Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Stained Glass Horse

The pieces are in place!
Working on a "cartoon", fitting the pieces together one at a time
The pieces moved onto my light table after the initial cutting.  Normally kept together in order, this time I just moved them onto the light table in a hurry.

Sometimes working in stained glass is like doing a jigsaw puzzle.  Except I get to put numbers on the pieces, and I can cut the pieces to fit.  Here's a horse named Star taking shape in stained glass.

Monday, May 16, 2011

My Christmas In May

Last Friday I woke up as euphoric as a young child on Christmas morning.  I couldn't sleep in anticipation of my planned trip that day to pick up my best Craigslist find ever.  We took my mom's truck and drove two hours away to pick up glass and glass supplies that filled up the back of her full size truck.  




It was so worth the drive!  I spent the weekend oogling all my new glass.  There were gorgeous blues, purples, reds, oranges, and pinks...I still haven't cataloged everything.  Here's the pictures he posted, but it didn't even include everything.  Missing from the pictures was 14 large size pieces of glass (24 in or larger).  I am so grateful for this great find!  Thank you God, and thank you Mom for sending me the craigslist post.  

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Science Club: Negative Space


Walls made with negative space
Science Club is something I started locally because my boys love science so much.  I'm going to share what we did in April in case anyone else wants to incorporate it into their homeschool or start their own science club:

Each month 1-3 students will share an experiment or collection to start our meeting. This month ds presented his cat stuffed animal collection.  We divided it into groups: lions, tigers, domestic cat, and one bobcat discussing how they are related in the feline family.  This was a good chance for a six year old to present to a group.

April's theme was Negative Space

We looked at Vase/Faces picture and several other optical illusions involving negative space.  I found them in books, but they are available online, too.
A Notan Design
Activity 1: Notan Design
We created an image called a notan design.  Traditionally, this is done with b/w, but it's spring so we used spring colors.  We used a large piece of construction paper for the background, and then a rectangle 1/4 the size to cut out the negative spaces.  The key is to glue down the negative spaces in a mirror image. This is a pretty simple illustration; you can get really sophisticated with it.

Activity 2: Negative Walls
Small marshmallows and toothpicks form "walls" and enclose negative space in a fun way.  They could make any structure.  We discussed geometry and the negative space within.  Tip: start with soft marshmallows, stale ones are more difficult to use.

Take home activity: Sudoku
There is a great website with free Sudoku puzzles for kids!  They have easy, medium, and hard - easy enough for elementary and logic phobic moms.  This develops critical thinking, and it involves lots of negative spaces in the puzzle which they have to use logic to fill in correctly.

www.dailysudoku.com/sudoku