Quelques gommettes de formes originales, des feutres pour les entourer, et hop ! voilà une jolie couverture de cahier ... Couverture cahier gommettes Niveau conseillé : 1/ Matériel Papier à dessin ou Créatex, blanc, format A4 ou plus grand , selon...
En manque d'inspiration pour la couverture du cahier maternelle ? Je t'offre 4 idées de couverture de cahier de vie en maternelle avec les consignes
Write down your dreams in style on these cool spiral-bound journals. Personalize it with a cool design to make them shine. These notebooks feature a thick gloss full-color laminated protective cover that is much more durable than the average flimsy paper covers. Made in the USA, the journal comes in 5x7 size with 150 pages of lined paper. .: Front, back and inside cover print .: 150 lined pages (75 sheets) .: Glossy laminated cover .: Note: 0.5"x0.5" production barcode visible on the back cover
Petite activité autour de la pochette d'un cahier sur un format A4 Empreinte au pastel + Empreinte spirale carton R...
Hey guys! I’m opening a new shop called thePsychNpStudent. I’ll be making study guides, templates, flashcards, digital stickers, digital study planners, notebook pages and covers and more! Please follow my shop :)
Envie d'une jolie couverture de cahier, toute en rondeur ??? Des tampons ronds, des couleurs vives, et c'est parti ! Couverture "Des ronds partout !" Niveau conseillé : 1/ Matériel Papier blanc Créatex ou type Bristol grand format (dans mon exemple 60x42)...
Pour les porte manteaux : papier photo et encres, outils : spatule à colle et rouleaux fins de la pâte à modeler. Explication succincte, mais grand résultat! Merci Fabienne pour cette explosion de couleurs! Eplications plus précises de Fabienne : Oui,...
Write down your dreams in style on these cool spiral-bound journals. Personalize it with a cool design to make them shine. These notebooks feature a thick gloss full-color laminated protective cover that is much more durable than the average flimsy paper covers. Made in the USA, the journal comes in 5x7 size with 150 pages of lined paper. .: Front, back and inside cover print .: 150 lined pages (75 sheets) .: Glossy laminated cover .: Note: 0.5"x0.5" production barcode visible on the back cover
Perfect activity for the first day of school and cute way to decorate your classroom. Two blank versions included in download.
Si c'est possible que la mascotte parte chez les élèves, voici la couverture que j'utiliserai pour son cahier d'aventures. - couverture cahier mascotte Gaston.pdf
Un rouleau creatif, des élastiques de bureau larges et plats... Et voilà une technique pour réaliser des mosaïques colorées un peu façon "vitrail"... Rouleaux et élastiques Niveau conseillé : 1/ Matériel Des rouleaux créatifs (en caoutchouc rigide)...
- Couverture cahier de vie POP , en rouge , vert ou rose . pour la version rouge c'est ici : https://mon-partage.fr/f/5kYDFn5P/ pour la version en vert c'est ici : https://mon-partage.fr/f/aWBZn0zQ/ pour la version en rose c'est ici : https://mon-partage.fr/f/bHpuyEhi/ A...
Pour réaliser la couverture des cahiers d'activité nous avons utilisé des ballons de baudruche trempés dans la peinture acrylique et posés sur une grande feuille blanche de format 1/2 raisin. Ces réalisations ont habillé le cahier d'activité et comme...
One of the first posts I pinned to my "Painting Inspirations, Tutorials, and Projects" Pinterest board was an abstract watercolor tutorial from Grow Creative. I have been wanting to try Elise's technique for months, and now that I've done it, I don't think I can stop! The results are absolutely beautiful, and their map-like-qualities appeal greatly to the arty cartophile in me! (I am borrowing the term "arty cartophile" from Jill K. Berry and her book Personal Geographies, which I was inspired to pull off the bookshelf after creating these rubber cement resist watercolor paintings.) I followed Elise's technique pretty much exactly, so you can read her blog post for her directions, but I also took photos of each step of the process as I carried it out, so I thought I would share them with you here: First, I used blue painter's tape to secure my 9x12 cold-press watercolor paper to a piece of palette paper on my work space. (I tried low-tack artist's tape first, and too much watercolor paint seeped underneath it. The blue painter's tape left a gorgeous crisp edge.) Next, I dribbled rubber cement over the watercolor paper. There is no planning, just random dripping in all different directions. Then, I spent a little time with my embossing tool, speeding up the drying process for the rubber cement. This is not a task for the impatient! I get into a kind of trance, watching the rubber cement boil, bubble, pop, and dry. Once the rubber cement is dry, the paper is ready for its first application of watercolor paint. For this particular piece, I used Reeves tube watercolors in "Lemon Yellow." In some of my first pieces, I did a watercolor wash across the entire paper. For the example photographed here, I applied this first layer of watercolor in just some portions of the paper, leaving other parts white. The drying process for the watercolor paint is much faster than for the rubber cement! Now technically, you are supposed to apply more rubber cement, but I actually forgot, and put on a different color of watercolor. This time is was Reeves tube paint in basic "orange." I supplemented with another shade of orange from a set of pan watercolors. I used the orange paint to fill in some of those white spaces I left when I applied the Lemon Yellow. After a bit more drying with the heating tool, I applied more random rubber cement. More drying--which meant more time mesmerized by bubbling rubber cement. At this point it was time for my final color--Reeves tube watercolor in "Magenta." Gorgeous! After one final drying session with the embossing tool, I was ready to pull back the painter's tape and enjoy the crisp edge along the perimeter of my watercolor paper. The next step is to use the pads of my fingers to rub away all of the rubber cement that has been resisting various layers of watercolor paint. The rubber cement comes away in balls and crumbs, and leaves behind the wonderful pathways that give the art such a map-like quality. When all the rubber cement has been rubbed away...voila! Now, I think this piece looks beautiful, and am tempted to leave it as it is, but there is a final step that makes it look even more beautiful. Using a fine-tipped black Sharpie pen, I outline various pathways around the piece. (I tried Microns, but the "tooth" of the watercolor paper really does them in.) I start with all of the white pathways, and usually move on to the secondary colors, like yellow in this piece. When I was finished deciding which areas to outline in black, I had my finished piece: I think I could sit around and look at it all day! I really love the results of this technique. What do you think? This was my fourth 9x12 art piece using the rubber cement resist technique. Here are the earlier ones I created: These first two have a similar color combination, with more "lake blue" in the first one. I like how they look when I photograph them without the white perimeter: I'm showing these in backwards order, because this last one I am showing you is the first one I tried. Instead of using rubber cement, I used Art Maskoid, which is the same as frisket. But my bottle was almost completely dried up so I was kind of smearing sticky frisket across the page. At first, I thought the result looked kind of terrible, but it has grown on me, and looks like a map of some archipelago far out in the ocean. (You can also see how the artist's tape didn't give as clean of an edge as the painter's tape does.) Stay tuned, because in an upcoming post I will share some pretty cards I have made using this same rubber cement resist technique!
Couvrir les cahiers en mode DIY La rentrée est là et l’épreuve de couverture des livres et cahiers ne va pas tarder. Es-tu prêt/e ? As-tu réellement envie d’utiliser du plastique pour emballer ces sources de savoirs et d’apprentissage ? Si ce n’est pas le cas et que la couture est un plaisir, j’ai un […]
MAJ de l’article le 14/07/2024 : mise en ligne des cahiers de maîtresse version 2022-2023. Correction de quelques coquilles. C’est en lisant l’article des Maîtresses en baskets su…
Le fond est fait de plusieurs aplats de couleurs, dans des tons d'automne. Les troncs sont réalisés ensuite : traits peints à la peinture noire, puis feuilles coupées en bandes pour faire les troncsTravail des GS d' Odile à l'école Condorcet , pour...