Showing posts with label Design Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Design Technology. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 July 2015

Beach Pottery


 My hands are itchy, they have to make, craft, form and mold. Even if that means simply arranging flowers in a jar, quotes in a journal or feathers on a windowsill.

We found these beautiful chalk pebbles at the sea a couple of weeks ago.
In their perfectly formed clods I saw a bird, a pear, a whale, a bear.... The children were inspired.

I used to love to use charcoal as a medium. It is messy. Beware and prepared with old shirt's and warm soapy cloths on hand. 
I remember buying some shards of charcoal years ago ( the brittle stick type they used to sell ) with my school trip pocket money. Scarcely holding the feathery sticks between my fingers lest they disintegrate I made endless spidery lines that would eventually be smudged to incoherence.


 The beauty of charcoal is it washes off the stone quite easily if you make a mistake. I will seal these pebbles with clear nail polish to preserve their designs.




Saturday, 13 December 2014

Puppet Making with Paper and Cloth


Inspired by this simply magical post by Rima Staines of the Hermitage, the older girls and I decided that making puppets would be our Summer project.

 However, it was a far more complex undertaking than I realised it would be.


It took from August to late November to finish our puppets in the end.

The girl's each had quite definite and ambitious designs in mind.
 I wanted to be able to help them to accomplish these without too much frustration so the puppets really ended up being collaborative efforts. 

I provided, technical support when threads needed threading and untangling and re-stitching.

They engaged, with guidance only in the processes that they could manage without help such as applying glue and paper to the heads and shoulders, cutting out the hands, whittling the sticks that hold the puppet's strings and stitching the fabric squares that made up the puppet's clothing.

We worked together on  painting  the faces and on stitching around the puppet's hands.

 

 This little man is named Thorfinn after the enchanting fairy tale by Vivian French and Jackie Morris "Singing to the Sun"


 His hands are made of wool filled cotton interlock.
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His gown and hat are made of two squares of cotton print fabric.

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His head and shoulders are molded out of papier mache.
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 His strings are made of hemp twine strung to two hand whittled pieces of wood, kindly donated by one of the trees in our village green.


He also  has a little bell sewn to the top of his cap of which he is very proud.


I wanted to create a puppet design that would be easy enough for the children to handle and manipulate. 

This meant the design had to be pretty simple, flexible and weightless. 

However, I also wanted them to easily express their puppet's character by manipulating it's movement.  

I think this was achieved by using large squares of flowing fabric for the puppet's gowns as they gave the arms a good reach and lots of flexibility.

Thorfinn also, actually has two strings threaded through his head. 
One comes out through the front and one pokes out of the  point of his cap.

Using two strings for the head like this, allows the puppeteer to direct the angle of the head with ease.

Thorfinn can be made to look down by pulling the thread that runs through the back of his head while slackening the the thread that pokes out from under the front of his cap.

 

This gives poor Thorfinn a rather melancholy air. 
But never fear! 
By tightening the front string and slackening the back one his joie de vivre soon returns.



The girls' whittled the wood and rubbed it with my homemade beeswax salve.
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His hair is made of Merino wool roving and stuck into place using a non toxic craft glue. 
I used my longest, scariest doll-making needle to stitch the strings through his head and cap before gluing his cap to his hair line with more copious amounts of  craft glue.







Florence, as ever unmoved by the general chaos of her household.
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 Matilda and I worked on this elegant character. Her name is Lady Elspeth Barley.



Boo's creation is simply magical. He is a Celestial Bird Boy!




Here is poor Thorfinn looking a wee bit undone. 

You can see how we shaped the head, neck and shoulders from this picture. 

To paint the faces we made up a large batch of skin tone in acrylic; One pale, one cool and one slightly warmer in tone for shading. 

We applied the skin tones and waited for them to dry thoroughly before painting the facial details and sticking on the hair.


To make the basic head and neck structure, we scrunched up a sheet of newspaper in to a ball, leaving enough to twist a sketchy neck and shoulder shape with the same sheet to avoid having to stick pieces together.

We molded the face by sticking pieces of ripped up newspaper onto the structure with PVA glue.


The  bodies were made by placing two pieces of fabric right sides together and stitching all the way around leaving gaps along the top and on the top two corners for the head and hands to fit through and be stitched in place.


On a roll of sorts I decided to use a similar process to create some cloth puppets using the Waldorf method for molding their heads. 

It was certainly easier to thread twine through a wool filled head than a paper filled one!




More inspiration




  The video above describes beautifully why puppets and puppetry helps children connect with their imaginations.




I love the simplicity of this Waldorf style Puppet play using marionette style dolls.

Monday, 24 November 2014

Forest Girls

Photos taken by Emmy, Matilda and Boo.







I love to take the girls down to our local National Trust Park. There is so much wilderness there. I park right down at the end of the park under the shade of the trees and spread out a blanket. We eat our picnic away from the crowds. No fancy sandwiches just a baguette torn into pieces, some cheese chopped into chunks, a pot of olives and cherry tomatoes, a punnet of strawberries and a huge packet of cheese and onion crisps. I save cakes for a going home treat. I'll also take a dog bowl, thermos' of water and some strong, milky coffee.

 
I gave the older three girls the camera and told them to give me some surprises. I think the pictures came out really well, although I didn't include in this post the many, many, many, crickets and ladybirds and snails that Nola persuaded them to photograph... "Take a picture of this buggy, and that buggy, Pwease, quick, now he's crawling up my sweeeve!"




The girls have a favourite Oak tree for playing see saw on. One of the branches in bent yet still strong enough to take the weight of a child and it bounces up and down when you sit on it. Nola calls it her pet dragon.


Fina and Nola played mostly in the little stick hut they made a couple of years ago and has since been embellished and furnished by other children. Nola has no fear and will try to follow her older sisters as far as they go. I'm sure she would be fine with them, but I can't let her. It is a completely different experience for me. The middle three were babies together and clung close to me, generally. But Nola is the youngest by 4 years and she has no apprehension of going out of my site so long as her older siblings are doing the same. I struggle with this on outings as I don't want to restrict the older ones freedoms but I still want Nola to be close to me. I also don't want to restrict her freedom, but I have to listen to my intuition. That is why I like this sprawling countryside so much. There are so many trees to climb, streams to paddle in and space to run and all within a close vicinity.



The dog has become very good at just hanging around us and not wandering off to meet, greet and jump on everyone as she used to. Though if she sees a duck or a rabbit she'll try to chase them so we have to keep a look out for that, but generally the ducks and rabbits outsmart her. Tani says she's got the junk yard dog look. I love her scruffiness, her goatie and her big long snout.


I settled the girls back in the car with some sweets and promises of ice cream while Boo and Emmy gathered some Willow for bow making.
They have been playing secret Summer Santa with their friends and wanted to make some bows and arrows for their chosen recipient.  They are not too hard to make, although really more of an 8 plus activity. Emmy and I split a length of green willow with a billhook cut notches into the top and bottom for string and the girls sanded it. Matilda, Boo and Fina had fun whittling the arrows and decorating the bows with acrylic paint. And they really work!!! Think I might have to felt the arrow points.