To continue on from my post about exploring colours using art activities, I thought I write this week about books that might provide useful support to such exploration.
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There's a host of picture books that feature colour. There are the obvious ones like (affiliate link)Mouse Paint which I'd used during my lesson on colour mixing and (affiliate link) Little Blue and Little Yellowwhere children can see the new colours emerge as part of the story line (there's a claymation Little Blue Little Yellow video too which is rather good).
There are books that include colourful language (the right sort that is!), books that encourage children to explore colour and experiment with it, books that order colour and books that use colour to help support the story.
Rainbow books
Good books for exploring the full colour spectrum include (affiliate link) Planting a Rainbow by Lois Ehlert. I love her (affiliate link) Eating the Alphabet book too. Planting a Rainbow is also great one for getting kids outside and involved in planning a garden although in a hot Australian climate not all of these plants are available to us, it still provides a useful prompt but it is one where the rainbow only has six colours.
If like me, you prefer rainbows with seven colours, (affiliate link)Duckie's Rainbow is one that includes all seven. Our copy was given to my eldest child by her grandparents not long after she was born. It's a story of a duck making it's way home before the rain. It's graduated pages make it a good one for younger children particularly.
Another book that features a beautifully-made rainbow is my favourite alphabet books - A is for Artist(affiliate link). I won't write more about it here but you can visit my original post by clicking here.
Artful colour
Another colour-filled book we've had a long time and loved (so much we're on our third copy!) is the classic (affiliate link)Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? It doesn't have a rainbow-order like the previous books, just bright colourful illustrations by Eric Carle which match the simple, repetitive, predictable text of Bill Martin Jnr. A perfect read for young children. My eldest loved this one so much she used to make all the animal sounds as we'd read it. Her first birthday cake was the gold fish from this book for this reason.Like all of Eric Carle's books, his style of illustration just asking to be interpreted by young hands - a perfect invitation to finger paint and experiment with different tools.
The Dot(affiliate link) is one a useful story for those children who are not sure that they can create. It's the story of Vashti who thinks she can't draw until encouraged by her good humoured teacher then she produces art work of every colour before inspiring another child to create.
Press here(affiliate link) is such fun book. It's book full of instructions that you must follow before turning each page. You press the dots, you shake them and they change colour, grow bigger and multiply. It has some early maths concepts too. It is a book guaranteed to be read over and over again (and possibly fought over if you're reading to more than one child at a time).
Ten Black Dots(affiliate link) is a book I've used as an invitation to create. The idea comes straight from Mariah Bruehl's book Playful Learning(affiliate link). The book begins by asking 'what can you do with ten black dots?' And then you're given plenty of ideas '3 dots can make a snowman's face' or 'Five dots can make buttons on a coat'. Some blank paper, pencils and some black sticky dots are all you need for children to create their own picture book.
All these things are worked around the story of three mice who live in the same house as a family named the Bigleys. One day the family receive a postcard with a portrait painting by Robert Peake. The mice decide to borrow it for a while and so marks the start of some great exploration. They use a viewing frame parts and find patterns and colours. Then they recreate the work using line drawings followed by cutting shapes to make a collage and so it goes on. It is such a good book.
Inspiring colour
The Big Orange Splot(affiliate link) was one of my childhood favourites. It's about a man, Mr Plumbean, who lives on a neat street where all the houses where the same that is until a seagull flies over his house carrying a bright orange can of paint (no-one knows why) and drops it (no-one knows why). It's a book full of colour but also about being brave enough to be true to yourself.Colour for storytelling
Mr. Pine's Purple House(affiliate link) has a similar start to The Big Orange Splot but the illustrations are simpler in just black, white and purple. Mr Pine also lives on a street (Vine Street) where all the houses are the same until he decides to plant a tree but it looks so good all his neighbours do the same. He then plants a bush and all his neighbours do the same so he decides to paint his house. After a few hiccups and a cat and dog chase, the house is painted and his neighbours all think it looks great. But will they do the same? A great colour-themed book and a good one to predicting for younger children too.Grandpa Green(affiliate link) is another picture book that allows a single colour help tell the story. It follows the story of one boy from his childhood, through war to peace time and into his old age. It's a beautifully made story.
Wait! No Paint!(affiliate link) starts as a retelling of the three little pigs who leave home to build their houses of straw, sticks and bricks. All goes along traditionally until the illustrator runs out of red paint then the pigs turn green, become camouflaged before complaining that they've had enough and they want out! A funny story for older kids where colour is used again to add to the story line.
With all of these books, the common element is seeing language in print. Providing print rich environments is so important in early childhood as a means of improving and extending a child's vocabulary. Seeing these words written down in books is incredibly valuable. Some recent studies indicate that some older students struggle with written problems in maths simply because they are unfamiliar with seeing mathematical language in print. For me, colour is useful tool in developing early maths skills along with it's many other uses so immersing a child in books full of colour and colourful words is so very powerful.