Showing posts with label oil pastels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil pastels. 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.



Tuesday, 7 April 2026

Easy Spring Art Lesson for Elementary Students: Flowers and Sneakers Wax Resist Project

Spring is one of the best times of year for colourful, creative art lessons. Students are full of energy, routines can loosen up, and you need an art lesson that:

  • keeps students engaged
  • produces beautiful spring related displays
  • and uses a mixture of techniques covered over the year

This is where mixed media and mixed technique projects really shine. They carry a lot of learning value and support skill-building. When well structured, they are surprisingly easy to manage.

Let me show you a beautiful spring lessons we just finished that students really enjoyed. In fact I extended it into a Fall option as well, to support our unit of seasons (concept sof change, causation))

spring art lesson elementary
Spring Sneakers

Why Wax Resist Is Perfect for Spring Art Lessons

If you haven’t used wax resist in a while, this is your reminder. It’s one of those techniques that students find magical. Used in this flowers and sneakers art lesson, it:

  • instantly engages students
  • creates beautiful results with high success
  • and builds confidence quickly

This project combines:

  • wax resist technique (crayon + watercolour layering)
  • drawing skills (structured but creative and personalised)
  • colour and value exploration (bright spring palettes)

And it gives students just enough guided structure while still allowing for heaps of individuality.


The Classroom Problem This Lesson Solves

You’ve probably had this happen before - you plan a creative drawing or painting lesson, and:

  • students get stuck on “what to draw”
  • confidence drops quickly
  • results are inconsistent
  • and you end up troubleshooting all lesson long

This lesson avoids that completely. The structure is a built-in framework that allows for personal ideas and individuality within a context. The resource also includes an optional sneaker template giving students a clear starting point for shape and size, while the background and shoe design allows for creativity and personal choice.

spring art lesson elementaryspring art lesson elementaryspring art lesson elementary


What This Lesson Looks Like in Practice

This project is built to balance structure and creativity.

👉 Students create a bold sneaker design of their own choosing with pencils or felts, then add spring blossoms using oil pastels, and rain puddles with water paints.

Student Process:

  • Begin with a guided sneaker drawing, starting with the optional template
  • Fill sections with rain puddles, grass and fallen spring blossoms - focusing on the element of space through layering
  • Decorate each element
  • Design your own sneaker patterns

The Result:

  • vibrant, colourful artwork that is packed with learning
  • strong visual impact for displays and art shows
  • unique designs for every students
  • high student engagement from start to finish


spring art lesson elementaryspring art lesson elementary

Skills Students Are Building

This lesson goes beyond just spring craft. Students are developing:

  • Pattern and design skills - repeating and varying elements
  • Colour theory - experimenting with spring schemes and value
  • Fine motor control - detailed drawings
  • Understanding of resist techniques - cause and effect in art
  • Creative confidence - working within a structure while making it their own
spring art lesson elementaryspring art lesson elementaryspring art lesson elementary




Why This Works for Busy Teachers

Wax resist might look impressive, but it’s actually very manageable with the right structure. This is the kind of lesson you can rely on when:

  • you want something a bit different
  • you need strong results without extra planning
  • your students need both structure and creative freedom

This lesson works especially well for:

  • students aged 8–11 (middle to upper primary)
  • classes that benefit from guided drawing support
  • teachers looking for a high-impact, low-prep painting lesson

Save Time and Get Strong Results

If you want this lesson to run smoothly without figuring everything out yourself, get my comprehensive teaching resource, here. It contains everything I used, and more:

👉 Spring Flowers and Sneakers Art Lesson (Wax Resist Project)

It includes:

  • step-by-step teaching guidance
  • clear photographs of all the steps
  • written instructions
  • structured support for drawing and design
  • a classroom-tested sequence and pacing guide, that works
  • and more...

If you’re planning for the spring term, this is an easy win that students will genuinely enjoy.

spring art lesson elementary

spring art lesson elementaryspring art lesson elementaryspring art lesson elementary

spring art lesson elementary


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:

  • I share my:

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


Needing More Spring Art Ideas

If you’re planning ahead, here are more proven lessons to try:

clay sculpture spring
  • More Spring Lessons ideas in these blog posts:  👉  Spring Lessons
  • 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.

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