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Growing Kids

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Make Things - 3 |
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Making Bark Pictures | |
| Making a Leaf Drawing | ||
| Pressing Flowers | ||
| Making Newspaper Pots | ||

The garden is a great place to find materials that can be used in art. You
can create beautiful pictures without paint , pastels or pencils - just by using
the wonderful colours that occur in nature. One of the best ways of doing this
is through the creation of bark pictures. Bark has many, many interesting shades
and textures. You’ll be surprised at how many different kinds you can find.
You will need: A stiff piece of card (a small canvas board from an art supply shop is ideal), craft glue that dries clear, bark.
What to Do:
1. You will need to make a collection of as many different types of bark as you can find. Collect bark that is already peeling from the tree. Don’t pull or cut living bark. Bark is very important because it protects all the really important tissue that feeds the tree and carries the water from the ground up to the leaves. This tissue is found just below the bark. If you cut into this tissue then diseases can sometime get in and spread around the tree.
2. Gum trees, Irish Strawberry trees, paperbarks are all very good, but you will find many, many others.
3. Once you have your collection you can organise it into colours e.g. white, cream, pink, orange, tan, light brown, dark brown, pale grey, blue-grey, green-grey, dark grey, black.
4. Sketch your drawing. There are many possibilities. You can create a bush scene, a desert scene, a sunset, a face - anything!
5. Attach small pieces of bark with the glue to make your picture. Overlap the pieces and cover the board completely so there are no white bits showing at all. Use darker shades of the one colour to form shadows. Use lighter pieces to create highlights.
6. Leave the finished picture to dry completely. You might even like to buy a frame for it and give it to someone special as a present!
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Someone once brought me back a gift from
a holiday in India. It was a drawing done on a leaf from the Pipal Tree which is
the kind of fig tree that Buddha is believed to have sat under for 49 days until
he achieved enlightenment - and for another seven weeks after that! You can see
it on the right. You probably
haven't got one of those trees in your yard, but other types of leaves will do
if you would like to create a leaf drawing.
You will need: A large leaf (Ivy works well, but you can experiment with others. The leaf needs to be tough and leathery. Don't choose a fresh young one). Cray-pas crayons
Here's What You Do:
1. Turn the leaf upside down so that all the veins are showing. This will give your drawing an interesting texture.
2. Draw a nice big bold drawing on the leaf with the Cray-pas. You will have to hold the leaf firmly and press quite hard. If you are using an Ivy leaf, a clown's face or a dog's face fits in well with the shape. Make sure every part of the leaf is covered with thick colour. You may need to sharpen the Cray-pas if you want to use fine lines.
3. When the drawing is finished, lay it on a tissue and place another tissue over the top. Pile a stack of heavy books on top and leave it for a few weeks to dry. Alternatively, put it in a flower press if you have one.
4. When it is dry you can paste it on to a card (like the black one above) or put it into a small frame. If you want to use the leaf as a bookmark, then you will have to spray it with clear varnish so that the Cray-pas doesn't come off on to the page.
Brain Teaser: Turn a leaf into something no gardener wants by changing one letter on each line:
L E A F
_ _ _ _ : Your dog needs one
_ _ _ _ : You should protect this from the sun
_ _ _ _ : Pay attention
_ _ _ _ : Gardeners' enemy
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Ever tried pressing flowers? It's easy to do and the pressed flowers and leaves are especially great for decorating cards and making gardening pictures.
What to Do
1. Choose a selection of flowers, grasses, leaves and even weeds. Don't choose ones that are too fat and juicy, small flowers with thin stems and leaves are best. Weeds are very pretty pressed, particularly their seed-heads which look fragile and feathery. Pick them when they are completely dry.
2. Having your own flower press makes the job very easy as it is just a matter of laying the flower stems, leaves, etc. on the layers of blotting paper so that none of them touch each other, placing other sheets of paper over them and screwing down the top of the press.
3. However, it is easy to do even without a press. Ask if there is a heavy old book you can use for the purpose. (Last year's phone book would do.) Select pages towards the back of the book. If you are able to get some blotting paper, use that, otherwise, tissues can be used. Smooth out a couple of tissues on one of the pages, then lay your flowers, etc. on top. Cover them with two more tissues that are as flat as possible. Very carefully close the pages over the tissues. Leave quite a few pages in between each group of things to be pressed.
4. When all the specimens are in the book, stack as many heavy books as you can find on top and leave for about 6 weeks. The flowers will then be very dry and wafer-thin.
5. Use clear craft glue to stick the pressed plants on to cards, etc. Paste them on in layers e.g. taller grasses at the back, then some leaves and seed heads, then the flowers in front. Don't be afraid to have them overlapping! You will be delighted with the pictures you can make.
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If you want to plant seeds or take cuttings, you don't need plastic pots. You can make your own out of newspaper and plant them straight into the soil when they're ready. Making these little pots is very easy and they last for a surprisingly long time - certainly long enough to raise seedlings to the stage where they can be planted out.






You will need: sheets of newspaper; a straight-sided glass; scissors
What to do:
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Global Garden 2000-
2007
http://www.global-garden.com.au
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