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Rock Crafts

A creative way for kids to use the stones they stumble across is to turn them into animals, people, or objects.

With just a few supplies -- paint, glue, and clay -- children can try out their skills as rock artists. Like sculptors, they'll learn to judge proportion and form. Like painters, they will need to consider color and shape, along with such pleasant dilemmas as how to create a tapered wing on a rounded rock.

 

 

Materials
Both tempera and acrylic paints work well; tempera looks chalkier but washes off easily, making it the best choice for kids. Acrylic paint has a glossy finish. Before painting, kids should sketch out their plan: It's easier to envision what the finished project will look like if they draw it first with pencil on paper.

Animal Ideas
Flat disks are perfect for magnets, attached with cement glue.

Shiny seals use this time-tested beauty tip: Eat fish.

Contented ducks have secure beaks, attached with glue.

A portly lop-eared rabbit is the perfect weight for a bookend.

Ladybugs who lunch are elegantly attired in polka-dots.

This turtle would be happy on a log.

Diplomatic pandas keep their thoughts to themselves.

This mouse can sleep in a fabric-covered matchbox.

A dachshund dreams of dessert.

These frogs are up to no good -- ready to pop open at the prospect of a fly lunch.

Yikes! Painting a jagged rock has brought to life a hungry shark.

Rock Craft How-To
1. Glue rocks together before painting them, attaching small stone features such as eyes, feet, or beaks to body parts before joining larger parts; attach whiskers and tails after painting. Cement glue makes the strongest bond but should be used only by parents working in a well-ventilated area. (Kid-friendly glues are less durable and are best for rock crafts that will sit on shelves.)

2. Kids can design a project by arranging rocks until the figure looks right. Use little cushions of nondrying clay to support parts while the glue sets; bread clay works especially well. For example, the alligator's hungry mouth is partly supported by his pink tongue (below left). Cut-up coffee stirrers are glued to the fellow's underside for stability (below right) and painted gray.


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Comments

  • catdan3
    6 Aug, 2011

    My five year old granddaughter and I have had a ball making rock animals. She was always collecting rocks and now has a fun way to use and display them. We even made a chicken and a T-rex! Thanks for all of the wonderful new ideas!

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