Showing posts with label art tutorials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art tutorials. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

Easy Summer Art Lesson for Elementary Students: Bright Picnic Baskets Project (Collage + Oil Pastels)

As summer arrives and the weather starts to warm up, you want to feel energised about your art lessons… but the reality is often very different.

You’re tired.
Your students are restless.
And you still need something that:

  • looks great on display
  • builds real art skills (not just “busy work”)
  • and spans across several lessons, with minimal prep

This is exactly why I come back to collage and oil pastel projects at this time of year.

They’re engaging, flexible, and when structured well, they create vibrant, successful results for every student, whatever their work pace may be. And the bonus is that you can use up left over paper scraps from the year.

Let me show you one of my recent lessons that worked beautifully for us.

Picnic art project for kids

Why This Summer Art Lesson Works (Even When Energy Is Low)

When short on time, with increased interruption to schedules, this lesson easily adapted to meet our needs. This summer picnic collage art lesson supports and extends:

  • Collage techniques (cutting, layering, composition)
  • Oil pastel skills (blending, value application, texture)
  • Creative choice (students can personalise their picnic scene)

And more importantly, it has enough structure that even your less confident students feel successful, as they get excited about the up-coming summer holidays.

The Problem This Solves in Real Classrooms

If you’ve ever taught a “fun seasonal activity” and it didn’t quite land, you’ll identify with this:

  • Students rush and make mistakes
  • They don’t like parts of their artwork and want to start again
  • Everyone’s work starts to look the same
  • You spend more time managing than teaching

Making the shift to structured, scaffolded lessons, like this one, that have choice built in at every step, can make all the difference.

What This Looks Like in the Classroom

This project is built around a simple but engaging idea:

👉 Students build their artwork in small, bite-sized sections that come together into a bright picnic scene, reducing overwhelm. If students miss lessons, it doesn’t matter, because they have the opportunity to make a range of things for their basket - they don’t need everything! All steps are on the included slides to inspire students with a visual example or to help students catch up anything that they missed.

Student Process:

  • Start the lesson at any point. 
  • When all students are present, that is a good day to create the basket together. Students design their unique basket and a background with a focus on colour, texture and value
  • Make each item for their basket across a couple of lessons, as individual collage elements (blankets, food, drink)
  • Use oil pastels, then enhance and define details with coloured pencils. Use paint sticks or liquid water colours to fill the backgrounds quickly
  • Extend with collage grass and flowers for your focused fast finishers

This will result in a high level of engagement due to genuine student-driven outcomes, and yield colourful pieces you’ll actually be proud to display.

summer art project for kidssummer art project for kidssummer art project for kidssummer art project for kids


Skills Students Are Actually Learning

This project isn’t just fun, it’s also skill-building with purpose. Students develop:

  • Composition skills – arranging elements in a balanced way
  • Colour theory understanding – bright, seasonal palettes
  • Fine motor control – cutting and detailed pastel work
  • Layering techniques – combining materials effectively
  • Art elements – texture, shape, line, value and form
  • Observational drawing - for the basket and contents

So yes, it’s engaging and seasonal. But it’s also meaningful and structured. This lesson works especially well for students aged 7–9 (middle to upper primary), those classes that need clear structure and guidance and teachers wanting a low-prep but high-impact lesson.

Let’s be honest, we don’t have time to reinvent lessons every week. This is the exact type of lesson I use when I need something that needs minimal prep and keeps students focused on individual outcomes with purpose, producing strong results, without the  stress.

It’s the kind of lesson you can walk into class with and feel prepared, even in a busy week.

Save Time and Get Strong Results

I have written up my process and added step-by-step photos so that you can also teach this Summer Picnics art project, perfect for your art lessons over the next few weeks. 

👉 Summer Picnic Collage Art Project (Collage + Oil Pastel Lesson)

summer picnic art project for kids
summer picnic art project for kidssummer picnic art project for kidssummer picnic art project for kids
summer picnic art project for kidssummer picnic art project for kidssummer picnic art project for kids

The resource includes:

  • step-by-step teaching slides (PDF - not editable)
  • clear process instructions with visuals
  • a simple materials list (basic art room supplies)
  • a classroom-tested sequence (ages 7–9)

If you need something reliable for the spring / summer term, this is it.

Make It Even Easier for Your Future Planning

If you want to stay in the loop, getting updates about comprehensive, ready-to-use art lessons that you can trust, you can subscribe to my FREE Substack newsletter.

👉 Join Up Here

Each week, I share my:

  • time-saving lesson ideas
  • latest classroom-tested resources
  • and practical strategies for busy teachers


Needing More Summer Art Ideas

If you’re planning ahead or want to build on collage skills, these are more proven lessons to try:

summer tulips art lesson
  • More Summer Lessons ideas on this blog:  👉  Summer Posts
  • And finish with a great end-of-term collage activity for your early finishers: 👉 Shaggy Dog Collage 

Connect with me for more art teaching ideas

You can also follow me on my other channels, for ideas and classroom inspiration, here:


Thank you for stopping by, With love


 

Mea 

Follow this  blog and check back soon for more art teaching ideas.



Sunday, 5 April 2026

10 Easy Op Art Drawing Lessons Your Students Will LOVE!

No Prep One Day Art Ideas for Busy Teachers!

If you’re looking for engaging, low-prep art lessons that actually keep students focused at the end of the term, or year, Op Art is one of the best options to use.

I’ve used my Op Art drawing lessons for my:

  • early finishers
  • sub plans
  • fast, one-day art lessons
  • middle and upper elementary students
    Op Art

And the best thing is - students LOVE creating these illusion effects. All you need are some basic supplies and minimal to no prep time.

In this post, I’ll share a collection of my one day Op Art projects. You can be assured that these are classroom-tested, highly engaging, and designed for real teaching situations. 

What is Op Art (and why students love it)

Op Art is a term used to describe art created with lines, patterns and shapes in such a way as to create visual illusions that appear to move, pop, or distort.

For students, it feels like magic.

For teachers, it’s a win because it:

  • builds drawing confidence
  • teaches line, pattern, and contrast
  • works for a wide range of abilities
  • requires minimal materials

Op Art

If you’ve ever needed a last-minute art lesson, this is exactly the kind of activity that saves your day. These Op Art lesson use simple step-by-step drawing techniques to create a variety of bold illusion effects.

When you need something short and effective, these Op Art activities works as a warm-up, a bell ringer and even a quick creativity boost.

It’s simple enough to fit into tight schedules but still produces high-impact visual results. Lessons focuses on repetitive pattern building, helping students develop:

  • fine motor control
  • concentration
  • creative variation
  • ruler skills
  • measuring accuracy

So what makes these lessons different from others you've seen?

I am a full time Visual Art and Digital Media specialist educator, teaching students from ages 4-12, at a primary school. I do this every day, just like you!

Op Art

These resources not only include the slides presentation for your large screen to run a whole class guided drawing lesson, they also include printable student guides for independent learners and early finisher drawing stations.

Upgrade to the Bundle and you'll have a bank of 10x go-to art lessons, these are the kinds of activities that you’ll come back to, again and again. With just paper and markers, students can create artwork that feels exciting, relevant, and rewarding. Such a great way to wind down at the end of a term or during the final weeks of the year. 

Another option is to start the term with mini versions that you collate into a collaborative display for your annual art show.

Jump into my TPT store HERE to view the BUNDLE and individual products by clicking on the cover images below. open or watch the previews to learn more about each product.

Op ArtOp ArtOp Art

Op ArtOp ArtOp Art

Make It Even Easier for Your Future Planning

If you want to stay in the loop, getting updates about comprehensive, ready-to-use art lessons that you can trust, you can subscribe to my FREE Substack newsletter.

👉 Join Up Here

I share my:

  • time-saving lesson ideas
  • latest classroom-tested resources
  • and practical strategies for busy teachers

More Drawing Lessons for Early Finisher Engagement

When you have focused students that finish early due to their great time management, you need to have a great drawing lesson on hand that they can work on independently. This is where my End of Year drawing bundle will be a great resource to have in your back pocket. These lessons are structured in exactly the same way as my Op Art products above. Print the student guides for independent students to use while you help the res of your students complete their main projects.

👉 Browse more Early Finisher ideas on my blog, here:


Connect with me for more art teaching ideas

You can also follow me on my other channels, for ideas and classroom inspiration, here:



Thank you for stopping by, With love


 

Mea 

Follow this  blog and check back soon for more art teaching ideas.



Sunday, 20 August 2023

Claude Monet Art Lessons

Claude Monet Art Lessons

Monet has always been a favourite artist of mine and visiting his home in Giverny, France as well as enjoying his famous works in multiple galleries, has been a highlight.

You can see the huge scale of his waterlily series of paintings in this photo I took.


Exploring his artworks with Years 4 (3rd grade) has been a real joy over the years, and we revisited this lesson (one of my favourites) again this year, based on my Waterlily tutorial, available HERE.


We started with observational value sketching, using my video I created as a reference. You can view the video HERE.

The students results are always beautiful and they really amaze themselves at how great their drawings turn out. Here are a the first 4 finished this year.


Next we explore a few different media, starting with oil pastels. Students learn to select 3 values of a colour, then I teach them to blend from darkest to lightest, ending with white. We do this on a single petal drawn in their A5 sketchbooks.


We follow this up, experimenting with water colour paints and then also with water colour pencils. Now students can choose which media they wish to use in their own water lily drawing (A4) later.


This year we also added a gorgeous clay sculpture element to extend our learning further and we were thrilled with the results. 
We used potters clay in Classic White and glazed with Stroke and Coat. We glazed onto bone dry greenware which I then ran through a bisque fire. I sent it through a glaze fire too to increase the shine aspect.



Please stay tuned to see how our waterlily artworks turn out as the term continues. But if you want all the steps now, click HERE to preview: 

CLAUDE MONET WATERLILY Impressionist Art lesson with VIDEO guide 3rd-5th grade


If you want the steps for the clay lesson, click HERE to preview:

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