Alyice on January 27th, 2010


Jazz Up School Photos

Last week I received the cutest school photo of my great-niece, Desirae. (Seriously I am not that old. My husband is the youngest of 8 children with the oldest being my mom’s age. But I digress.)

Personally, I love getting photographs of the family each year—they add character and warmth to our family scrapbooks. My in-laws, however, hate getting annual photographs. It’s not that they don’t enjoy seeing how their grandchildren’s children have grown, or even their own grandchildren, for that matter. It’s that they never know what to do with the photographs once they are done looking at them. “We only have so much room in this tiny apartment,” they’d say.

Which got me to thinking about how much fun my children and I had coming up with creative ways to show off their school work and school photos—to distant relatives. We’d make ornaments, refrigerator magnets, wall calendars, and even video recordings. Now that they’re older, of course, those days are long gone. But it doesn’t stop me from reminiscing about times gone by.

In honor of those memories, I put together a fun, quick, tutorial on how to jazz up your children’s school photos.

Copyright 2009, Alyice Edrich
Abstract Art © Alyice Edrich, 2009

Supplies:

  • Wallet-sized school photo
  • Strathmore Paper for Acrylics or Watercolor
  • Frame with a 4” x 6″ opening
  • Colored pencils
  • Yellow watercolor paint
  • Copper, black, and Titanium Buff acrylic paints
  • Thin paintbrushes
  • Patterned stamp with four large squares
  • Rinse water
  • Scissors
  • Embossing heat tool or hair dryer

Instructions:

  1. Use one of the colored pencils to doodle several circles on top of one another. (You can also get creative by incorporating other shapes.)
  2. Use up to five colored pencils to lightly color each shape a different color.
  3. Dab stamp with Titanium Buff acrylic paint and gently stamp a few squares over the image.
  4. Use heat tool to dry acrylic paint, or let dry naturally.
  5. Use yellow watercolor paint to add a thin “wash” over the entire painting.
  6. Let dry naturally as the heat tool can curl the paper.
  7. While the painting is drying, take the scissors and cut around the child’s portrait until you get a silhouette.
  8. Go back to the painting and outline all the lines in copper.
  9. Once dry, go back over each line, slightly off to the side, in black.
  10. Let dry.
  11. Turn the painting over. Use the glass, from the frame, as a template and trace an outline onto the backside of the painting.
  12. Cut out the shape.
  13. Have your child sign and date his painting on the backside.
  14. Lift the back of the frame and place the picture on the screen, then place the painting on top of the picture. Close frame and stand upright.

Congratulations! You’ve just created an original piece of abstract art—in less than 30 minutes!

Note: You can use double-sided tape to adhere the picture to the artwork; however, I like the idea of not taping the two together so that the recipients can change out the picture, annually, if they’d like.

Keep Creating

Alyice Edrich, Editor-in-Chief



© Alyice Edrich The content and images on this website are all copyright protected. Contact Alyice for reprint permission and fees.


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AlyiceEdrich.com
I'm a freelance writer, mixed media artist, SMVA, and the owner of The Dabbling Mum.

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    All material on this blog belongs to Alyice Edrich, unless otherwise noted. No project, artwork, or text may be reproduced or displayed elsewhere without the consent of the creator. That includes making derivative works for resale. Please use project tutorials for personal use and/or gifts only.


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