Nicole Alderman

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since Feb 24, 2014
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Five acres, two little ones, one awesome husband, 12 ducks (give or take), and a bunch of fruit trees and garden beds. In her spare time, Nicole likes to knit, paint, draw, teach kids, make fairies & dragons, philosophize, and read fantasy. She doesn't HAVE spare time, but does like to fantasize about it!
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Recent posts by Nicole Alderman

Watching the kids experiment with the various media and methods was SO COOL. They all took the art in so many different ways, and everyone really enjoyed it.

I hope you can find a way to bring art to others again, even if it's just a few people for a short time. I love seeing their creativity and watching them learn, and seeing how proud they are of what they've made.

(And, yeah, when things go wrong, they do go wrong in big ways! I try really hard to prevent fights over resources, tears over material not working, utter distress about accidents, etc. But, it still happens! I'm glad I'm not trying to do it in a museum!)
1 day ago
art

r ranson wrote:

megafauna chicken shielding her human from the rain



My new most favourite sentence ever.



That was my son's art from Monday. At first, I thought the megafauna chicken was eating the human (my son has a propensity to draw chickens who kill those who eat chicken meat), but, no, chicken was shielding human from the rain ♥.

(This was done on the grey construction paper, and since I had it at home, I could throw it in my scanner. I don't have any of the cardboard art from today, since my kids aren't in today's class.)
2 days ago
art
The ink washed cardboard worked! My camera died, or I would have taken pictures. The kids had an absolute blast (and made an absolute mess!). Some kids just smeared dry pigment the whole times. Some painted pokemon. Others made prehistoric stories like cats battling other cats to protect humans, or a megafauna chicken shielding her human from the rain. Some kids got into grinding everything they could in the mortar and pestle (many kids are now begging their parents for their own mortar and pestles), and other mixed every color they could together. Some experimented with flicking paint from the brushes. It was super cool to see what the kids could do with chalk, soapstone, charcoal, yellow ochre, red ochre, and gum Arabic.

I'm so glad I didn't take the "easy" route of having the kids just draw with pastels on paper. They learned so much through their experimental archeology ♥.

Thank you all for your help!!!
2 days ago
art

Flora Eerschay wrote:It is because it stretches when water is added, and then shrinks as it dries. You have to leave it stuck to some hard surface until completely dry.



Yeah, the problem is I have one 50 minute class followed by another in the exact same space, with a total of 4 different groups. There's just not room to store all the drying paper :'(
2 days ago
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It didn't curl when painting, though. It curled an hour later while drying. Some of the papers crumpled up 45 degrees and looked like blooming flowers, rather than flat paper. I've always kind of wondered what the point of construction paper was, if it had any benefit over cardstock in some uses. Well, this was not one such use. It obviously was not made for getting wet!
2 days ago
art

Anne Miller wrote:Have you thought about making milk paint?  Maybe the charcoal suggestion could be used with milk paint?

Or do you feel it is not suitable for poster board?



I thought about making milk paint, but don't have any skim milk, and only have a little bit of just-add-water milk paint. Since I'm doing the project with my class at 10:00am tomorrow (which is now almost today), I didn't really have time.

I ended up doing Tereza's suggestion. I had to use a bit more black ink than I was thinking I would, and the grey was still paler than I thought. But, it was quick and easy to apply. I also added in some blue ink, because my black diluted to a more brownish/yellow black, and I wanted a bluer black.

The only issue I had was that the poster board decided that it, too, liked to curl. It didn't curl as much as the construction paper used in class did, but it definitely had a curl. I think the amount of water used in diluting the ink was a bit much. I tried pressing it flat, which flattened it. But, it didn't dry. So the instant I took it out of the press, it curled again. I then sandwiched towels between the poster board, which helped it dry a bit more. But, it still curled.

It was then 10:00pm. And I needed to get the poster board cut for tomorrow's class. So, I cut it up and am now pressing all the pieces under some books with a heater blowing at the stack. I'm going to turn off the heater and lay out the boards to dry in a few minutes and go to bed. Let's hope they're not too curled in the morning, and that they don't curl when the kids make their prehistoric art in 11 hours!
3 days ago
art

Jay Angler wrote:

John F Dean wrote: It looked like a pretty simple project.


I would point out, that as we get older, crawling into short spaces to chase a sick chicken starts to seem yucky.  Yes, it takes more material, but I'd be inclined to find a way to extend the legs for at least 4 1/2 ft of height for short humans, and more for tall humans or people not good at bending over or if you anticipate needing to enter it daily because your birds decide to lay wherever.



My friend is actually making a mobile duck enclosure with a trampoline right now. What they did was attach the uprights that usually hold the safety netting, and they put the fencing around that, as well. They're going to put netting across the top, too. Her husband welded a gate for the duck yard, too, so they won't have to crouch to enter and exit. It'll be heavier to move than my duck yard, but since their ducks will always be in there (rather than herded in and out every day like mine), it'll make it a lot easier for them to manage--and more fun to hang out with the ducks during the day.

By having the extension above, rather than below, it also makes it easier to glide along the ground. You need the smooth bottom beams for the trampoline to slide on the ground.
3 days ago

Tereza Okava wrote:do you have any black ink for sumi-e or calligraphy?
remembering back to my teaching art in museum days, we used to dilute it *super* diluted in water to make gray washes. if you're using chalky pigments and it's super duper diluted to be light grey, activation may not be such a big problem.



I have Higgens "Waterproof drawing ink." I could maybe water it down. Do you think painting or ragging would be the best way to apply it?

I'm going to assume it'll dilute in water, because I clean my calligraphy pen with water. And, when it was still wet, it could be reactivated with my watercolor paints (found that out the fun way when making the Northern Wei Dynasty scroll painting).
3 days ago
art
In my history class yesterday, I had the kids make prehistoric cave art with charcoal, chalk, limestone, and ochre pigments. I also mixed up ochre, charcoal, and chalk watercolors for them to make their own cave art. They had an absolute blast! I gave them grey construction paper, because that was the only grey thing I could find at school. Construction paper, however, LOVES to curl. And, their beautiful art ended up all curled and crumpled. Even the kids who just used charcoal ended up with curled paper.

I'm teaching the same lesson to group of kids tomorrow. I would like for them to make epic art that *doesn't* curl. I have a bunch of white cardboard that I could cut for them to paint on. But it's white. And the chalk and limestone won't show on white. And grey looks more stone line.

So, how do I turn the white cardboard grey, while still allowing for a porous surface that the pigments and watercolors can stick to.

I have a few ideas, but none seem perfect:

  • Paint them grey with water colors. But the paint will activate when they paint. That's not good.
  • Paint them grey with acrylic paint. But the paint will make a plastic, non-permeable surface. That's not good.
  • Use the hydrated lime I have and tint it grey with pigments, and paint that on the cardboard. I'm worried that it won't solidify in 18 hours, and the pigments will reannimate when the kids paint tomorrow.
  • Hope I have enough just-add-water milk paint to paint a thin coat of grey on 25 pieces of cardboard. Sometimes the milk paint reaanimates, though.
  • Color it grey with colored pencils or crayons. Crayons are too waxy, so that'd make it impermeable to watercolors. Are colored pencils too waxy?
  • Try and glue on the grey paper to the white cardboard. The problem is, I didn't bring the paper home to try that out. And the glue might not dry if I do it at 9:00am tomorrow with class starting at 10:00.


  • Does anyone else have any ideas?
    3 days ago
    art
    This is what permies is for:



    Have you planted your fall garden yet? I haven't! I'm too busy planning/teaching a botany class to elementary-aged kids. I did get some free grape plants that I'll be putting in the ground soon, though!
    1 week ago