![]() ![]() You can find several other space themed songs here.Īlso, have you seen this whoopie pie solar system yet? Mmm. We loved singing our favorite rocket song (Zoom Zoom Zoom) as we worked on our projects today. Add extra pieces of cardstock (with glue) to serve as the fins at the bottom of the rocket.Ħ. ![]() I actually liked the cleaner look (without the marker lines), but kids always seem to like to add extra details, so I'll keep the markers as an option for the little ones I am working with tomorrow.ĥ. Use markers to draw in any details you'd like. Add other details to the rocket- buttons, foil, stickers, etc. Cut strips of tissue paper (great fine motor scissors skills activity) and glue them to the bottom of the rocket as the exhaust.Ĥ. Glue on the engine (yellow piece of paper in our pictures).ģ. Add the nose cone and body tube of the rocket and glue to the background paper.Ģ. Materials Needed: a few shapes (these were the basic ones we started with) cut out of cardstock, a piece of cardstock for the background (black or navy), scissors, glue, aluminum foil, stickers, jewels, buttons (other random items to add), tissue paper, and markers.ġ. You can never do too many rocket projects, right? While this might seem overwhelming, look at it from another perspective: collage frees you up from the rules of drawing or painting and allows you to explore your unique artistic language. The other version involved some painting and a cool window in the rocket with our favorite family members inside. With collage, there’s no limit on materials or approaches you use in image-making. this was the simpler version, so I thought I would share it. After stumbling upon this awesome art lesson blog ( Deep Space Sparkle) and the cool rocket collages, we had to try out our own rockets.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |