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Elementary winter views to paint

Andries Vermeulen
Winter scene with skaters by Andries Vermeulen shows people skating on the frozen water. Let children cut out a frozen shape from silver paper and stick at the base of a piece of grey sugar paper. Use pens and ink to draw stick characters skating on their own frozen picture.


Oakwood Public School’s snowplow design ready to make a difference this winter

At the start of the school year city staff asked local elementary schools to help them with a SnowPORTant mission: to cheer up our snowplows as they prepare for a long, cold, and snowy winter ahead by painting them.

Eight elementary schools and one high school accepted the mission: St. Therese Catholic Elementary School, Oakwood Public School, St. Patrick Catholic Elementary School, DeWitt Carter Public School, St. John Bosco Catholic Elementary School, Saint-Joseph Catholic Elementary School, McKay Public School, Steele Street Public School, and Lakeshore Catholic High School. Students were asked to paint original artwork on the plows with a theme: school pride.

Six of the eight plows were returned to the city’s engineering and operation centre for the Touch-a-Truck event on Sept. 27, where Mayor Steele chose his favourite plow: Oakwood Public School.

Oakwood Public School’s mascot, the eagle, was incorporated into their plow design along with the slogan “spread your wings”. Students also incorporated the phrase “we make a difference”, and they do, especially for city snowplow operators who now have creatively designed, inspirational plows to join them on their own SnowPORTant mission: plowing our streets.

“It really was a tough decision as there were a lot of schools with unique, original designs,” said Mayor Bill Steele. “I would like to thank all schools who participated again this year, creating a sense of community pride through their artwork.”

Oakwood Public School’s plow will also be part of the city’s upcoming Lighted Santa Claus Parade on Saturday, Dec. 3, starting at 6:30 p.m.

Honourable mention, chosen by Mayor Steele, was Lakeshore Catholic high school.

“The art teacher reached out to us inquiring if they could participate as it would be a fun activity for the students to partake in, given their school year did not start as expected, and they did an amazing job painting the plow,” commented Mayor Steele.

Port Paint and Paper partnered with the city on this initiative, providing schools the paint and paint brushes required to complete their mission.

Fun fact: each school’s plow will be deployed to the route that the school resides in, so the school community could see their plow in action whenever it snows. So, this winter, be sure to keep an eye out on city streets for these newly painted plows.





Drawing & writing!

Wintry trees
Go outside with sketch books and charcoal. Look at the bare wintry trees and invite children to make sketches of their favourite tree. Help them to emphasise the spikey shapes of the trees. Compare the thicknesses of the trunk with the branches and the twigs.

A chalk in the snow
Let children use white chalk on black or dark blue paper to create pictures of snow. Try swirling snowflakes; fat, round snowmen; snow-laden trees and landscapes.

A winter’s walk
Go for a short walk in the local street or park and look at the winter trees, views, landscapes, etc. Take photographs of the different scenes. Let children choose a photo to copy. Provide small pieces of white paper and black pens for children to use. Make photo frames using strips of coloured card.

Festive envelopes
Explain that at Chinese New Year, children receive gifts of money from their friends and family in festive red envelopes, as this is considered a lucky colour. Help children to deconstruct an envelope to see how they are made. Create a template to make new envelopes using wrapping paper or sheets of red paper. Help children to fold and join the paper into envelopes. Let them write their name on the front. Later you can secretly fill them with a small gift for each child to celebrate a winter festival.

Painting & printing!

Ice cube painting
Sprinkle different-coloured powder paint onto paper. Let children use ice cubes on sticks or wear plastic gloves and hold loose ice cubes. Spread the ice cubes over the powder paint to create swirling patterns.

Evergreen still life
Make an arrangement of evergreen plants in a glass vase. Use holly, ivy, other evergreen shrubs, grass, twigs, pine cones, etc. Ask children to paint pictures of the still-life arrangements using shades of green, red and brown paints.

Making icicles
Cut out some sharp, icicle-shaped pieces of card. Spread runny white paint along the top and then hang them up and watch the paint run down the icicles! Repeat with runny blue or silver paint. When dry, hang up around the room with snowflakes and straw flakes (see below) to create a wintry feel.

Salty snow
Ask children to paint a picture of a winter landscape on pale blue paper. Use dark brown paint for trees and buildings, white paint for frosty ground, etc. Leave to dry until still tacky and then let children sprinkle snow all over the picture with a salt shaker!

Fingerprint snowstorms
Paint a picture of a bare winter tree using brown paint and thin paint brushes. Then add white snow all over the tree using fingerprints. Let children paint their own picture of a person, animal or building with the brown paint and then cover it in a fingerprint snowstorm.

Winter prints
Let children draw a winter scene on Styrofoam or polystyrene trays using a blunt pencil. Spread a small amount of ink on top of the tray using a roller. Turn the trays over and press down onto clean paper. Make repeat prints until the ink has dried up and then try again using a different colour ink.

Christmas decorations
Provide some clean aluminium trays and help children use Christmas templates such as stars, moon, candles, snowmen and trees to cut out shapes. Place the shape on a chopping board and using a nail or hole punch make a hole at the top of the shape. Try using the nail to tap the foil and create indentations and patterns all over it. Hang the decorations on the Christmas tree.

Making & modelling!

Snowflakes
Cut folded paper circles or white plastic bags into snowflakes. Help children to fold the paper circles in half and half again. Use scissors to cut shapes along the folded sides. Unfold, sprinkle with glue and glitter and hang on windows around the room.

Half-rocking robin
Cover the back of a paper plate with brown paint and when dry fold in half so that the semicircle rocks back and forth. Paint on a red breast with red paint and add a yellow beak made from a diamond folded in half. Stick on brown feathers as a wing and add googly eyes.

Giant snowman
Work in a small group to create a giant sculpture of a snowman. Use a cardboard box or large tube as the body. Cover in scrunched newspaper and glue. Then wrap strips of white modroc around the finished shape. Make a big ball of newspaper and modroc for the head. Use a carrot for the nose, small pieces of coal for eyes, buttons down its front and add a knitted scarf and hat.

Snowflake mobile
Use three equal lengths of white artstraws to create a model snowflake. Fasten the three straws into a six-pointed star shape using glue, staple or tie with cotton. Make different-sized snowflakes. Hang them off a metal clothes hanger using different lengths of string to create a pretty mobile.

Popcorn treats
Make popcorn wreaths as treats for the birds. Cut the centre out of a paper plate to make a cardboard ring. Thread popcorn onto a long piece of dental floss and wrap it around the ring to create a wreath. Add a red ribbon and hang up outside for the birds to feed on during the cold winter months.

Extreme play dough
Make some extreme white play dough using the following ingredients:

● 2 cups of white cornflour

● 1½ cups of boiling water

● 2 tbsp cream of tartar

● 1 tbsp veg. oil, silver glitter

Mix together in a bowl until combined into dough. Let children use the snow dough to make snowmen and polar bears.

Solid snowballs
Half fill empty balloons with some plaster of Paris and fasten the balloon with a knot. When the plaster is starting to set, let children have fun moulding the material into a snowball shape. Leave to set for about four hours and then cut and peel off the balloon. Make and display a whole pile of snowballs, but don’t try throwing them!

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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