Sunday, January 7, 2018

A Woman's Heart

A Woman's Heart

God's angels took a little drop of dew
Fresh fallen from the heaven's far-off blue.
And a white violet, so pure and bright,
Shedding its fragrance in the morn's soft light,
And a forget-me-not laid altogether gently out of sight
Within the chalice of a lily white.
With humbleness and grace they covered it,
Made purity and sadness near to sit.
And added pride to this and fears a few,
One wish, but half a hope, and bright tears, too,
Courage and sweetness in misfortune's smart,
And out of this they molded woman's heart

A Mother's Love by Montgomery

A Mother's Love 
by Montgomery

I loved thee, daughter of my heart!
My child, I loved thee dearly!
And though we only met to part!
How sweetly! how severely!
Nor life nor death can sever
My soul from thine forever.

Thy days, my little one, were few
An angel's morning visit.
That came and vanished with the dew,
Twas here - 'tis gone - where is it?
Yet didst thou leave behind thee
A clue for love to find thee.
Darling! my last, my youngest love.
The crown of every other I
Though thou art born in heaven above
I am thine only mother I
Nor will affection let me
Believe thou canst forget me.

Then - thou in heaven and I on earth -
May this our hope delight us,
That thou wilt hail my second birth.
When death shall reunite us;
When worlds no more can sever
Mother and child forever.

Maternal Love

       If there is one mortal feeling free from the impurities of earthly frailty that tells in its slightest breathings of its celestial origin, it is that of a mother's love - a mother's chaste, overwhelming and everlasting love of her children.
       The name of a mother is our childhood's talisman, our refuge and safeguard in all our mimic misery; 'tis the first half-formed word that falls from a babbling tongue; the first idea that dawns upon the mind; the first, the fondest and the most lasting tie in which affection can bind the heart of man.
       It is not a feeling of yesterday or to-day ; it is from the beginning the same and unchangeable ; it owes its being to this world, but is independent and self-existent, enduring while one pulse of life animates the breast that fosters it; and if there be anything of mortality which survives the grave, surely its best and noble passion will never perish.
"Maternal Affection" print from 1846.
       Oh! it is a pure and holy emanation from Heaven's mercy, implanted in the breast of woman for the dearest and wisest purposes, to be at once her truest and most sacred pleasure, and the safety and blessing of her offspring.
       'Tis not selfish passion, depending for its permanency on the reciprocation of its advantages; but in its sincerity it casteth out itself, and when the welfare of that object is at stake, it putteth away fear, and knoweth not weariness. It is not excited by form or feature, but rather, by a happy perversion of perception, imbues all things with imaginary beauty. It watches over our helpless infancy with the ceaseless benignity of a guardian angel, anticipates every childish wish, humors every childish fancy, soothes every transient sorrow, sings our sweet lullaby to rest, and cradles us on its warm and throbbing breast, and when pain and sickness prey upon the fragile form, what medicine is there like a mother's kiss, what healing pillow like a mother's bosom!
       And when launched upon the wide ocean of a tempestuous world, what eye gazes on our adventurous voyage with half the eagerness of maternal fondness. amid the sad yet not unpleasing contest of hopes, and fears, and deep anxieties?
       When the rugged path of life has been bravely, patiently and nobly trodden - when prosperity has smiled upon us - when virtue has upheld us amid the world's temptations - virtue which she herself first planted in us - and when fame has bound her laurels round us, is there a heart that throbs with a more lively or greater pleasure?
       Yet it is not prosperity, with her smile and beauty, that tries the purity and fervor of a mother's love; it is in the dark and dreary precincts of adversity, amid the cold frowns of an unfeeling world, in poverty and despair, in sickness and in sorrow, that it shines with a brightness beyond mortality, and, stifling the secret of its own bosom, strives but to pour balm and consolation on the wounded sufferer; and the cup of misery, filled to overflowing, serves but to bind them more firmly and dearly to each other, as the storms of winter bid the sheltering ivy twine itself more closely round the withering oak.
       Absence cannot chill a mother's love, nor can even vice itself destroy a mother's kindness. The lowest as degradations of human frailty cannot wholly blot out the remembrance of the first fond yearnings of your affection, or the faint memorial of primeval innocence; nay, it seems as if the very consciousness of the abject state of her erring child more fully developed the mighty force of that mysterious passion, which can forget and forgive all things; and though the youth of her fairest hopes may be as one cast off from God and man, yet will she not forsake him, but participate in all things save his wickedness!
       I speak not of a mother's agonies when bending over the bed of death! nor of Rachel weeping for her children, because they were not!
       The love of a father may be as deep and sincere, yet it is calmer, and, perhaps, more calculating, and more fully directed in the great periods and ends of life; it cannot descend to those minutiae of affection, those watchful cares for the minor comforts and gratifications of existence, which a mother, from the finer sensibilities of her nature, can more readily appreciate.
       The pages of history abound with the records of maternal love in every age and clime, and every rank of life ; but it is a lesson of never-ending presence, which the heart can feel and acknowledge, and needs not example to teach how to venerate.
       Can there be a being so vile and odious, so dead to nature's impulse, who, in return for constant care, such unvarying kindness, can willingly or heedlessly wound the heart that cherished him, and forsake the lonely one who nursed and sheltered him; who can madly sever the sweetest bonds of human union, and bring down the gray hairs of his parents with sorrow to the grave; who can leave them in their old age to solitude and poverty, while he wantons in the pride of undeserved prosperity?
       If there be, why let him abjure the name of man and herd with the beasts that perish, or let him feel to distraction that worst of human miseries.

"How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is
To have a thankless child." - Shakespeare.  

"A babe is a mother's anchor." - Beecher

Japanese Lullaby

Japanese Lullaby 
by Eugene Field

Sleep, little pigeon, and fold your wings,-
Little blue pigeon with velvet eyes;
Sleep to the singing of mother-bird swinging-
Swinging the nest where her little one lies.

Away out yonder I see a star,-
Silvery star with a tinkling song;
To the soft dew falling I hear it calling-
Calling and tinkling the night along.

In through the window a moonbeam comes,-
Little gold moonbeam with misty wings;
All silently creeping, it asks: "Is he sleeping-
Sleeping and dreaming while mother sings?"

Up from the sea there floats the sob
Of the waves that are breaking upon the shore,
As though they were groaning in anguish, and moan-
ing-
Bemoaning the ship that shall come no more.

But sleep, little pigeon, and fold your wings,-
Little blue pigeon with mournful eyes;
Am I not singing? - see, I am swinging-
Swinging the nest where my darling lies.

The Gift

       I want to give you something child, for we are drifting in the stream of the world. Our lives will be carried apart, and our love forgotten. But I am not so foolish as to hope that I could buy your heart with gifts. Young is your live, your path long, and you drink the love we bring you at one draught and turn and run away from us. You have your play and your playmates. What harm is there if you have no time or thought for us?
       We, indeed, have leisure enough in old age to count the days that are past, to cherish in our hearts what our hands have lost forever.
       The river runs swift with a song, breaking through all barriers. But the mountain stays and remembers, and follows her with his love. by Rabindranath Tagore.

Widow and Child by Alfred Tennyson

 Widow and Child 
by Alfred Tennyson

Home they brought her warrior dead;
She nor swooned, nor uttered cry;
All her maidens, watching, said,
"She must weep or she will die."

Then they praised him soft and low,
Called him worthy to be loved,
Truest friend and noblest foe;
Yet she neither spoke nor moved.

Stole a maiden from her place,
Lightly to the warrior stept,
Took a face-cloth from the face,
Yet she neither moved nor wept.

Rose a nurse of ninety years,
Set his child upon her knee-
Like summer tempest came her tears-
"Sweet my child, I live for thee."

"A sad but very beautiful lullaby. After the execution of the Clan Chief MacGregor of Glenstrae in 1570, his widow composed and sang this lullaby lament to her child."

Mother's Day Bill In Congress

From Congressional Record, May, 1914

       Whereas the service rendered the United States by the American mother is the greatest source of the country's strength and inspiration; and
       Whereas we honor ourselves and the mothers of America when we do anything to give emphasis to the home as the fountain head of the State; and
       Whereas the American mother is doing so much for the home, for moral uplift, and religion, hence so much for good government and humanity; Therefore be it 
       Resolved, etc. That the President of the United States is hereby authorized and requested to issue a proclamation calling upon the Government officials to display the United States flag on all Government buildings, and the people of the United States to display the flag at their homes or other suitable places on the second Sunday in May, as a public expression of our love and reverence for the mothers of our country.
       Section 2. That the second Sunday in May shall hereafter be designated and known as Mother's Day, and it shall be the duty of the President to request its observance as provided for in this resolution.
       The joint resolution was reported to the Senate as amended and the amendment concurred in.
       The amendment was ordered to be engrossed and the joint resolution to be read a third time.
       The joint resolution was read a third time and passed.
       The preamble was agreed to.
       The title was amended to read: "A joint resolution designating the second Sunday in May as Mother's Day and for other purposes."
       A message announced the House agrees with the amendment in joint resolution designating the second Sunday in May as Mother's Day, and for other purposes.
       H. J. Res 263. Joint resolution designating the second Sunday in May as Mothers' Day, and for other purposes.
       Approved and signed by the President. May 8th, 1914.

Born - A Daughter

"A Daughter!
Well, what brought her?"
Kitty asks. "How came she here? "
Half with joy and half with fear,
Kitty is our eldest child -
Eight years old, and rather wild -
Wild in manner, but in mind
Wishing all things well defined.

''Last night I did not see her, father,
Or I'm sure I had much rather
Stayed at home, as still as a mouse.
Than played all day at grandma's house.
She is so pretty, and so tiny -
And what makes her face so shiny?
Will it always be like that?
Will she swell up, plump and fat,
Like my little doll? or tall.
Like my wax one? tell me all
About her, papa dear,
For I do so love to hear
Where she came from, and who brought her,
Yours and mamma's brand-new daughter."

A daughter! another daughter!
And the question is, "What brought her?"
Spence, our boy, but three years old,
Says the nurse did, and is bold 
In defiance of them both,
Since to yield his place he's loth;
And, pouting, feels his nose's point.
When I declare 'tis out of joint.

But though the childish explanation
Be food enough for child's vexation.
We older folks must better find
To feed the hunger of the mind;
To us, of larger issues preaching,
This link of life eternal, reaching
From earth to heaven, this new-born soul
Come, fresh from whence forever roll
It's countless years through yonder heaven,
Has deeper cause for thinking given.

A daughter!
Whatever else - she comes to bring
A blessing in her life's young spring.
" No matter, darling - she is here -
Our daughter, sister, baby dear!
Open your hearts, and let her enter,
Open them wide, for God hath sent her."

Creation's Constant Love

       A broader view of life, a grander meaning of the word, is growing in the understanding of mankind. There is a growing confidence that a great love like a mother's love pervades the Universe. This perfect love that casts out fear is bringing us a definition of life large enough to include death as merely one of life's incidents, and thus the fear of death as a moving factor in the minds of men is passing away. Mother-love, love like a mother's, has for ages bridged the river of death for the heart, till now the understanding is following where the heart has led.
       All that modern science and learning is doing to dispel the mists of ignorance (where fear hides) is adding strength to that growing confidence in which love may breathe, the true, unselfish love, the mother-love that knows no fear. The following lines of deep meaning are from the pen of Leopold Schaffer:

All that God owns he constantly is healing.
Quietly, gently, softly, but most surely;
He helps the lowliest herb with wounded stalk
To rise again. See! from the heavens fly down,
All gentle powers to cure the blinded lamb.
Deep in the treasure-house of wealthy nature
A ready instinct wakes and moves
To clothe the naked sparrow in the nest.
Or trim the plumage of an aged raven.
Yea, in the slow decaying of a rose
God works as well as in the unfolding bud:
He works with gentleness unspeakable
In death itself‚ a thousand times more careful,
Even as the mother by her sick child watching.

The Prophecy of Mother-Love

       As in the blade of grass and in the smallest herb, the first years of our globe gave signs of the coming  tree; as in the first drops of rain there was the promise of a coming ocean; as in the little garden of Eden there lay the prophecy of future homes, so the earliest instincts and affections of animal life were advance heralds of a profound devotion destined to appear in the form of a mother's love. Each wild beast which to the death would defend its young, each bird that screamed and fluttered when an enemy approached its nest, said in distinct accents that Nature was preparing the way for that sublime sentiment‚ human love. No wonder, then, that when writers, sacred or profane, have desired to convey some adequate notion of the love of God for His universe, they have always asked us to look upon a mother and her child. In that love we find all the heights and depths of sentiment, and when we have compared God to a loving mother, we can say no more‚ our richest emblem is then exhausted. By Professor Swing.

A Proclamation

By The President of The United States of America

       Whereas, By a Joint Resolution approved May 8, 1914, "designating the second Sunday in May as Mother's Day, and for other purposes," the President is authorized and requested to issue a proclamation calling upon the government buildings, and the people of the United States to display the flag at their homes or other suitable places on the second Sunday in May as public expression of our love and reverence for the mother of our country;
       And Whereas, By the said Joint Resolution it is made duty of the President to request the observance of the second Sunday in May as provided for in the said Joint Resolution:
       Now, Therefore, I Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the said Joint Resolution, do hereby direct the government buildings and do invite the people of the United States to display the flag at their homes or other suitable places on the second Sunday in May as a public expression of our love and reverence for the mothers of our country. 
       In witness whereof I have set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be hereunto affixed.
       Done at the city of Washington this ninth day of May, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fourteen, and the Independence of the United States one hundred and thrity-eight.

Woodrow Wilson.
By the President:
William Jennings Bryan,
Secretary of State.
(Seal)

The History Behind Mother's Day

Friday, January 5, 2018

An Easter Greeting To Every Child Who Loves "Alice"

Dear Child:

       Please to fancy, if you can, that you are reading a real letter, from a real friend whom you have seen, and whose voice you can seem to yourself to hear, wishing you, as I do now with all my heart, a happy Easter.
       Do you know that delicious, dreamy feeling, when one first wakes on a summer morning, with the twitter of birds in the air, and the fresh breeze coming in at the open window, when, lying lazily with eyes half shut, one sees as in a dream green boughs waving, or waters rippling in a golden light? It is a pleasure very near to sadness, bringing tears to one's eyes like a beautiful picture or poem. And is not that a mother's gentle hand that undraws your curtains, and a mother's sweet voice that summons you to rise?, to rise and forget, in the bright sunlight, the ugly dreams that frightened you so when all was dark‚ to rise and enjoy another happy day, first kneeling to thank that unseen Friend who sends you the beautiful sun?
       Are these strange words from a writer of such tales as Alice? And is this a strange letter to find in a book of nonsense? It may be so. Some perhaps may blame one for thus mixing together things grave and gay; others may smile and think it odd that any one should speak of solemn things at all, except in church and on Sunday; but I think‚ nay, I am sure‚ that some children will read this gently and lovingly, and in the spirit in which I have written it.
       For I do not believe God means us thus to divide life into two halves‚ to wear a grave face on Sunday, and to think it out of place to even so much as mention Him on a week-day. Do you think He cares to see only kneeling figures, and to hear only tones of prayer; and that He does not also love to see the lambs leaping in the sunlight, and to hear the merry voices of the children as they roll among the hay? Surely their innocent laughter is as sweet in His ears as the grandest anthem that ever rolled up from the " dim, religious light " of some solemn cathedral.
       And if I have written anything to add to those stories of innocent and healthy amusement that are laid up in books for the children I love so well, it is surely something I may hope to look back upon without shame and sorrow (as how much of life must then be recalled!) when my turn comes to walk through the valley of shadows.
       This Easter sun will rise on you, dear child, feeling your "life in every limb," and eager to rush out into the fresh morning air‚ and many an Easter-day will come and go before it finds you feeble and gray-headed, creeping wearily out to bask once more in the sunlight; but it is good, even now, to think sometimes of that great morning when the " Sun of Righteousness shall arise with healing in his wings."
       Surely your gladness need not be less for the thought that you will one day see a brighter dawn than this‚ when lovelier sights will meet your eyes than any waving trees or rippling waters‚ when angel hands shall undraw your curtains, and sweeter tones than ever loving mother breathed shall wake you to a new and glorious day‚ and when all the sadness and the sin that darkened this life on this little earth shall be forgotten like the dreams of a night that is past!

Your affectionate friend,
Easter, 1876. Lewis Carroll.

Easter Index/ Previous Page/ Next Page

Easter Wings by George Herbert

Butterfly hatching from an egg...
Resurrection symbol

LORD, WHO GREATEST MAN IN WEALTH AND STORE,
THOUGH FOOLISHLY HE LOST THE SAME,
DECAYING MORE AND MORE,
TILL HE BECAME
MOST POOR.

WITH THEE
OH LET ME RISE
AS LARKS, HARMONIOUSLY,
AND SING THIS DAY THY VICTORIES:
THEN SHALL THE FALL FURTHER THE FLIGHT IN ME.

MY TENDER AGE IN SORROW DID BEGIN :
AND STILL WITH SICKNESS AND SHAME
THOU DIDST SO PUNISH SIN,
THAT I BECAME
MOST THIN.

WITH THEE
LET ME COMBINE,
AND FEEL THIS DAY THY VICTORY
FOR IF I IMP MY WING ON THINE,
AFFLICTION SHALL ADVANCE THE FLIGHT IN ME.


Easter Morning

Easter Morning
by Edmund Spenser

Most glorious Lord of life, that on this day
Didst make thy triumph over death and sin,
And, having harrowed hell, didst bring away
Captivity thence captive, us to win;
This joyous day, dear Lord, with joy begin,
And grant that we, for whom thou diddest die.
Being with Thy dear blood clean washed from sin,
May live forever in felicity:
And that Thy love we weighing worthily.
May likewise love Thee for the same again:
And for Thy sake, that all like dear didst buy,
With love may one another entertain.
So let us love, dear love, like as we ought;
Love is the lesson which the Lord us taught.

Egg Rolling

       "One of the annual sights in the city of Washington is Easter egg rolling on the White House grounds, on Easter Monday, in which several thousand children usually take part. The game is played in pairs, each player having one egg. These are rolled down hill, the unbroken egg taking its rival, if the latter is cracked.
       This custom probably came from Germany, where, at Easter-time, egg rolling is practiced on tracks made of sticks, laid side by side. In Germany the sport begins Easter-eve at midnight, and lasts about three hours. Apples and little round cakes are rolled as well as eggs.
       In Bohemia, children roll eggs in a row, starting them all at once, and watching to see which will reach the bottom of the hill first.
       In the north of England, eggs are used in playing hand ball on Easter-day." by Sandham, 1916

Egg Roll in D.C. 2012

Thursday, October 12, 2017

The Chiva Bus Parade

Chivas come from Columbia, South America.
        These fifth grade students studied the brightly colored buses, Chivas, of Latin America. This transportation is unique to the culture of people who live south of our Mexican boarders. Students shaped clay into basic bus shapes and then attached animals, ladders, and people to the outside of their buses before painting them in bright, bold acrylic paints.

These artisan rustic buses are adapted to rural transport.
Chivas must carry passengers, luggage, and sometimes even domestic animals over mountainous terrain.

These buses are built tough and can plow through
 just about anything, including mud!

Wednesday, October 11, 2017

The Four Seasons Index

       The four periods into which the year is divided by the ever-changing position of the earth in relation to the sun. As the earth revolves about the sun in nearly circular obit, its axis at all times points toward the Pole Star and is inclined to the plane of its orbit 23 1/2 degrees. Therefore different parts of its surface are at different times of the year exposed to the vertical rays of the sun. Astronomically speaking, in the northern hemisphere spring extends from March 21, the time of the vernal equinox, to the summer solstice, June 21; summer from June 21 to September 21, the time of the autumnal equinox; autumn to December 21, and winter from that date to the beginning of spring. In the southern hemisphere the seasons are reversed, and spring begins September 21. In the torrid zone the changes in the seasons are not marked by differences in temperature, but by wet and dry periods.
       Artifacts included here come from several of my blogs featuring the holidays and/or weather related content.

For All Seasons:
Woven tree art project may be used to incorporate any
season: Spring, Summer, Fall or Winter, depending
on the landscape and colors used in the selection of
yarns as well.
Autumn Artifacts & Art for Enhancing Lesson Plans: Search Both The Halloween & Thanksgiving  Artifacts at Thrifty Scissors
  1. The Mist and All
  2. Craft a Fall Landscape Using Leaf Rubbings
  3. Shape a pinch pot acorn 
  4. Craft a Paper Scarecrow Jumping-Jack 
  5. Draw a Scarecrow Emphasizing The Use of Pattern(s)
  6. Harvester Picture Puzzle
  7. Practice Shading An Owl
  8. "When the Frost Is On The Punkin"
  9. Cut & Paste Popped Corn On the Cob
  10. A Wise Old Owl 
  11. A Fall Leaf Craft for Two and Three Year Olds 
  12. The Frost
  13. Tear and Paste Falling Leaves
  14. Create Fall Leaf Patterns
  15. A Fall Collage Featuring An Owl
  16. The Karo Corn Maiden Coloring Sheet
  17. "In October" Poem
  18. "The Cornstalk's Lesson" Poem
  19. Pumpkin and Jack-O-Lantern Number Books
  20. "Roasting Corn" Poem
  21. Paint Fall Foliage With Hugs and Kisses
  22. Paint, Cut and Paste a Leafy River Scene
  23. Craft a Paper War Bonnet
  24. Draw a Design from A Spider's Web
  25. Craft a Ruote Paste Web
  26. Draw a Shaded White Spider Web
  27. Wad, Wrap and Tape a Fall Pumpkin Craft
  28. Weave Indian Corn for Autumn Fun!
  29. Autumn
  30. Lessons: Pumpkin Soup 
  31. "Little Jack Frost" poem
  32. Find The Acorns Puzzle 
  33. Acorn poem by Edith King
Winter Artifacts & Art for Enhancing Lesson Plans: Search Christmas Artifacts at Thrifty Scissors and Then Children's Christmas Arts & Crafts From The Belsnickle Blog
  1. "When Winter Comes"
  2. A stacked felt Christmas tree 
  3. The Snow Bird
  4. Christmas Paper Plate Snow Globe 
  5. Mark The Soft-Falling Snow  
  6. How Teachers Can Craft a Giant, Recyclable, Snowman for Their Classrooms
  7. Sculpt a snow scene with clay
  8. Jest 'Fore Christmas  
  9. The Snowman Song 
  10. 12 Six-Sided Snowflake Templates 
  11. Sliding Down Hill
  12. Little Ones Can Print Snowmen With Their Hands  
  13. Make pine cone Christmas trees
  14. Search for Winter Fun coloring sheets
  15. Snow-Flakes
  16. Rotating Library for Winter Book Themes 
  17. Windy Poems 
  18. Snowdrops  
  19. The Snowman's Resolution
  20. The Snow Storm 
  21. A Winter Artist
Spring Artifacts & Art for Enhancing Lesson Plans: Search Easter Artifacts at Thrifty Scissors and Then Easter Related Crafts at The Easter Egg Crafts Blog
  1. Stencil Rabbits Eating Clover  
  2. 7 Gardening Books for Kids
  3. Draw a mother hen and her chicks 
  4. Craft a Simple Butterfly Mask
  5. Color Alphabet Chicks
  6. Craft a Very Hungry Caterpillar 
  7. Frogs, Toads and Pollywogs for Spring  
  8. Positive and Negative Bunnies
  9. Doodle an Easter bunny or chick
  10. Repeating Line Butterfly Design
  11. The Living Butterfly
  12. A Tisket, A Tasket, A Green and Yellow Basket 
  13. Dunking Ducks 
  14. Create a Butterfly Yarn Picture
  15. Craft a Paper Robin Toy for Spring
  16. "Handy" little butterflies
  17. Decorative Bird Box - design and finish 
  18. Draw a Bunny Portrait
  19. Drawing Butterflies Through Five Progressive Steps
  20. Craft Doily Butterflies 
  21. Search for Rainy Days and Rainbow Coloring Sheets 
  22. Search for Garden and Flower Coloring Sheets 
  23. The Rain Regiment
  24. The Shadow
  25. The Merry Breeze
  26. How Mother Nature Cleans 
  27. Caterpillar On The Wall
    Summer Artifacts & Art for Enhancing Lesson Plans:
    1. Rain In Summer
    2. Salt Lifting Some Sand Castles
    3. Children love to paint rock pets
    4. Glue together a shell mosaic box
    5. Search for camping and scouting coloring sheets
    6. Weave Some Yarn Trees!
    7. Grasshopper Green 
    8. The Cloud House 
    9. Fire Flies 
    Check out more weather related artifacts from popular collections across the web...
    Additional Four Seasons Crafts:

    Weave Some Yarn Trees!

    Use a fast drying paint for the first half of this art assignment so that the paper plates will not warp.
            This weaving project is accomplished in two parts. Above is the first part of the assignment. Teachers review or teach for the first time what a landscape is in art. Then students paint their own version of a landscape using acrylic or tempera paints, whichever is available in their classroom, on the inside of a paper plate. Make sure they include a foreground and a background. Above you can see that there is a nice variety of landscapes represented by these students: a green park-like setting, a couple of deserts including cactus and a glimmering lake with a rainbow above it. Below a student painted a lush green and blue mountain landscape with a white fluffy cloud hovering above.

    The worp of the tree branches is strung around the notches above and tied off at the bottom.
           For the second half of this art lesson, students will need yarn and scissors to notch the edges of their paper plate. These notches do not need to be exactly placed. In fact if the notches are a bit off, the result can be quite charming. Wrap the worf of the tree in and out of the notches as shown above.
     
    The simple process of wrapping a yarn tree trunk.
           At the bottom of the plate, where there are only two notches, students will need to wrap a smaller length of yarn to form the trunk of their tree. they should make this trunk approximately one to two inches in length.

     A colorful assortment of woven trees from these second and third grade students.
            Next, student weavers may pull yarn lengths in and out of the worp forming what is called the weft of the weave. They may choose to make a striped pattern to represent the leaves of their trees if they wish. All in all this makes quite a striking art exercise when completed!

    Part 1 of the weaving project from Cassie Stephens. 
    This is a snow scene.

    More Woven Trees:

    Sunday, October 8, 2017

    Quick & Easy Bulletin Board!

    Sometimes, teachers over think things like bulletin boards. Tack up a bright butcher paper to cover an old cork bulletin board and then let your students do the rest! I contributed a few scissors and glue bottles while everyone else laughed and scribbled.
             Young students should be allowed to feel they have a say in how their everyday spaces look. This bulletin board was decorated by kids in an after school kid care program. I hung up their paper puppets, drawings, and coloring sheets in just a few minutes. This old cafeteria never looked so colorful! I think they did a great job!

    On the upper left hand corner of the bulletin board I stapled the "visual" directions of how to assemble the turtle puppet. 1. color, 2. cut, 3. paste. The bulletin board was then filled in with the children's crafts. It got even fuller than what is depicted above over the following weeks.

    Saturday, October 7, 2017

    The Paper Town Hall from Cut-Out Town

    Directions for the Town Hall. Cut around the outlines. Fold on dotted lines,
    tuck tabs inside and where shown paste together as drawn in the above "model" sketch.
           Well, just when I thought that I had found all of these little village templates, out crops another one! Searching newspapers is a tedious process, even for an archivist! But here is the Town Hall; better late than never. I think it is the last of the series? I've cleaned it up, folks. Don't forget to enlarge it as much as possible before printing it out.

    Tuesday, October 3, 2017

    Paper Village Index

    Samples of paper village buildings and dolls in this index.
           In this index, young visitors will find all sorts of paper playthings that will keep them preoccupied for hours or perhaps even days. There are paper people and animals to color, little art lessons including paper doll crafts and lots of templates for crafting paper buildings. Enjoy and don't forget to check back for new additions!
    Paper Village and Paper Doll Artifacts: 
    1. The District School of Cut-Out Town
    2. Color and Cut Out These Victorian Paper Dolls
    3. Little Factory from Cut-Out Town
    4. Doll Quotes
    5. Mr. Roger's Neighborhood Resources
    6. Mermaid Paper Doll Parts 
    7. "Myrtle" paper doll
    8. Cut and Paste Paper Pueblos
    9. Favela Painting
    10. Illustrated Objects for Designing 1880 Something Doll Houses
    11. Draw An Animal Hospital
    12. Some nursery furniture for the paper doll house
    13. Patterns for a Plains Indian village  
    14. A Treehouse Collage
    15. Paper Doll Craft 
    16. "Irene" paper doll
    17. Historic Paper Buildings at Greenfield Village
    18. Miniature Paper Kitchen Furnishings for Your Paper Dolls
    19. Craft Little Houses from Milk Cartons
    20. The Strangely Changing Face
    21. 100 Little Paper Villages: Mega List
    22. Rainy Day Paper Dolls
    23. Little Church from Cut-Out Town
    24. "Thomas" paper doll
    25. Paper Circus Performers for Little Ones
    26. The Little House from Cut-Out Town
    27. Weave a Paper Dress
    28. Paper Circus Toys for Young Students to Color
    29. The Little Store of Cut-Out Town
    30. "Clare" paper doll 
    31. The Paper Town Hall from Cut-Out Town
    Illustrations of a box apartment, it's windows, walls and a basic floor plan.
        How To Make A Box Apartment For Your Paper Dolls   
            Girls and boys who are fond of paper toys might enjoy making an apartment for their paper characters similar to the one pictured above. There is are also patterns for paper furnishings in the list above if they should choose to furnish their paper accommodations as well.
           To make the apartment all that is necessary is a sturdy box 24 inches deep. These dimensions are the best for the size furniture  that is published above, but if your box is an inch or two longer or shorter or wider or narrower it won't matter very much. If you can not secure a box that is at all near this size it is best to get a larger box and cut it down. A box may also be made of scrap cardboard of the proper dimensions.
           The box is divided by a straight partition which goes down the center and two crosswise partitions, which divide the box into six rooms of equal size.
           One long side of the box is taken off, as the apartment is to be entirely open across the front, and this sidepiece is used for the long partition which goes down the middle of the box. Before putting the partition in place you should make the doors which lead from one room to another and which are shown in the picture above. Also paper or color the partition with paints to suit the different rooms. In order to do this first decide what color you with for the walls in the rooms to be or if you would prefer; select a fancy scrap paper to paste on top of the walls instead. Divide the long partition into three equal parts by making slits which reach from the bottom half way up the side. Then cut the crosswise partitions long enough to span the box plus four inches deep. These may be cut from the box lid. Each of these crosswise pieces is divided in the middle by a slit which reaches from the top half way to the bottom. Fasten these cross partitions on the long partition at the places where it is cut and then place the partition unit inside the box temporarily to see where each section of wall comes. Then with a pencil mark on each side of the walls of every room which room it is, so that when you disassemble the partitions to paper or color the walls you will understand where everything should go. Paper or color the remaining wall sections inside the box to correspond appropriately. 
           Next cut the doors in the two partitions. There is a drawing of how these door frames could be finished in the illustration above. There are likewise window types drawn above that could be used as either templates for cutting or ideas for drawing directly on top of the walls of your apartment rooms.

    Thursday, September 28, 2017

    The Circus Procession

    The Circus Procession 
    by Evaleen Stein

    Oh, hurry! hurry! here they come,
    The band in front with the big bass drum
    And blaring bugles, — there they are,
    On golden thrones in a golden car,
    Tooting and fluting, oh, how grand I
    Hi diddle, diddle!
    The fife and the fiddle!
    Hurrah , hurrah for the circus band!
    And the red-plumed horses, oh, see them
    prance
    And daintily lift their hoofs and dance,
    While beautiful ladies with golden curls
    Are jingling their bridles of gold and pearls,
    And close behind
    Come every kind
    Of animal cages great and small,
    O how I wonder what’s in them all!
    Here’s one that’s open and glaring there
    Is the shaggiest snow-white polar bear I
    Woof! but I wonder what we’d do
    If his bars broke loose right now, don't you?
    And O dear me!
    Just look and see 
    That pink-cheeked lady in skirts of gauze
    And the great big lion with folded paws!
    O me I O my!
    I’m glad that I
    Am not in that lion’s cage, because
    Suppose he'd open his horrible jaws !
    — But look ! the clown is coming ! Of course
    Facing the tail of a spotted horse
    And shouting out things to make folks
    laugh,
    And grinning up at the tall giraffe
    That placidly paces along and looks
    Just like giraffes in the picture-books!
    And there are the elephants, two and two,
    Lumbering on as they always do!
    The men who lead them look so small
    I wonder the elephants mind at all
    As they wag their queer
    Long trunks, and peer
    Through their beady eyes, — folks say they
    know
    No end of things, and I’m sure it’s so!
    And you never must do a thing that’s bad
    Or that possibly might make an elephant
    mad,
    For he’ll never forgive you, it appears,
    And will punish you sure, if it takes him
    years !
    So do not stare
    But take good care
    To mind your manners, and always try
    To smile politely as they go by!
    But the camels don’t care if you laugh at
    them
    With their bumpy humps like a capital M,
    They lurch and sway
    And seem to say,
    As they wrinkle their noses, long and gray,
    “ This swaggering stride is quite the plan,
    It’s the way we walked in the caravan!”
    And now more cages come rumbling by
    With glittering people throned on high;
    So many spangles and precious things,
    They surely must all be queens and kings!
    They look so proud
    Above the crowd, 
    O my, how fine it must feel to ride
    On golden wagons that hide inside
    Strange animals caught in cannibal isles
    And brought in ships for a million miles!
    But hark ! it's near
    The end, for hear
    That sudden screeching in piercing key!
    The steaming, screaming cal-li-o-pe!
    Just plain pianos sound terribly tame
    Beside this one with the wonderful name,
    And wouldn’t you love some day to sit
    In a circus wagon and play on it?

    May-Baskets

    May-Baskets
    by Evaleen Stein

    Let us take our baskets early
    To the meadows green,
    While the wild-flowers still are pearly 
    With the dewdrops' sheen.

    Fill them full of blossoms rosy,
    Violets and gay
    Cowslips, every pretty posy
    Welcoming the May.

    Then our lovely loads we'll carry
    Down the village street,
    On each door, with laughter merry,
    Hang a basket sweet.

    Hey-a-day-day! It is spring now,
    Lazy folks, awake!
    See the pretty things we bring now
    For the May-day's sake!

    Hallowe'en by John Kendrick Bangs

    HALLOWE'EN
    by John Kendrick Bangs

    BRING forth the raisins and the nuts -
    To-night All-Hallow's Spectre struts
    Along the moonlit way.
    No time is this for tear or sob,
    Or other woes our joys to rob,
    But night for pippin and for bob.
    And Jack-o'-Lantern gay.

    Come forth ye lass and trousered kid,
    From prisoned Mischief raise the lid.
    And lift it good and high.
    Leave grave old Wisdom in the lurch,
    Set Folly on a lofty perch,
    Nor fear the awesome rod of birch
    When dawn illumes the sky.

    'Tis night for revel, set apart
    To reillume the darkened heart.
    And rout the hosts of dole.
    'Tis night when Goblin, Elf, and Fay,
    Come dancing in their best array,
    To prank and royster on their way.
    And ease the troubled soul.

    The ghosts of all things past parade.
    Emerging from the mist and shade
    That hid them from our gaze;
    And full of song, and ringing mirth,
    In one glad moment of rebirth,
    Again they walk the ways of earth
    As in the ancient days.

    The beacon light shines on the hill,
    The will-o'-wisps the forests fill
    With flashes filched from noon;
    And witches on their broom-sticks spry
    Speed here and yonder in the sky,
    And lift their strident voices high
    Unto the Hunter's Moon.

    The air resounds with tuneful notes
    From myriads of straining throats.
    All hailing Folly Queen;
    So join the swelling choral throng,
    Forget your sorrow, and your wrong,
    In one glad hour of joyous song
    To honor Hallowe'en!

    Friday, September 22, 2017

    Indigenous Peoples Index

    Samples of lessons and crafts about Indigenous peoples.
           Indigenous peoples or Natives (formerly Indians) held undisputed possession of the wilds of the Americas before the European invasion of those continents. Once masters of the fairest regions on the globe, the natives represented many degrees of civilization. They ranged from nomadic tribes, wandering the grasslands freely in order to hunt the buffalo to survive to those native peoples whose architectural achievements in the tropical rain forests of South America made their conquerors marvel.
    Indigenous Peoples' Artifacts & Art for Enhancing Lesson Plans:
    1. Craft a paper war bonnet
    2. Gobble Up Over 100 Turkeys!
    3. Cut and Paste Paper Pueblos
    4. Picture Puzzle: Find the hidden potter
    5. Molas Characterized by Kuna Legends, Real Animals, Politics or Geometric Shapes 
    6. Squanto, The Native American Hero of Thanksgiving 
    7. Weave Indian Corn for Autumn Fun!
    8. The Hiawatha Paper Cuts Restored 
    9. Patterns for a Plains Indian village - canoe with paper dolls and teepee/tipi template 
    My Indigenous People's Art Lessons & Crafts from Art Education Daily: