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Book of Textures

April 11, 2011 by notjustcute Filed Under: Create, Get Outside, Learning through Play and Experience 21 Comments

I’m really excited to share this guest post with you from Rachelle Doorley of Tinker Lab:

 When it comes to outdoor play, kicking a ball around, cooling off in the pool, or spending hours at the park probably come to mind. But how often do we consider making art outside? Outdoor art making is one of my favorite things to do with young children because it’s a great way to fully embrace messy activities, it can be a new way to meet the neighbors (chalk drawing on the sidewalk, for example), and inspiration can come in new forms with birds flying by and trees overhead.

This project came about with the idea that we’d craft a book of patterns from textures collected on our weekly walk to the farmer’s market. As you’ll soon see, my daughter couldn’t wait to get out of her pajamas to get started, and we never made it to the farmer’s market. But this is how we like our art projects: spontaneous and improvisational!



Here’s what we used:

  •  Home made booklet, made from four sheets of printer paper, folded in half and stapled at the spine
  • Assorted crayons without paper wrapping
  • Found textures

We began by talking about “textures” as an opening into this activity.  We happened to be barefoot, so I asked my daughter what the ground felt like under her feet. “Bumpy,” she said.  When I facilitate similar actives with elementary children in a school setting, I may ask them to feel their shirts (soft, silky, bumpy, etc.) or their desks (smooth, slippery).

I then opened up the book and talked to my daughter about how we couldcollect textures by rubbing the edge of the crayon on the paper when it’s layered over a bumpy (her language) surface. Once the “rules” were established, we took our booklet to the sidewalk and began collecting.

We had to be sure that the pages were all folded back so that we worked with just one sheet at a time. Here’s the water meter grate. I really like that diamond pattern.

With the first texture complete, I asked, “what else has a bumpy texture?” With that, she found some cement to collect. She used a pink crayon (her favorite), but was disappointed at how the color didn’t show up very well. This was a good lesson in color selection, and we hypothesized about which colors might work best for this activity.  After the driveway rubbing she darted off to pick up some leaves to rub and needed help holding them steady while she captured their
image.

While the original idea was to collect textures along our neighborhood walk, it ended up being a book of textures taken from the front of our house. When I’ve done this withe school-age children, I’ve seen them get excited about the hunt for textures, and I imagine that the project would have had a longer life if my  daughter were just a bit older. But I also know from experience that once an idea is planted in the mind, it will pop up again as a footnote to a conversation or an experience that can be built upon at a later point.

What are your favorite outdoor art-making experiences?

Rachelle Doorley has extensive experience in the arts, from costuming for Warner Brothers to lecturing at Stanford and on to exploring creative thinking with her “muses”, her two daughters.  Rachelle writes at Tinker Lab where you will find experiments, art explorations, and provocations designed to develop creative and critical thinkers.  If you’d like to see more projects from TinkerLab, subscribe to Rachelle’s blog.

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Comments

  1. 2

    Rachelle says

    April 11, 2011 at 1:42 am

    Hi Amanda! Thanks so much for the opportunity to meet your readers. Your blog is a huge inspiration, and it’s an honor to be here.

    Reply
    • 3

      notjustcute says

      April 11, 2011 at 12:19 pm

      It was such a pleasure to have you!

      Reply
  2. 4

    Sheri Brown says

    April 11, 2011 at 4:01 am

    This is also a fun activity for Passover. We do it with paper on matza. Not an outside activity – but one we like to do this time of year.

    Reply
    • 5

      notjustcute says

      April 11, 2011 at 12:21 pm

      What a creative idea!

      Reply
    • 6

      Rachelle says

      April 11, 2011 at 10:28 pm

      I’ve never thought of doing a matza rubbing — that’s brilliant, Sheri! What a great way to keep the kids entertained through a very long meal 🙂

      Reply
  3. 7

    amy says

    April 11, 2011 at 6:10 am

    I’ve been waiting for the New England weather to cooperate so we can go on a rubbing hunt in the park. The sunny days (not warm, mind you, just sunny!) have also been windy, which seems like a recipe in frustration. I’m hoping over April break I can do this with all my kids.

    Reply
    • 8

      notjustcute says

      April 11, 2011 at 12:21 pm

      I totally understand. I’ve been feeling quite impatient about spring this year. We finally have a nice sunshine day. Now we just need the snow to melt…..AGAIN!

      Reply
    • 9

      Rachelle says

      April 11, 2011 at 10:30 pm

      Have you ever done rubbing hunts indoors? It’s not quite the same, I know, but I wonder how kids would enjoy it.

      Reply
  4. 10

    Melissa @ The Chocolate Muffin Tree says

    April 11, 2011 at 7:35 am

    Great post! Love TinkerLab! One of my favorite blogs!! SO excited to see her featured here! I will need to do a texture book with my daughter. We’ve done plastic texture plates a while back—-so maybe an outdoor expedition would be more exciting!

    Reply
    • 11

      notjustcute says

      April 11, 2011 at 12:30 pm

      I love Tink Lab too! Isn’t Rachelle brilliant?

      Reply
    • 12

      Rachelle says

      April 11, 2011 at 10:31 pm

      Thanks Melissa! Now that the weather is getting warm, I bet C would really enjoy this.

      Reply
  5. 13

    Perfect Dad says

    April 11, 2011 at 8:20 am

    I did penny rubbings with my oldest, but haven’t done rubbings with the middle or youngest yet. Great reminder of a very fun activity.

    Reply
    • 14

      notjustcute says

      April 11, 2011 at 12:23 pm

      I agree, it was a great reminder! We often need to be reminded that even though WE’VE done it before, there are still little hands and minds that need the opportunity to enjoy the experience.

      Reply
    • 15

      Rachelle says

      April 11, 2011 at 10:32 pm

      Oh, penny rubbings! Now you’re the one reminding me 🙂

      Reply
  6. 16

    Jessica says

    April 11, 2011 at 12:36 pm

    Fantastic. I ‘ve been racking my brain to come up with an outdoor art project to do on this beautiful day and couldn’t come up with anything new and exciting. Thanks for the awesome Idea!

    Reply
    • 17

      Rachelle says

      April 11, 2011 at 10:35 pm

      So glad you like it, Jessica. Enjoy the lovely weather!

      Reply
  7. 18

    Mercedes Hayes says

    August 1, 2011 at 7:35 am

    I put this on my pintrest to do sometime with my kiddos

    Reply
  8. 19

    Yolanda Crisostomo says

    February 28, 2013 at 12:18 pm

    I Love this activity and the nice thing about it too is the bonding that is created between mother (grandmother in my case) and child. 🙂 Thanks so much for sharing! ~Yolanda~

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Twist pipe cleaners through paper to make art. | says:
    April 11, 2011 at 1:41 am

    […] posts for your enjoyment. Hoorah! The Not Just Cute project will take you outdoors to make a Book of Textures, which is a great activity for kids of all ages. After you read all about it, come on back and read […]

    Reply
  2. Six Ideas for Exploring Nature with Kids | Not Just Cute says:
    April 27, 2011 at 9:59 am

    […] you find along your expedition.  Rachelle from Tinker Lab wrote a great post about creating a Book of Textures as part of your outdoor experience.  Check out her ideas and then go for a texture walk of your […]

    Reply
  3. Exploring Texture says:
    July 29, 2011 at 12:56 am

    […] indoor textures, textures with letters, etc.? For more on this idea, you can read this post: Book of Textures. Printing with textures is also a fun experience — it’s like making a rubbing with […]

    Reply

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I’m Amanda Morgan. Here’s what I’m about…

In early education, there is too much distance between what we know and what we do. I bridge the gaps that exist between academia, decision-makers, educators, and parents so that together, we can improve the quality of early education while also respecting and protecting the childhood experience.

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