — a giant creature that visually represents emotion through color, shape, line, symbolism, and environment. This project blends social-emotional learning, vocabulary, and creative problem-solving into a high-interest monster design assignment that students LOVE and teachers can easily assess. Perfect for grades 6–8,
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About the store

Experience

Hi, I’m Karen—yes, that Karen, but I only ask to speak to the manager of art supplies. Honestly, if the art room had a manager, we’d need a meeting about inventory, color theory, and whoever keeps putting marker caps back on like that. I create engaging middle school and high school art lessons with a modern twist: digital art projects, brainrot-inspired activities, pop art, sketchbooks, elements & principles resources, and low-prep lessons students actually enjoy.

Teaching style

My classroom is calm, inviting, and thoughtfully organized—basically the opposite of what you’d expect after handing paint to a room full of middle schoolers. I work hard to keep it visually engaging without making it feel like a craft store explosion. After years of teaching students on the autism spectrum and those with attention-related needs, I’ve learned that less really is more. A simple, structured space helps everyone stay focused and sane—because middle school brings enough chaos on its own. I’m also comfortable teaching across multiple ability levels, which means I can challenge advanced students while supporting those who need extra help, sometimes all in the same class period without spilling my coffee. I believe in balanced classroom management. I use PBIS, which is a fancy way of saying I notice and reward positive choices because it actually works. At the same time, I’m consistent with consequences when needed, whether that’s a behavior log entry or an office referral. In other words, I’m kind, consistent, adaptable, and I absolutely know where the referral forms are.

Awards & shining teacher moments

I’ve done some pretty unusual things in my career—like creating a life-sized “Elvis in the Gecko” installation for Geckofest, which is apparently a perfectly acceptable way to spend your time as an art teacher. I’ve also written successful grants for myself and other educators, making me part teacher, part artist, and part professional beggar—but with better formatting. Those grants have funded everything from STEM projects and classroom headphones to lockers and special education supports. Most recently, a grant sent me to Japan, where I studied indigo dyeing, woodblock printing, traditional weaving, matcha tea ceremonies, and Japanese pottery. So yes, I’ve now made art on multiple continents and still somehow get paint on my clothes every time.