This piece hangs on Lila’s wall, and has since she was a wee little newborn (who rarely slept in that room and much preferred the three inches next to my face).
The “print” is actually a piece of scrapbook paper. It was $.35 at the scrapbooking store, and with an inexpensive frame, it suddenly became adorable artwork! At many scrapbooking stores (and some larger craft stores have a decent paper selection), you can find great papers that look beautiful on the wall and are easily changed out as tastes change.
Easy Art Project #2
This is one of my favourite art projects in our house. This series of pictures hangs on Lucy’s bedroom wall.
Each print is an illustration from a copy of “Cinderella” that I purchased at the discarded book sale at the library. I took the book apart – I know, I know… it’s kind of a sin to take books apart, but this was worth it – and popped them into frames from a home decor store. The pictures I chose show Cinderella going to the ball, dancing, and then leaving sans glass slipper.
I love how they turned out. And all from a $1.00 book!
This project involves the the combination of children and paint. You don’t have to invite children to do this project (and if you want them to turn out a certain way, it’s probably best that you do this by yourself), but because this piece was going in Lila’s room, I let her try her hand at it.
And there’s something so charming about a piece that a kiddo has created. There’s a lot of pride in it!
You will need some brushes, a canvas (I chose 12×12 canvases, because I like the size, and because an 8 pack of them was on sale this week!) and some paints. We opted to use acrylic paints, because I wanted the colours to be vibrant.
*Cue the whirring of the Helicopter Mother… “Non-washable paint!?!?!? Whaaaaaat……????”*
I used my Silhouette Cameo to cut out a vinyl silhouette of a ballerina, which was Lila’s picture of choice. Lucy was supposed to do a unicorn (her choice), but upon hearing that we would be painting over it, she had a full-blown conniption and then stomped away from our craft table.
Sigh. Two-year-olds just sometimes can’t see the vision. Why can’t you see the vision, Lucy?
We adhered the ballerina to the canvas and then got started.
Lucy decided to join us (“But no uni-cown, mommy!”) and the girls carefully painted their masterpieces.
I told Lila to paint over the ballerina, and she took that very seriously. I had to remind her than we would be peeling up the sticker and that her careful “ballerina-tracing” would be no longer. In the picture above, she’s painting windows for the ballerina. It took a while to convince her to paint the ENTIRE canvas.
Notice that Lucy is wearing a Hallowe’en shirt. This child does her own thing.
Lila diligently painted her canvas all by herself. She took great care to paint the edges.
When it came time to lift up the silhouette, Lila could not contain herself and reached over to “help”. Ahhhhhhh!!!! A little glob of “help” touched the ballerina and is now the signature of the piece. I quieted down the Controlling Mommy Monster that lives inside of me, and told her that it looked like a bow on the ballerina’s slipper.
And here it is, in its finished glory!
Lila is thrilled with her artwork. Again, I was just the prep and clean-up lady – I barely had a hand in the execution of this piece. It is now proudly displayed in Lila’s room and cost $2.00 in canvas and probably less than $1.00 in paint and supplies.
While not everyone has access to a Cameo cutter, this could be easily replicated with decals, stickers, or even paper cutouts that are tacked down with a light adhesive. The possiblities are endless!
These three art pieces are ones that I am happy to have on the girls’ walls. And if I need to switch things up, it’s quick and easy to create more artwork. I always keep my eyes open for books, calendars and scrapbooking papers with beautiful illustrations. They can be just as lovely as a print, but for a fraction of the cost!
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Great ideas for kids spaces! Pinned! We’ve done all sorts of cool things with photos for my kids rooms, but nothing as inexpensive as this! I wish I’d thought of using book pages when my kids were little…that’s such a great idea! For a kid that is into theatre, you could probably take the flyers (wrong word I know) and slip those into a frame. I am sure you could do this with any older kids hobby as well.