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How To: Animal Art Templates

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Your kids' artwork is terrific on its own, but Sarah Jane of Sarah Jane Studios has devised a method for using it as the base for an animal art gallery and she's sharing a few templates for you to use.

 
 

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Choose from among the gazillions of paintings and drawings your kids have already done or make an afternoon of drawing or fingerpainting.

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You can find templates for a sparrow, elephant and seal at Sarah Jane's blog. For other animals you can look online. We typed "bear clip art" into Google's image search and found several suitable, simple line drawings. Enlarge them to your desired size and then follow Sarah Jane's instructions.

Here's Sarah Jane's post about the project and you can also find her original artwork in her Etsy shop.

(Via Craft Gossip)

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How to..., artwork, Sarah Jane Studios, art template

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Comments (13)

i love this idea for baby and very young toddler art work. however, were i to paint a "house" for mommy and she turned it into an elephant, i would be highly offended!

posted by BuddhaBellysMum on March 18th 2009 at 4:08pm
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What a way to break a kid's heart! Baby art work maybe, but who turns a baby loose with finger paints? I think this is terribly sad.

posted by Palmetto on March 18th 2009 at 5:56pm
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I think this idea is intended for all the crazy artwork your YOUNG toddler does where the main goal is the fill the page. Children at this age are not trying to draw a "house" or any other inanimate object; they are simply experimenting with color, texture and the result of their actions, which we equate with art. Besides, it is not necessary that you cut up your child’s art; you could simply overlay the template. Needless to say, I think this is great! Those hundreds of "scribbles" slated for the circular file could be resurrected as something new.

posted by herz9160 on March 18th 2009 at 6:28pm
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As a parent of a very prolific artist we have a collage box where she puts some of her completed artwork to be "recycled" into new creations. Think Eric Carle or other children's book illustrators that use collages to create the images for their books. Now that her work is becoming more representative it is harder to get her to do this--but we still cut out parts of volcanos, trees, islands, houses and make new pieces of art. Other things we have used her art for include wrapping paper and making cards for friends and family.

posted by PNWGal on March 18th 2009 at 7:36pm
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I also wanted to add I think this would be a good way for a big sister or big brother to get to help decorate a room for a new baby.

posted by PNWGal on March 18th 2009 at 7:37pm
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I think this is a great idea! I am in the process of re-doing my daughter's bedroom, and I think she would love to do a project like this.

For those concerned about hurting an older child's feelings, why not ask them to create something specifically for this? You could also ask them if they have any older pictures you could use. I think there are a lot of ways to do this without hurting a child's feelings.

posted by Tashy on March 18th 2009 at 10:08pm
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An alternative I did with my niece and nephew was to print a couple of pictures of their favourite things/people in black and white and get them to colour those in.

My niece is still proud of her purple polkadot grandparents... :)

posted by EvaInNL on March 19th 2009 at 7:21am
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Hello Friends...

This activity was meant to be done together WITH your kids. I did the cutting of course, but THEY picked which animals they wanted to create. We even framed it together and hung them together. They loved every second of it! You can read more here:

http://sarahjanestudios.com/blog/index.php/2009/03/02/making-an-art-gallery/

posted by Sarah Jane on March 19th 2009 at 7:50am
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I love this idea! The templates look great. The bird is especially pretty. But, and I am not ornithologist, isn't the bird a swallow, and not a sparrow? I don't think sparrows have deeply split tails, do they? In any case, I love it!

posted by gastronormous on March 19th 2009 at 2:30pm
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I love it! Sweet, beautiful, practical idea. Thank you.

posted by hyzen on March 19th 2009 at 3:14pm
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I understand some of the concerns posted here, but, like Sarah Jane herself says, there are ways you can approach this project with sensitivity.
I think it's a beautiful idea and something my daughters would love to do.
A project I did with my kids one time was to photocopy a line drawing of something meaningful and have them paint it with watercolors. In this case it was a drawing of the school where my husband works (taken from a 1930s yearbook). I framed the painting and the girls gave it to him for Father's Day:
http://pennycarnival.typepad.com/penny_carnival/2008/06/daddy-day.html

posted by pennycarnival on March 26th 2009 at 7:17am
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I run a kindergarten school and I think this is a great idea for the school kids.

posted by D or me on March 30th 2009 at 12:39pm
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My daughters and I followed Sarah Jane's instructions and we're thrilled with the finished products. You can see them here:
http://pennycarnival.typepad.com/penny_carnival/2009/04/meal-planning-and-fabric-hoarding.html

We added a whippet to the mix in honor of our dog.

Thanks again for this great idea (Sarah Jane) and post (Ohdeedoh).

posted by pennycarnival on April 10th 2009 at 11:16pm
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