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After all these years as an illustrator/chronicler of hit TV shows and onetime-wonder blunders, illustrator Kyle Hilton still adores what he doe.
Ruben led me into this project gradually. For weeks, he'd been asking me (or Joe, or Diego, or anyone willing) to draw superheroes for him. Then he wanted them cut out. Then he wanted accessories. Then he wanted the arms or legs in different positions. They would get torn. He would cry. Something had to be done. Here's the design that I came up with (there is a printable version for you at the end of the post): Print the template on light cardboard or print on regular paper and glue it to cardstock or light cardboard. (The cardboard we used was about the thickness of a cereal box.) Get out the art supplies and turn it into your child's fantasy super-hero! Older kids can color, collage and add details to the figure. Younger kids can dictate what they want. Remember to use only flat collage materials if you plan to laminate. You can have them laminated, or you can carefully coat both sides with clear packing tape, then trim off the excess. (Try it on a test piece first if it is your first time doing this!) Make sure the thumbs are facing the right way. Poke the brads through the laminated holes and fold them over on the back to tuck in the sharp ends. Use a hard surface to press them flat. If your kids can draw their own outlines for their superheroes, I think these will turn out even better! I am hoping we can try that next. Click on the picture below to get a printable version: ** added 5/6/12** click here for some other fun ideas for your superhero paperdolls!
Paper Dolls are so much fun to dress up. All the different clothes and styles give your kids a fun way to spend their time. Who knew there were so many different ways to have fun with paper. YOU DID! Download all of our printable dress up paper doll templates and have a new look […]
een tijdje geleden kreeg ik een mailtje van de Mollie Makes , over hun nieuwe blad Home en dat ik er in stond, ik zoeken op inter...
This Pegasus paper doll had lots of moving joints so you can position him flying, running, rearing... so many possibilities! If you look at Pegasus' haunch, you will see his markings form the same pattern as the constellation he shares a name with. He is 11 inches long and about 12 inches tall with his wing extended. The original design is scanned and then laser printed on heavy 140# index paper (cardstock). He is cut and assembled by me with tiny brads to make him posable. The Pegasus paper doll was part of a project including 18 other mythological beasts and creatures that was successfully funded through a Kickstarter campaign! Now, it's been made available through my Etsy store. Thank you!
Using paper dolls to help your students learn about the elements of life? Sounds unusual, doesn't it? This activity can be used as a stand-alone, or you can use it as a fun culminating activity in your existing unit. The students get an attractive graphic organizer that includes information on the...
a gallery curated by em`lia
Hi Everyone! Thanks for joining today and reading my blog. I truly appreciate your curiosity and your support. A couple of years ago, I came across a foundation paper pieced pattern (FPP) from Mary McGuire featured in Quiltmaker's 100 Blocks. I loved the block so much, I redrew it in EQ8 and asked my bee mates to make blocks for a bee quilt. I was quite happy with the result. There as so much excitement and rapport, that I took the idea a little further. I envisioned a whole community of girls and started working on adapting the blocks even further giving each one a nice outfit and different hairstyle. During one of my patchwork retreats, I sewed together most of these and then put them away. They seemed to be rather small and even I was a little discouraged to sew them at 4" x 6". Then I had another idea. What if you could mix and match the dolls to make your very own "paper doll" just like when we were kids? So, I had to go back to the drawing board and design the dolls to be interchangeable. I divided them into three segments - head, torso and legs and increased the block size. I designed and sewed together Emily, the reddish-brown girl on the far right followed by Mia on the left followed by the innocent and bashful Jasmin. With each doll block, I improved my own designing skills and understanding of my quilt designing software to design foundation blocks. I decided to increase the width of all blocks to 6" x 9" instead of 5" x 9" which gave the possibility of adding hands to Mia (both dark haired girls). I liked how it gave the illusion of dancing. Since there was such a great interest in the dolls, I started writing a pattern for a mini collection. Yes, my dream is one day to have an extensive pattern with many dolls, but pattern writing takes time, a LOT of time. Not only must you know how to technically write, you must know how to utilize your computer programs to fulfill your ideas which are clear enough for everyone to read and understand. I want to stick to my philosophy of simple, easy and practical especially in my patterns. If you have too many details in the pattern, your customers will lose interest. If there is not enough, the finished product will not look like it is supposed to and your patterns will never be bought again. I truly wanted to design easy, do-able patterns for everyone with a little bit of foundation piecing knowledge. When writing the pattern, I added a bonus hairstyle - a pretty shorter cut, because not all girls have long hair. I also wanted to set the dolls apart from other doll or girl patterns and designed a "Girl Power" quilt with a whole community of girls. I tried to create movement and flow between the dolls by adding a simple Log Cabin Block between them allowing the color to radiate towards the middle. Originally, I worked out a grid of quilting over the entire quilt that would not interfere with the doll faces and speed up the quilting time, but when I started marking my quilt, the lines started to interfere way too much. I sprayed the whole quilt with water and started again! I worked on a new design to eliminate the intrusive quilting over their faces. As with all designs, it usually gets changed slightly during implementation due to moods, brain gas and time restraints. : ) The center of the quilt, quilted up very nicely. I am not totally content with the outer parts of the quilting, because when I sprayed the quilt, the fabric lost its shape and the marker was not cooperating. I was afraid to iron the quilt again with the risk of having the lines reappear. I am currently unhappy with ALL quilting markers. If there is one thing that I am displeased with the way the quilt turned out, it is the quilting and the background fabric. I should have sent the quilt to a long arm quilter and should have used more of a contrasting background or darker skin colors for the girls. Another fabric other than a solid such as a low volume light printed fabric would work very nicely as well. And, at the very last minute (the eleventh hour so to say), I had a revelation to design hands for Mia! Now, you can have a whole string of paper dolls holding hands. Not only that, but there are also three options for an ending hand - open, closed and partially open. To finish up the quilt, I added some lovely 2 1/2" Double-Folded, Continuous Machine Binding. It was the first time that the binding came out exactly the way I wanted it too without "beauty flaws. " Honestly, I just couldn't stop designing. My mind kept going and going with ideas for new dolls! I had to keep reminding myself - this is the MINI collection. "You have to come to an end, Karen." Here are some of the noticeable design differentces from the original to the pre-edited Mia. I made the torso and legs longer and pepped up her hairstyle. I found the feet to be the most challenging. There are at least four different versions of the feet and legs that I sewed together, before I really found one that I loved. You will find those in the final version of Mia in the pattern booklet. So, I am proud to present this wonderful 16-page foundation pieced collection featuring three different dolls, one bonus hairstyle, four different hands for Emily and several ideas including instructions for the cover quilt. There are more than 200 different dolls you can make not including the hands for Mia. You can find it for sale on Etsy in the easypatchworkSHOP. You can also find it at these local stores in Germany: einfach bunt quilts & Quilt ét Textilkunst. If you wish to carry it in your patchwork and quilting store, please write for wholesale purchases. I really look forward to seeing what you do with this pattern. Please send me an email with your doll or share on social media for all of us to see under the hashtag: eppaperdolls. Thank you for joining me today and reading all about the Paper Dolls Mini Collection. Enjoy your week(end).
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Thereza Rowe is a London-based illustrator and graphic designer. Her designs are bright, happy and often feature stylised creatures. She wa...
(...) Offrons le globe aux enfants, Qu'une journée au moins le globe apprenne la camaraderie, Les enfants prendront de nos mains le globe Ils y planteront des arbres immortels. Nazim Hikmet 53 pays à colorier, didactiques et ludiques depuis 2009 :...
This Spring paper doll template pack includes paper doll dresses, paper doll cut outs, season activities that focus on Fall, Winter, Summer and Spring.
Bumble Button provides free graphics and digital clip-art for crafters and artists. Wide variety of images from antique & vintage books, and ephemera.
I have had the pleasure of working with Rebecca on several art commissions. She is amazing! My first experience with her was when I commissioned her to create a coloring page to accompany my firs…