Mix It Up!
TIP: After reading the story, have children make their own painted papers. Use bright colored construction paper and tempera paint to see what happens when you paint one color on top of another.
Use this interactive book to introduce students to the magic of color-mixing.
Prompting Questions:
- Which color do blue and yellow make?
- Do they always make that color?
- What would happen if we mixed blue, red, and yellow?
Related Creative Activities
Multicultural Colors and Self-Portraits
Animals, Colors, and Senses, Oh My!
Tear It Up!
A Portrait of One’s Own
After spending time exploring aspects of the Ancestor Portrait and the importance of ancestor portraits in the Chinese tradition, students will create an ancestor portrait using mixed media materials and present it to the class.
Combining Human and Animal Forms
Students will use visual observation skills to carefully examine the Assyrian Bird-Headed Deity limestone relief and explore the movement, sounds, and traits of different animals. They will first explore these aspects in humans and birds of prey, as seen in the limestone relief, and will then do the same with “animals” they create from two or more animals. This lesson enables children to draw upon previous knowledge and imagination in order to act out the movement, sounds, and other traits of the animals they create.
If You Give a Man a Horse
Students will read the book If You Give a Mouse a Cookie by Laura Numeroff, explore Charles Deas’ painting Long Jakes, and exercise their imaginations to create their own cause-and-effect story.