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Textured Moon

Texture

Textured Moon

Students will use contrasting textures and various materials to create a night scene featuring shooting stars and a textured moon. Recommended for 1st Graders.

Printable Lesson Plan with Instruction Images


Elements of Art 

Texture: Actual texture is how something feels when touched; visual texture (also called simulated texture) is how something appears to feel.


Principles of Design

Contrast: The difference between elements of art in the composition. In this lesson there is contrast between the rough and smooth surfaces of the artwork.


Materials & Supplies
  • Familiar objects with tactile (actual) texture and images with visual texture

  • Small beans or rice, gravel, seeds, orzo, coarse sand (I don’t suggest using craft foam)

  • 9" x 12" dark blue paper

  • Tagboard or thin cardboard cut in 4" circles (or round paper plates)

  • Bottles of white glue

  • Class set of glue sticks

  • Class set scissors

  • Black construction paper 6" x 12"

  • At least 2 large flat boxes or pans for applying glitter

  • About 8 containers of glitter


Advanced Preparation
  1. Prepare examples of real texture using familiar small items from nature or everyday life. Keep them examples a flat box to be passed around.

  2. Prepare quick slide show of images, both in photographs & art that show textured subjects in nature or everyday life.


Tips & Tricks
  • Double the foil if necessary.

  • At least 2 instructors are needed for this: 1 to manage the glitter applications and both to help with the foil and cutting paper.

  • Once liquid glue is applied is can’t be removed, so no erasing or trying to smear off any unwanted glue lines. Less squeezing and less glue than you think you need!

  • Students tend to over-squeeze. Instruct students (repeatedly) to not make “lakes, puddles, oceans or rivers” of glue: only dots and lines.


Discussion Points
  • Write the word ‘texture’ on the whiteboard and ask students to repeat it. Use this word often during the lesson.

  • alk about words that might be used to describe different types of textures: fuzzy, soft, hard, etc.

  • Discuss how different textures might feel: bumpy, wet, prickly, etc.


Reflection Point (Assessment of Learning Objectives)

Students will:

  • Point out and describe different kinds of actual and visual texture.

  • Point out and describe contrast of textures.

  • Create a work of art with actual rough/smooth texture contrasts.

  • Use liquid glue to ‘draw’ texture.


Instructions for Lesson
  1. Show the class actual textured objects briefly and ask what they might feel like. If time permits, pass all or some of these objects quickly around to feel.

  2. Demonstrate making the tagboard circle very sticky with a glue stick. Then apply the small textured pieces to cover most, not all, of the surface. 

  3. Ask the students if they can see where the bumpy and smooth textures are. Explain that these textures ‘contrast’ with each other: they are very different. Have the word ‘contrast’ already written on the white board. Have students repeat the word and use it often during the lesson.

  4. Show a finished example of this lesson and ask where the contrast is. (Between the textured moon, stars and the smooth background.)

  5. Flip your textured circle upside down on a pre-measured piece of foil (doubled if necessary). Carefully fold the foil edges over the tagboard edges. Flip it over and gently push on the foil to make more bumps.  

  6. Have students do the same with their ‘moons.’ Set moons aside.

  7. Demonstrate cutting the black paper lengthwise to create a horizon that fits along the bottom of the blue paper, or cut triangles and small rectangles to make ‘trees’.

  8. Use glue stick to adhere, leaving room for the moon.

  9. Have students do the same.

  10. Demonstrate how to apply liquid glue around the back rim of the moon: quickly as if drawing a line. Tell students they can’t erase glue lines and remind them that it is OK.

  11. Flip the moon over and attach to the blue paper over the horizon or trees. Have students do the same.

  12. Demonstrate how to draw a dot of glue, with quick thin lines of glue trailing from the dot to represent a shooting star. 

  13. Take your picture to the glitter box, gather students around to watch you shake glitter onto your star(s) and shake off into the box. Have students do the same.

  14. There should be a ‘glitter station’ with at least two or more flat, wide boxes for multiple students to lean over. Set aside to dry overnight. Any moons that fall off can be stapled later.


Optional additions:

  • Wipe black shoe polish over foil to accentuate texture.

  • Rub off with cotton balls.


Another option:

  • Use lighter blue tempera paint to prepare background before starting project.

  • Paint should be dry enough to glue over by the end of the project if students aren’t too heavy-handed with the paint. 


References and Attributions

Adapted from the Metallic Moon lesson from the 2011 ISF Arts Integration grant.


Notes for Educators 

21st Century Thinking Skills

Thinking flexibly, persisting, creating, taking responsible risks, reflecting, observing, making connections, cisualizing, comparing/contrasting, finding Eevidence, cause and effect, decision making, evaluating.


WA State Learning Standards

(VA:Cr1.1.1) a. Engage collaboratively in exploration and imaginative play with materials. This happens when they explore different textures.

(VA:Cr1.2.1) a. Use observation and investigation in preparation for making a work of art.This happens when they watch the presentation of the lesson.

(VA:Cr2.1.1) a. Explore uses of materials and tools to create works of art or design.This happens when using scissors, paper, glue, glitter, foil & textured objects.

(VA:Cr2.2.1) a. Demonstrate safe and proper procedures for using materials, tools, and equipment while making art.

(VA:Cr3.1.1) a. Use art vocabulary to describe choices while creating art. This happens when you explain ‘texture’ and ‘contrast’.

(VA:Re8.1.1) a. Interpret art by categorizing subject matter and identifying the characteristics of form. This happens when contrasting subject matters’ textures.


Arts Integration Opportunities

Writing: procedural (how we did it), informative (what texture is, what contrast is), spelling words, descriptive (which parts have which textures).


Please note:  These lesson plans are intended for non-profit use only. Use of these plans for commercial purposes should give attribution to the Issaquah Schools Foundation and be accompanied by a nominal donation at www.isfdn.org/donate. Thank you.

Textured Moon
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기부

이것은 귀하의 기부 양식입니다. 귀하의 조직에 대한 추가 정보를 제공하거나 그들의 기여가 귀하의 목표를 달성하는 데 가장 도움이 되는 방법을 제공하여 사이트 방문자가 오늘 기부를 하도록 권장하십시오.

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