Abstract Line & Color Art
(Kid-Friendly Step-by-Step Instructions)
Materials
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Thick white paper or drawing paper (9" x 12" or similar)
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Black marker (fine or medium tip, non-bleeding if possible)
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Coloring supplies:
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Markers or
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Crayons / colored pencils or
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Watercolor paints + brush + cup of water
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Pencil (optional for sketching first)
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Scrap paper or table covering (optional but helpful)
Step 1 – Introduce the Activity (1–3 minutes)
Explain to the kids:
“Today we’re going to make abstract art. That means it doesn’t have to look like anything real—no rules, just shapes and colors! We’ll draw a big scribbly line and then color in all the shapes it creates.”
Show them your finished example (like the ones in your photo) so they understand the goal.
Step 2 – Set Up
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Cover the table if needed.
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Give each child:
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1 sheet of thick white paper
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1 black marker
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Access to the coloring supplies
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Tip: Write their names lightly in pencil on the back before they start.
Step 3 – Draw the Abstract Lines
You can offer a few styles to choose from:
Option A: Scribble Loops
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Start at one edge of the paper with the black marker.
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Make big looping lines across the page—curves, swirls, curves that cross over themselves.
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Try to crisscross the line so it creates different “sections” (spaces) on the page.
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Stop when there are 8–15 shapes of different sizes.
Option B: Starburst Lines (like your bottom picture)
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Draw one line from near the middle out to the edge.
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Add more straight or slightly curved lines, all crossing in the middle like a star.
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Keep going until you have lots of triangles and odd shapes from the lines crossing.
Option C: Petal / Blob Lines (like your top right picture)
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Draw a small scribble or dot near the center.
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From that central point, draw long, teardrop-shaped “petals” going out in all directions.
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Let some overlap, cross, or touch each other so more shapes are created.
Reminders for kids:
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“No erasers needed—there are no mistakes in abstract art.”
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“Try to keep your marker moving; don’t worry about it being perfect.”
Step 4 – Outline & Check Shapes
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Have kids pause and look at their paper.
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Ask: “Can you see all the different little spaces your lines created?”
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If any spaces are too tiny, they can:
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Thicken the line a bit
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Combine two shapes by adding another connecting line
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This helps make coloring easier later.
Step 5 – Choose a Color Plan
Give kids a simple choice:
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Option 1: Rainbow Chaos – “Use as many colors as you like! Just try not to put the same color side-by-side.”
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Option 2: Cool/Warm – “Pick 3–4 colors that go together—like warm colors (red, orange, yellow) or cool colors (blue, green, purple).”
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Option 3: Pattern Play – “Choose 2–3 colors and repeat them in a pattern all over.”
You can quickly model:
“I’m going to use pink, yellow, and teal and repeat them.”
Step 6 – Color In the Shapes
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Color one shape at a time.
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Encourage slow, careful coloring to stay inside the black lines.
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Suggest not using black for the shapes so the outlines stay bold.
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Remind them to:
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Fill in all the white space in each section
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Leave a little space to rest their hand so they don’t smear (with markers or paint)
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For younger kids:
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You can lightly outline some shapes in colored pencil first to “invite” them to color those areas.
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Offer breaks: “Color five shapes, then wiggle it out.”
Step 7 – Add Details (Optional)
For older kids or a second session:
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Add tiny patterns inside a few shapes with a fine black pen:
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Dots, stripes, zigzags, spirals
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Add white highlights with a white gel pen or crayon (if you used markers or watercolors).
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Write initials and the date in a corner.
Step 8 – Dry & Flatten (If Using Paint)
If you used watercolor:
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Let the artwork dry flat on the table.
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If the paper curls, you can gently stack books on top once fully dry to flatten it.
Step 9 – “Gallery Walk” & Talk
Do a mini art show:
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Lay the finished pieces on the table or tape them to the wall.
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Invite kids to walk around and quietly look at each one.
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Ask simple questions:
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“What colors do you notice?”
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“Does any picture remind you of something—like a flower, a rocket, or a roller coaster?”
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“How did you feel while you were drawing your lines?”
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This builds language and confidence.
Step 10 – Frame & Display
To recreate the lifestyle look:
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Trim the edges of the paper if needed so they fit your frames.
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Place each artwork into a simple white frame (or print a photo of the art and frame the photo).
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Hang three in a row over a bed, desk, or play table.
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Tell the child, “This is your art gallery!”
Extensions & Variations
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Math Connection: Count how many shapes they created. Sort by big/small shapes or triangles vs. blobs.
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Feelings Art: “Choose colors that match how you feel today.”
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Family Project: Each family member makes one, then you hang them together as a series.
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Seasonal Sets:
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Fall colors (red/orange/yellow/brown)
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Spring colors (pastels)
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Winter colors (blues/silver/white)
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