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Lesson 4: Self-Portrait – Oil Pastel Exploration

Overview

Students will experiment with mixing oil pastels to mix secondary colors, tints, and shades using different techniques.    

Grade Level

6-12

Media

Oil Pastel Drawing

Lessons In Unit

8

  • Unit & Lessons
  • Slide Deck
  • Teaching Guide
  • Teaching Tools

Materials and Tools

  • Oil Pastels 
  • Paper 

Objectives

Students will understand that:

  • Oil pastels can be mixed, smudged, and layered to create dynamic effects.  
  • A secondary color is made by mixing two primary colors.  
  • A tint is made by mixing white with any color.  
  • A shade is made by mixing black with any color.  

Students will be able to:

  • Mix, smudge, and layer oil pastels. 
  • Mix secondary colors.  
  • Mix tints of colors. 
  • Mix shades of colors.  

Activities

Oil Pastel Tips

It can be helpful to clean your oil pastels on a separate sheet of paper or paper towel before using it to mix a new color. 

It can also be helpful to use specific fingers when smudging. This will keep unwanted colors from mixing on your page. 

Engagement/Work Time 

Step 1: Draw three 3-5 shapes.  

Demonstrate: Fill your page by lightly drawing three overlapping shapes. 

Show students how to correct a mistakenly drawn line by smudging it into the paper and drawing over it.  

Step 2: Fill one shape with a primary color. 

Use a primary color to fill in a section of a shape with varying amounts of pressure.  

Ask: How does the color change when you press hard/light?

 Step 3: Smudge and layer by creating tints and shades.  

Mix a few tints and shades. Use a finger to show students the difference between smudging color with your finger vs. layering colors. Add black to a section of your shape to create a shade. 

Ask: How does the smudged tint look different from the layered shade? 

Step 4: Fill each shape with a primary color.  

Fill a few sections of your shapes with primary colors, adding white and black to create tints and shades. 

Step 5: Mix secondary colors.  

Demonstrate combining secondary colors to make primary colors.   

Ask: What color did I make when I mixed red and yellow together? Blue and red? Yellow and blue?

Step 6: Add Layers to mixed colors.  

Demonstrate: Show students how to make their mixed colors rich and opaque by adding layers. 

Ask: How did the color change by adding more layers of oil pastel?   

Step 7:  Finish your drawing.  

Encourage students to finish the rest of their drawing by continuing to mix primary and secondary colors, tints, and shades while smudging and layering oil pastel.  

Ask: What’s a new color you created? 
What colors did you combine to make it?  

Reflection Questions for Discussion

  • What is a new technique you practiced today?  
  • What is a new color you mixed today?  

Vocabulary

Primary Colors: red, yellow and blue. These colors cannot be made from other colors.  

Secondary Colors: green, purple and orange. These colors can be made by mixing pairs of the primary colors.  

Tint: A tint is any color mixed with white.  

Shade: A shade is any color mixed with black. 

Mix: Oil Pastels colors can be combined to create new colors.  

Smudge: Oil Pastels can be easily smeared and blended using your fingers. 

Layer: Oil Pastels can be layered by putting one color directly on top of another. 

Resources

Holly Coulis, Cat as Universe, Mars, 2023