Showing posts with label truffula trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label truffula trees. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Celebrating Seuss



Our painted truffula trees and construction paper cats-in-hats will greet our guest readers this week as we celebrate Dr. Seuss and our love of reading!

Click here for my blog post about our truffula trees, and click here for a cats-in-hats tutorial!

~Michaele

Saturday, February 25, 2017

Painting Truffula Trees

This week the Stars painted truffula trees so that our hallway bulletin boards will be decorated in time for our guest readers during Read Across America and our celebration of Dr. Seuss' birthay!

I preassembled the background and frame, using 9 X 12 sky blue construction paper, backed by 10 X 13 white and 11 X 14 black paper.


Students wrote their names in the lower right-hand corner and then chose their truffula tree color from orange, red, and yellow tempera paint.  They painted a circle onto the sky blue paper:


... and filled it in.  The brush strokes helped give the truffula tree top a fluffy, textural look:


Using a thin brush, students then added a black tree trunk, letting the brush move this way and that, stopping right before meeting the edge of the blue paper:


It looks like a balloon, doesn't it?


After letting the tree top and trunk dry...


... the Stars painted white stripes onto the trunk using a Sharpie paint marker:


... and dabbed some green grass at the base of the blue paper.



Once our bulletin board is finished, I'll share it here on the blog for you to see!

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It's almost time for the annual wearing-of-the-Sneetch-shirt!  Click here to be taken to the tutorial.

~Michaele

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Truffula Tree Tutorial

Students love to celebrate Dr. Seuss' birthday!  Listening to favorite stories by guest readers, making Cat in the Hat crafts, speaking in rhyme, and enjoying green eggs and ham and gummy "hats" as snacks are activities that typically fill the week as students nationwide remember Theodor Seuss Geisel.


(source here)

Truffula trees are a favorite decor element from The Lorax.  Long stalks/trunks with yellow and black stripes and colorful, fluffy tops can be found on many bulletin boards and classroom doors as well as decorating school programs and libraries.

I've found several tutorials online for making truffula trees, using items such as pool noodles or heating insulation, but I wanted to use items that had been donated to our class over the past few months.  Affordable, lightweight, and easy to store, these trees could also be happily adopted by students or families planning a Seuss themed birthday party.

You'll need the cardboard tubes from wrapping paper, double sided tape, black crepe paper rolls, yellow tape, tissue paper, pipe cleaners, a hole punch and scissors:


Put a piece of double-sided tape at the end of a cardboard tube:


Then add a strip of double-sided tape down the length of the tube (be careful, it sticks to everything):


Press the end of your crepe paper onto your first piece of tape:


Wrap the crepe paper around the tube, gently pulling it taut and making sure all of the cardboard surface is covered.  The long strip of double-sided tape will hold the crepe paper in place as you roll/wrap.  A word of caution: you'll likely end up with blue-ish black fingers thanks to the bleed-through of the crepe paper. 


When you've covered the tube, leave a bit of crepe paper at the end to tuck up inside:


Wrap yellow tape around the tube to create stripes:




You can use large butcher paper to create the tuft for the top of the tree or you can fold layers of tissue paper (I used 6 sheets per tuft) fan-style, tying a pipe cleaner around the middle, to make a more dimensional top:


I cut the edges:


... and carefully separated the layers:


To attach the tuft to the trunk, I punched two holes at one end of the tube and anchored the ends of the pipe cleaners through them:



Oh truffula tree, oh truffula tree, how lovely are thy tufts...


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Do you know of any other Seuss-inspired tutorials that readers would enjoy?  Link us up in the comments!

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