Fabric Artist
Yinka Shonibare
Supplies
- Cardstock or heavy paper (for the figure)
- Scissors
- Glue stick or white glue
- Patterned fabric scraps, wrapping paper, napkins, or scrapbook paper
- Markers or crayons (for details)
- Optional: googly eyes, yarn for hair
Dollar store finds: wrapping paper, tissue paper, and paper napkins all have great patterns and work perfectly!
Steps
- Draw and cut out a simple human silhouette from cardstock. It can be any size, but about 8–10 inches tall works well. It doesn't need to be detailed, just a basic body shape.
- Look at the patterns you have and pick 2–4 that feel interesting together. They don't have to match, mixing is the point!
- Cut your patterned paper or fabric into clothing shapes. Whatever clothing items you want such as a shirt, pants, a skirt, a jacket, shoes. Glue them onto your figure like you're dressing them.
- Use markers to add a face, hands, and any extra details.
- Optional: Give your figure a name and decide: what are they doing? Where are they going? Write or tell a sentence about them.
- Encourage your learner to be bold with pattern mixing. The wilder the better, just like Shonibare!
- If fabric scraps are available, even small pieces from old clothing or pillowcases add great texture.
- There's no wrong way to dress the figure. Resist the urge to guide toward "matching."
Wind Sculpture, by Yinka Shonibare, Wilcox Place, London by PAUL FARMER, CC BY-SA 2.0 <