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Published byEdmund Webb Modified over 9 years ago
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Central Primary School Arts Day Third Grade: Scott Nash- Saturday Night at the Dinosaur Stomp
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Saturday Night at the Dinosaur Stomp Written by Carol Diggory Shields Illustrated by Scott Nash First picture book Scott Nash illustrated
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Scott Nash Illustrator, author, designer, and media mind Has done independent work for Disney and every other player in the kid’s media market over the past 25 years
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Scott Nash Illustrator of Flat Stanley Responsible for designing many of the icons and logos we see every day from companies like Nickelodeon, PBS, Disney, and American Girl
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Thoughts on Illustrations… Completely visual and detail oriented, and he likes to add little treasures for kids to discover throughout his books Illustrating a character makes the character very real; a sketch of a character will actually conjure up a lot of details about that character
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Time to Read While reading, point out the dinosaur drawings, taking time to note the colors and patterns.
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Examples of Color and Patterns
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Art Project: Watercolor Painting
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Supplies Needed 12” x 18” white watercolor paper Crayons Liquid Watercolor paints Paint brushes and water containers Salt and rubbing alcohol How-to-draw a dinosaur handout Photocopies of pages from the book
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Set-up Have students write their name on back of paper. Spend a few minutes on the white board demonstrating different ways to draw dinosaurs. Refer to handout for how-to-draw techniques.
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Part One: Drawing the Dinosaur Encourage kids to draw lightly with their crayons Once they like their lines, they can trace over it with a heavier hand
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Part One: Drawing the Dinosaur Encourage kids to fill in small areas such as party lights, stripes, teeth, etc (add many details) with crayons
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Part Two: Painting with Watercolors After the drawing is complete, use a tray of liquid watercolors to paint the background. Save painting the dinosaur until last to give background a chance to dry.
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Part Three: Adding Texture Sprinkling a few granules of salt over wet watercolor imparts a magical quality to the painting.
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Part Three: Adding Texture Demonstrate by dipping a cotton swab into a small container of rubbing alcohol and then applying it directly to wet watercolor paper. The effects are magical. Suddenly, a funny looking dot will appear— almost rubbery or lizard-like.
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Completed Project
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