Coin Collecting for Kids
Dec 15th, 2010 by Aldouspi

Coin Collecting for Kids

  • Kid-friendly introduction to a lifelong hobby of coin collecting
  • Encourages children to search for, save and learn about all kinds of U.S. coins
  • Take a tour through the mint and save pennies from 4 decades
  • Learn how coins are made
  • Slots on every page let kids collect birth-year coins, millennium coins, statehood quarters and twentieth-century coins

NEW REVISED EDITION! Newly updated to include Presidential coins and Westward Journey nickels! A colorful, kid-friendly book to introduce children to a lifelong hobby, Coin Collecting for Kids encourages children to search for, save, and learn all about many different U.S. coins. Take a tour through the mint and save pennies from four different decades while learning about how coins are made. Slots on every page let kids collect birth-year coins, millennium coins, and twentieth-ce

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Making Your Own Watercolor Paints
Sep 3rd, 2010 by Aldouspi

Watercolor Paints

Making Your Own Watercolor Paints

I think everyone has had the opportunity to paint with watercolors. Perhaps that is because painting with watercolors has become a regular activity in schools. Watercolors may be difficult to master is subtleties, but unlike oils or acrylics, they are essentially child-friendly. They are so easy-to-use and their water base is non-toxic. This is why most preschools and kindergartens usually use them in parts of their curriculum.

Watercolors are an excellent medium for any budding artist to start in. But before you start painting, how about making your own watercolor paints?

The idea of making paints may sound daunting, but remember most artists before the twentieth century mixed their own paints. With easy access to the ready-made art marketplace, the art of mixing paints is something of a “lost art.”

But creating your own watercolor paints is actually pretty easy. Here is an example making the children’s version – mixing a batch of watercolors for professional use is a more involved process…

First, you’ll have to get together some basic ingredients. You’ll need the following:

    • 3 tbsp baking soda
    • 3 tbsp cornstarch
    • 3 tbsp white vinegar
    • 1 1/2 tsp light corn syrup
    • food coloring

Note that the measurements can be doubled or tripled depending on how many people will be using the watercolor. This should be enough for a small group of four, but for larger groups add a bit more.

By the way, the corn syrup is the binder, the substance that will keep your pigments together, for your watercolor so its pretty important. YBefore there were bottles of corn syrup on the grocery shelf, artists made their own glucose syrup. “Glucose syrup” is just a fancy name for a sugar solution. To make it, just boil two cups of sugar in a cup of water. Mix it well until you have a clear solution. Now that you have your binder, whether a homemade sugar solution or corn syrup, it’s time to start.

First of all, mix the vinegar and baking soda together in a small bowl. It will start to foam, but that’s a natural reaction, so you just keep mixing. When the foaming has died down, it’s time to add the cornstarch and your syrup, to the mix. Keep on mixing until you get a smooth consistency to the mix. This will be your clear base.

Now that you’re got your base, it’s time to create your color sets. Get several bottle caps or small containers of similar size and pour in the base. After you’ve used up all the clear base, you just add a different food coloring to each small container. Be generous with your coloring amounts – the color needs to spread well, so this means you also have to stir a bit. When you’re done, there’s only one step left – put the caps in a cool dry place so that they can dry.

By the next day, you’ll have a dry set of watercolor paints ready for use!


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Making Your Own Watercolor Paints related articles from the blogosphere…

Paintings And Diverse Techniques | Article Toucan

To paint with oils you only need a brush, a palette, a cloth and linseed oil to clean your brush. These are the most useful materials to begin to work. Paint with watercolor is common too. Watercolors provide a veiled effect unlike the opacity and thickness … Practice as much you can up to find your painting style. Once, you find your style you will create more and better paintings. The possibility to be a better painter is always real. Create your own Tableaux. …

Publish Date: 09/02/2010 13:29

http://articletoucan.com/2010/09/02/paintings-and-diverse-techniques/

Sally Brooks Learn Watercolor Painting Review | Knowledge Archive

Learn Watercolor Painting will help you each and every day that you learn how to paint with use of watercolor. It will provide you everything you need. It will provide you step by step instructions on how to make brilliant watercolor … You will enjoy having your own watercolor paintings. You will love to have your own paintings in watercolor. And so you should pursue learning watercolor painting. You might be little hesitant about going for it but you should not be. …

Publish Date: 09/03/2010 22:48

http://knolarch.com/lifestyle/sally-brooks-learn-watercolor-painting-review/37955/

DIY Watercolor Paints » Pepper Paints

1 1/2 teaspoons light corn syrup. Pour into your containers —bottle caps, pill boxes, any tiny, shallow container will do. DSC_9463 · DSC_9465. Add food coloring. We used both neon and regular colors of food coloring … 6 Responses to “DIY Watercolor Paints”. sioux @ crunchybits.net says: April 21, 2010 at 11:39 am. That is the coolest! I love making our own art supplies but we haven’t tried watercolors! Thanks for the inspiration and pictures — they really help! …

Publish Date: 04/20/2010 18:40

http://pepperpaints.com/2010/04/21/diy-watercolor-paints/


How to Make Your Own Twinkling H2O Watercolor Paint

I show you how to mix your own twinkling H2O type of watercolor paint using pearl ex powder. Added note: I have read that a 3 or 4:1 ratio of water to gum arabic is a good rule of thumb. More info about gum arabic can be found on the following post ….

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