Monotype - an unconventional drawing technique in kindergarten: a variety of topics and the specifics of organizing classes

How diverse the world of art is! He has no boundaries and generously accepts any ideas, turning them into a separate direction of creativity. One of them is monotype - a drawing technique that combines printed graphics and painting, but is not an engraving.

The artist applies an image with a brush to a flat metal surface, from which the design is imprinted onto damp paper under the pressure of an etching press. This design is unique because... its replication is impossible: only one high-quality print can be obtained from a flat form.

In this article we will tell you where this type of art comes from, what types of monotype there are, and how to learn this drawing technique yourself. Welcome to the world of monotype!

The history of the appearance of monotype

Monotype, translated from Greek, literally means “one print,” but, judging by historical data, it did not originate in Greece: the first engraving prints without a black outline appeared in the 11th century in China. These were the simplest types of monotype.

For a long time, monotype was an additional technique to the main graphic techniques. The first color print was made by the Dutch artist Hercules Seghers: he painted over metal engravings (etchings) with colored paints. This is how unique prints were obtained, which served as the beginning of the development of this type of art.

This technique of depicting a drawing was adopted and improved by the Italian artist and graphic artist Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione. It is he who is credited with the invention of monotype. Castiglione painted the plate with ink and, after the paint had completely dried, cut out the image with a sharp tool and printed it on paper.

“The Creation of Adam” is one of the most famous monotypes of the Italian painter. The painting depicts God emerging from a cloud with white angular strokes. And in the darkness, Adam is depicted with thin flowing lines. This masterpiece was created using black ink, a plate and a blunt instrument (stick or brush handle) [Art Institute Chicago, 2020]:

More than a hundred years later, the English artist, engraver, poet William Blake contributed to the development of monotype: he varnished the drawing on a copper board. He filled the areas empty of varnish with acid, so that the outline of the design protruded above the smooth background. Next, Blake transferred the drawing with a print to the board. This is how zincography appeared - a convex etching.

Despite all the artistic experiments, monotype began to emerge as a separate direction only in the 19th century thanks to Edgar Degas, a French artist. He created many works using this technique. Degas loved to experiment: he was the first to use a transparent board in a monotype; it made it easier to control the work process.

The artist published manuals on monotype, presented his works at exhibitions, and the circle of those interested in monotype began to gradually expand [N. Kuznetsov, 2010].

In Russia, Elizaveta Kruglikova is considered the founder of monotype. While in Paris for about 25 years, she created about five hundred prints on various subjects. The largest series of works made using the monotype technique is the “Flowers” ​​series; it includes more than a hundred prints [P. Kornilov, 1969].

In the 20th century, color and the material used began to take on special importance in art. Thus, Yuri Velikanov, a student of Elizaveta Kruglikova, created monotypes dedicated to the construction of a power plant on the Svir River.

Monotype gained particular popularity in the 1930s. Using this technique, Anatoly Suvorov created illustrations for Alexei Nikolaevich Tolstoy’s story “Nikita’s Childhood”:

Ada Rybachuk, an artist from Ukraine, came to the North in 1950 and was struck by the beauty of nature, which served as an incentive for inspiration and painting using the monotype technique. She created illustrations for the fairy tale “Little Unyany”:

Artists of the 20th century experimented in their creativity, worked with colored paints and found non-standard methods for performing monotypes. Vadim Frolov, an engraver, used waste from metal production in his works, and Valery Mishin, an artist from St. Petersburg, used real objects to create prints: plants, buttons, needles, snaps, etc. This is how the monoprint appeared.

Mikhail Tarkhanov, a graphic artist and designer, poured oil paints over water and then placed a sheet of paper on top. Using watercolor, ink, and pencil, he completed the missing images on the dried canvas. This is how a new direction of monotype appeared - aquatype.

Another original way of applying a picture was invented by Gennady Troshkov: he applied paints to glass or lithographic stone, and then transferred this paint to paper using a soft roller.

As you can see, since the advent of monotype, this type of creativity has undergone significant changes. Artists used various methods of drawing, which led to the emergence of new directions in the monotype technique. Let's look at each of them in more detail in the next section.

Types of monotypy

Monotype is a multifaceted art form. The authors use various technical techniques that help to most accurately convey the artist’s idea.

There are several criteria that divide monotypy into types:

  1. Color solution: monotype can be monochrome or polychrome. Monochrome monotype is most often done with black printing or offset ink.
  2. Method of applying the design: the design is applied to a clean form or by removing paint residues from the base.
  3. Type of printing form: the design can be applied to wood, glass, plastic, metal.
  4. Type of print base: a print of a drawing can be made on canvas, cardboard, or paper.
  5. Art materials : watercolor, ink, oil, acrylic, etc. are used for drawing. [Very Important Lot, 2020].

Monotype is a great way to develop creativity for both adults and children. Today, several varieties of this image technique have appeared:

  1. Aquatype: the picture is applied with gouache, and then the areas free from paint are painted over with black ink. Next, the painted sheet must be dried and then placed in a container with water. Mascara does not dissolve in water, but gouache does not dissolve partially. The result is the original blurry image:

  1. Deotype: a sheet of paper is placed on a form with paint, and thin tracing paper is placed on top. A drawing is applied to the tracing paper using a pencil or any other object. As a result, the paint is imprinted unevenly on the paper and an interesting pattern is obtained:

  1. Negative monotype: to create it, a form with remnants of paint that was used in deotype is used. Unpainted areas are re-painted and a new print is made on paper:

  1. Aquagraphy: insoluble paint in liquid form is slowly added to a container of water. Colored pigments will form on the surface, which must be mixed with a brush, creating interesting patterns. Then a sheet of paper is placed in a container of colored water to make an imprint of the pattern, and it is carefully removed. By the way, this method of depicting a picture appeared in the 15th century. In Turkey and Persia, aquagraphy was called ebru (" cloud art "):
  1. Florotype: paint is applied to the form, and petals, flowers, leaves are laid out on top and covered with paper. an interesting imprint remains on the paper with the silhouettes of the objects used:

  1. Decalcomania: a colored design is transferred from paper under pressure to a fabric surface, ceramics or other canvas. This technique is most often used to print a decal:

  1. Blotography: this is one of the easiest techniques to create a monotype image. Anyone can handle it: watercolor or gouache is poured onto the center of a sheet of paper, and then the paper is tilted in different directions so that the paint spreads over the surface, forming colored streaks: [Very Important Lot, 2020].

It is no coincidence that monotype is classified as a non-traditional drawing technique. The methods for creating images are striking in their originality and at the same time simplicity. I just want to try to draw something like this using one of the methods described above. And you?

Monotype techniques

Drawing using the method in question has a long history. During this time, several different working techniques emerged.

Subject monotype

The simplest technique can be used as follows:

  1. The drawing is done on a sheet of paper.
  2. It is folded in half, forming a fold line.
  3. On one of the halves, paint half of a simple object, for example, a cube.
  4. The paper is then folded, creating a complete picture.

Landscape monotype

Older kids can create landscapes. In this case, they draw part of the image on half of the paper, fold it and get the full picture. Thus, in particular, it is convenient to draw a forest on the shore of a lake and its reflection in the water.

Winter landscape

Other monotype techniques

To perform the next technique, you must already have basic skills. In this case, a plastic sheet is used. Dark paint is applied to it. While it retains its moisture, the child moves a cotton swab over it. Then they apply a sheet of paper and get a picture drawn with light paint on a dark background.

Baby learns a new drawing technique

Another technique can be used when the drawing is made by applying dark paint to a light surface with a brush.

On a note! Another subject technique can be used. In this case, the sheet of paper is crumpled before drawing on it. As a result, new features will be added to the resulting print, allowing you to see the image with more texture.

How children dance in kindergarten in a playful way and with an accelerated tempo

There is a non-standard use of this technique. Here the presentation is created in two stages:

  1. First, make a background image on a piece of paper.
  2. After the paint has dried, the child completes the drawing on it.

The work is done this way:

  1. You need to prepare a bowl of water, linseed oil, oil paint, a solvent for it and a brush that will be used for stirring. You need containers in which to mix the paint.
  2. For each desired color, this procedure is carried out separately. A little paint is poured into the jar, solvent and linseed oil are added. Then this mixture must be thoroughly stirred.
  3. The mixture is poured from the jars into a bowl of water. Linseed oil allows paints to float
  4. Use a brush to gently mix the liquid.
  5. Then a sheet of paper is placed under water and slowly raised. The paint drips off it, leaving beautiful and unexpected shapes.
  6. Then you need to wait until the paper dries.

On a note! Multi-colored stains will be visible on the sheet, which form unusual patterns or fantastic figures. The child can modify the drawing at his own discretion.

Monotype in psychology

Monotype is not just a drawing technique, because... today it is a type of art therapy that will be useful to absolutely everyone who needs to stabilize their psycho-emotional state. This method of psychotherapy has long been loved by psychologists, because, if used correctly, it will bring obvious benefits in the form of:

  • relieving emotional stress;
  • development of individuality;
  • strengthening interpersonal connections;
  • actualization of feelings;
  • development of thinking, creativity;
  • spontaneous self-expression [M. Kiseleva, 2007].

The most famous method of studying the psyche of an individual and its disorders using monotype is the psychodiagnostic text of Hermann Rorschach (“Rorschach’s Blots”).

The author of the test drew 10 blots of different colors and saturation, each image serves as a stimulus for free associations. According to Rorschach, what the subject sees in these images indicates his intellectual control and emotional state. For the purity of the study, the test taker must answer the following questions:

  1. What does he see in the picture?
  2. Where does he see this?
  3. Why does the ink blot evoke such associations in him?

Here is an example of one of the test images:

What do you see in the picture? This image evaluates a person's attitude towards other people. Most often, subjects answer that they see a moth, a butterfly, two people, or a person looking in the mirror.

If you see two people talking, then you have an active social life. If you feel like they are washing their hands, then you may not feel safe. And if it seems to you that two people are playing some kind of game, then most likely you are now subject to competition [B. Bely, 2005].

Monotype is especially useful for children. It plays an important role in studying the psychological state of the child and developing his creative skills. Many children love to draw with paints, so the process of creating a drawing using this technique fascinates them very much. Monotype contributes to:

  • development of fine motor skills;
  • stabilization of the emotional background;
  • speech development;
  • broadening the horizons of children;
  • normalization of the nervous system;
  • formation of perseverance, perseverance, attentiveness, etc. [M. Kiseleva, 2006].

To begin with, you can use a simple sheet of paper and paint: let the child draw what he can, and then, while the paint is still wet, cover the painted sheet of paper with a clean sheet. The end result will be a funny picture.

This kind of creative activity can be easily organized at home. In kindergartens, for this purpose, plexiglass or plastic boards are used, on which an image is applied with gouache or oil paints and then printed on paper. The resulting picture is complemented by a drawing with a brush or pencil.

Monotype is included in the curriculum of fine arts lessons. In elementary grades, children draw with their fingers or palms, while older students use other techniques and materials.

An interesting creative exercise “Frosty Patterns” is offered by psychologist Galina Elchaninova. To do this you will need sheets of paper, gouache, gel paints, threads, a plastic bag, and a tube. First, dip the brushes into jars of paint and apply spots on the bag. Next, put paper on it and press tightly. On the resulting print, before the paint has dried, we lay out patterns using thread, tubes, etc. The result is an improvised winter pattern.

This technique can reflect absolutely any theme, be it summer, spring, or just free creativity. The main thing is the absence of restrictions [G. Elchaninova, 2018].

Monotype is an excellent way to develop sensory-perceptual perception. Here is another exercise that psychologists recommend doing with children: you will need liquid gouache, water, paint cups, vegetable oil, flour, PVA glue, salt, cardboard, oilcloth.

To begin with, children make their own paint: mix 100-150 grams of flour, a tablespoon of vegetable oil, a pinch of salt, a tablespoon of glue and add water so that the consistency resembles sour cream. It is important that all components are mixed by hand. Next, the child’s favorite color is added to the resulting mixture.

Ask children to comment on how they felt during the process. After this, give the task to paint with your hands on cardboard or a sheet of paper with the resulting paint. This can be individual or collective creativity.

Don’t be afraid to experiment with monotype: the more varied the activities, the more interesting they will be for children. an unusual execution of monotype in her book “Creative Workshop: 55 Master Classes for Little Explorers”: take paints, water, paper, soap and straws. Mix gouache and soap in water in a ratio of 1:2:2.

Invite your child to blow into a tube lowered into a glass of colored soapy water until a cloud of bubbles forms on the surface. Place the paper on the bubbles. It will be more interesting if there are several similar solutions and they are all of different colors [R. Dorley, 2016].

If you have any difficulties in conducting such creative activities, you can always turn to pedagogical materials for help. There are many notes on monotype on the Internet for teaching lessons to children of different ages.

Work options

Let's look at some drawings that work well using the monotype technique.

Monotype butterfly drawing lesson step by step

Stage No. 1 Getting started

  1. The children, with the help of the teacher, lay out the supplies, and the teacher tells the kids about the upcoming work.
  2. The presenter shows by example how to carefully bend a sheet of paper and draw a butterfly wing. The wing is drawn on one side of the sheet, so that the butterfly’s body is on the fold. The second half of the sheet remains blank.
  3. The teacher asks the child to repeat the actions shown.

Stage No. 2 Selection of colors, painting

  1. The teacher can tell the child which colors go well with each other and which combinations are best avoided.
  2. Using his own example, the presenter shows how to paint over a wing.
  3. You should pay attention to the fact that you need to take a lot of paint and it must be quite liquid in order for the print to turn out well.

Stage No. 3 Creating a fingerprint

  1. When the entire wing is filled with paint, the sheet is quickly rolled up and gently patted on it with the palm of your hand.
  2. If necessary, the teacher helps the child to do the work more accurately.
  3. Now you can expand the sheet and evaluate the work. A butterfly has two wings!

Stage No. 4 Adding details

  1. At this stage, the teacher and child complete the drawing of the butterfly’s body and complement the drawing with other details (veins, spots, patterns).
  2. To make the work brighter, it is better to paint additional details in a dark color. There should be a contrast between the print and the additional elements. It is advisable for the teacher to explain this nuance to the child.

Otherwise, the best adviser is the child’s imagination.

Stage No. 5 Decoration

Children especially love this part of the work and indulge in it with particular enthusiasm.

How to decorate a butterfly:

  1. Carefully dip a wet brush into PVA glue and draw the desired detail, then quickly sprinkle with glitter. Gently brush off any leftovers so they can be reused.
  2. The sequins are glued one at a time using PVA glue.
  3. A glitter pen is especially convenient when decorating; you can quickly draw the desired element. At the same time, it will be bright and shiny. Usually several pens of different colors are used.
  4. Small stickers, self-adhesive rhinestones and beads are also suitable for decoration.
  5. It is best to combine several different decorations in your work.

At the end of the lesson, the teacher must thank the children for their participation and praise them for their work.

Drawing a tree

1. Fold a sheet of paper in half and unfold it.

2. On one half of the sheet, draw half of the depicted object (tree trunk) and again fold the sheet of paper to make a print.

3. Then unfold and draw the crown of the tree, grass and fold it in half again.

4. Expand it and get a beautiful symmetrical image of the tree.

Draw flowers

Step by step drawing of a dress

  1. The “Dress” stencil is applied to the sheet with the marked border.
    The teacher checks that the middle of the template coincides with the middle of the sheet. Children trace the stencil with a pencil. Children cannot draw a dress symmetrically; they are asked to trace a template
  2. One part of the dress is filled with the main color.

    The choice of color for the dress can be left up to the guys

  3. A simple pattern is applied on top of the undried paint: pokes, strokes.

    The simplest pattern for a dress is small pokes

  4. The design is imprinted - the dress is evenly colored with interesting stains and patterns.
    Monotype allows you not only to color the template, but to make a symmetrical pattern on it
  5. When the drawing is dry, the children cut out the dress along the outline.

    Children cut out the monotype on their own using safety scissors, or they are helped by a teacher.

Step by step drawing of a winter landscape

  1. The background is drawn first: sky and water.

    For a winter landscape, cold colors are selected

  2. We print and open the sheet. Drawing a winter forest: blue, light blue, lilac or gray paint is suitable.

    The landscape is created in several stages of imprinting

  3. Landscape monotype is based on the mirror principle: objects (trees, houses, ships) are reflected in the water.

    An imprint in a landscape monotype is a reflection of objects

Step-by-step drawing of a winter tree (on film)

  1. A special type of monotype is the printing of drawings from glass, plastic or film. Initially, the image is created on a smooth surface, and it can be anything (asymmetrical). It is recommended to paint with gouache; watercolor will form droplets on the film.

    A drawing is created on a smooth surface with a thin brush.

  2. If the gouache has dried while the image was being created, apply a little water on top with a clean brush.

    The image on the film must be wet to make a print.

  3. Place a sheet of paper on the film or glass, press and iron it. The winter tree is done!

    Classes on monotype on film are conducted with students of senior groups

Winter landscape

Drawing a winter landscape is one of the options for developing creative thinking in children. An image of snow cover, snowfall or trees in winter can be created using various tools.

Kind of workDescription
1 optionA blue or blue background is painted on a glass or plastic surface. Use a cotton swab to make streaks and patterns. A thick sheet of white paper is placed on the wet drawing. After receiving the result, the image is covered with silver sparkles.
Option 2Blue snow and white clouds are drawn on a thick sheet of paper. The sheet of paper is crumpled, paint accumulates in the center of the folds, and the background becomes lighter there. After the paint has dried, the sheet is straightened.
Option 3Make a horizontal fold on a thick sheet of paper. Blue and white clouds are painted in the upper part. After this, an impression is made on the bottom using a roller. The result is an image of the winter sky and snow cover.

Winter landscapes can be complemented with the image of snowflakes using a brush and white gouache. To make the design brighter, use silver sparkles and stick on rhinestones.

Monotypes of autumn leaves | Motherhood

Autumn is now in full swing, and in the literal sense of the word! The trees glow with bright colors in the sun, and if you also want to try to capture this beauty with your child, then here are some very simple techniques.

By printing the leaves, you can make postcards or something else.

But if you print a large sheet, it will turn out to be a real tree!

It is better to apply paint from the side of the veins. We painted with gouache, but you can also use acrylic and even watercolor. Each time you can apply new color combinations to the same sheet, then all the prints will be different and not similar to the previous ones.

You can add stickers or stamps.

Using the same principle, you can make an entire autumn forest.

Here are prints of rowan leaves. And any kid can draw rowan berries - they are made using a cotton swab with red paint.

There is a painting method where the paint is blown onto a sheet using a straw.

Taking these “blown” trees as a basis, you can develop the theme a little. The following drawings were made using a regular flower spray bottle, into which we poured a little water and stirred the paint (gouache).

This is also done with cotton swabs. My daughter, however, only had the patience for the leaves on the trees, and I had to poke all the “fallen” ones, which is why they turned out so unnaturally uniform.

You can also make confetti with a hole punch and pour it onto areas of the design that must first be thickly coated with PVA glue.

A very effective and probably my favorite method: place leaves under a sheet of paper (not thick paper, but regular office paper), and draw a wax chalk on top, holding it flat, and then a pattern with all the veins will appear on the paper!

And now for a little magic - you just need to take a white chalk and run it over the white paper, and then let the child paint over the sheet with a sponge.

The further fate of all the drawings can be very different. But the main thing is that they have this destiny.

The simplest thing is to sign the drawing (especially the date, age) and save it as a keepsake in a specially designated folder. Or frame it and give it to relatives. We gave just some of these drawings to our somewhat great grandmother for her 96th birthday, and they immediately enlivened her room.

The second, more creative thing is to arrange a small home themed exhibition. And give dad an invitation card right from the door when he comes home from work.

And the third thing - the most interesting thing - is to make postcards and send them to relatives and friends. Believe me, your grandparents, aunties and even your children’s little friends will be very happy to receive such news, even if they live in your own city.

Vase with Flowers

To make a still life using the monotype technique, prepare a sheet of watercolor paper, a set of gouache, a container of water, round and flat brushes, a sheet of linoleum or cardboard of the same size.

Creative process:

  1. Using a flat, wide brush, paint the entire sheet with white gouache.
  2. Using a thin brush, apply stripes of pastel-colored gouache.
  3. Load a wide brush with white paint and rub out the colored lines. The result will be a heterogeneous background with soft color transitions.
  4. Dry the gouache, select paints for the flowers in the vase. Flowers can be arranged in a circle, in the shape of a fan, oval, or arc.
  5. The central part of the composition is flowers. Their height should be 1.5–2 times the height of the vase.
  6. Apply blue paint to the location chosen for the vase, and then for the flowers - ultramarine, light and dark purple, hot pink, white.
  7. Apply a damp sheet, smooth, remove. Please note that if you remove the sheet from bottom to top, paint smudges will be directed upward; if you remove the sheet from top to bottom, paint smudges will be directed downwards. This determines how your flowers will look.

All that remains is to finally decorate the vase, add a few green leaves, and come up with a name for the still life.

Monotype as a school of decor teaches children to create a composition, line up an image on a sheet of paper, use brushes and paints, develop coordination, develop patience and accuracy in work. Nowadays, “Magic Palms” clubs are organized in most children’s institutions; they are designed to arouse children’s interest in visual arts.

Let's start practicing

The advantage of monotype is that absolutely everyone can do it. To learn how to draw in this technique, you do not need to have an artistic education or a rich imagination; you just need to stock up on time and some tools, such as:

  1. Base: To start, you can use thick paper or cardboard. The main thing is that the surface is not saturated with paints. Glass, metal plates, and plastic surfaces are suitable as a base.
  2. Paints: It is best to use acrylic paints, because... they are distinguished by bright colors and dense texture, the images are more saturated and interesting, gouache is also suitable.
  3. Drawing supplies: usually paint is applied with brushes and a roller, and for drawing details, cotton swabs, tubes, toothpicks, pencils, in a word, anything that has a pointed end is suitable.
  4. Additional materials: to create more original images, you can use fabric as a base, and to add texture to the design - any available materials, twigs, leaves, etc.

One of the main principles of monotype is specularity. The drawing is obtained by imprinting paint from the base onto another surface or, in the simplest way, from one half of the paper to the other. Another important point - do not overdo it with the amount of paint, otherwise the drawing will resemble blots.

Monotype is a technique that allows you to create a unique print. It will not be possible to replicate a drawing: only one print can clearly convey the image. Despite its simplicity in execution, you should start with simple images and drawing techniques. There are several monotype techniques that you can easily handle:

  1. Subject monotype : using this technique, you can draw any object by symmetrically transferring an image from one half of a sheet of paper to the other. It's very simple: first we bend a sheet of paper in half, unfold it and draw on one side, for example, a tree trunk. Next, fold the paper in half again: the design is imprinted on the blank side of the sheet. This way you can finish drawing the leaves on the tree, the sky, the background, etc.
  1. Monotype “Butterfly” : on one part of a sheet of paper we draw colored spots, the outline resembling the wings of butterflies. We print the colored part of the sheet on the blank half. The result is a bright outline of the butterfly; the contours of the wings, patterns and antennae can be completed with a pencil.

  1. Landscape monotype : on one side of a sheet of paper we draw a landscape and print the drawing on the opposite side of the sheet. The resulting picture can be completed and made clearer and more organic. Look how beautiful the monotype on the theme “Spring” looks:
  1. Monotype “Flowers” : paint over a sheet of paper with white ink, draw stripes of pastel colors on top, and then use a wide brush to shade the colored lines with white paint. Make a vase of flowers the central figure of the image. You can choose shades according to your taste. Once the image is completely applied, wet another sheet of paper and press firmly onto the design. You will get a picture with original streaks [L. Savchuk, 2018].

You can execute this monotype using the previously described methods, by depicting part of the design on one side of the paper and simply printing it on the other.

Even a child can handle such techniques, but despite the simplicity of the process, both adults and children will enjoy creating an image. The main thing is to make prints before the paint dries.

If you are ready to experiment, in addition to the above-mentioned materials, use glass, rollers, and plastic. Apply paint to the glass with a roller or brush. If you want an interesting texture, use hard brushes. You can remove excess paint with a napkin and complete the missing details. Then, while the paint is still wet, cover the glass with a sheet of paper and go over it thoroughly with a roller. A few minutes of creative flight and the picture is ready.

There are many video tutorials and master classes that will help you quickly master this drawing technique. Look at this one for example :

If you have long wanted to learn how to draw, but until now you thought that only the gifted could do this activity, we advise you to take our online course “Drawing”, where you will learn how to create your own works of art and forever cast aside all doubts about your creative abilities. We recommend!

Drawing using the monotype method in kindergarten

Important! When using monotypic drawing, children produce drawings, each of which is unique.

These lessons can be included in the educational plan or organized as a circle.

You can start classes in kindergarten using the monotype drawing technique as early as the second junior group. At this age, children are asked to depict simple and well-known objects. Here are a few such examples:

  • air balloons;
  • cubes;
  • fish;
  • checkboxes.

Usually kids are asked to use a sheet of paper folded in half. First, make the design on one side, then fold it in half. The drawn image is printed on the other side.

On a note! Sometimes the design is applied so that it touches the fold line. After folding the page, a symmetrical image is obtained.

If it is difficult for a child to make a drawing, you can prepare a template for this.

Bouquet of flowers

At an older age, children are asked to draw more complex drawings. For creativity, watercolors or gouache are used. The first of them should not be diluted too much. In some preschool educational institutions, drawing classes are conducted using acrylic paints. However, in this case, you need to take into account that they dry quickly and cannot be washed off if you want to correct the drawing.

How to teach your child to use a pencil or pen correctly

To conduct classes in kindergarten on creating images, you can use the following materials:

  • sheets of thick paper or thick glossy paper;
  • when teaching preschool children, you can use film;
  • A plastic board is suitable for drawing;
  • glass;
  • You can use tiles.

Other options for performing the work are also possible.

Summarize

Monotype is one of the oldest forms of art, which has greatly transformed in our time and has found its application not only in creative fields, but also in psychology. This is a unique method of drawing that does not have any restrictions.

You can use all possible materials: paper, plastic, glass, metal and any available means; The main thing to remember is that speed and mood are important in this matter.

Monotype is compared to meditation, and it is not for nothing that this technique is widely used in art therapy. To master this type of creativity, no special preparation is required, and each of you will probably have the materials necessary for drawing at home.

This activity will be exciting for both adults and children, so don’t deny yourself the pleasure of plunging into the world of creativity. And, if you have long wanted to try yourself as an artist, we recommend starting with monotype, because it is fast, simple and very exciting.

We wish you creative inspiration!

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