Look at a flower garden from the butterfly's perspective.
1.
Study how artists portray flowers and gardens, such as Georgia O'Keeffe's exaggerated scale and boldly colored floral shapes.
2.
Imagine what a butterfly sees when flying around a dense, magnificent garden or rain forest. Walk through a flower garden and take notes about what you see. Examine leaf and flower details with a magnifying glass. Draw flowers with details using Crayola® Colored Pencils.
3.
Cover a work surface with newspaper. Fill in any background areas using Crayola Washable Watercolors and Brushes.
4.
Complete the drawing with the pencil techniques that best convey a butterfly's perspective of the garden.
Bugs are flyers and crawlers, diggers and wigglers! Discover the biology of arthropods and then show insects at their be
Nature is a powerful force! Convey the drama of hurricanes, typhoons, cyclones, tornadoes, and other powerful storms in
What’s growing in your classroom? Record how a plant, animal, or you are changing. It’s a cinch with Crayola® Markers!
Create chains of charms to show symbols of the seasons.
Eating fruits and veggies is a healthy, green choice! These freggies (fruits and vegetables) have faces with silly grins
Sun science is the focus as you explore the Earth's rotation and revolution, the seasons, and night and day.
Add "bling" to any science project, such as this insect drawing, with new technology!
Explore the life cycle of butterflies with a fluttery mobile. How can you attract these beautiful, fragile creatures to