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How to Draw a Kindergarten Self Portrait Tutorial

Below you’ll find an easy step-by-step tutorial for how to make a Kindergarten Self Portrait project that makes a wonderful work of art. Some inexpensive supplies are used to help celebrate the amazing way that children draw!

Kindergarten Self Portraits on Canvas

Kindergarten self portraits have a built in charm, with their wobbly lines and all, so why not make a special display by applying them to a stretched canvas? You’ll have a special work of art that commemorates this time in their life, all ready to hang in a very a polished looking way.

This idea of applying drawings to a canvas was created years ago while I was still working in a public elementary school. There was a natural interest in making group projects for classrooms, not only to hang on their walls, but possibly to raise money for school fundraisers too.

Some chance materials on hand lead to experimenting with Sharpie drawings on DRY wax paper, which was thin but strong, and then kind of decoupaging them to a stretched canvas with watery white glue. The result was a drawing that kind of “hugged” the canvas as it dried, and ended up with the illusion that students drew right ON the canvas.

Why not just draw the kindergarten self portrait on the canvas?

If your brain is wondering, “well, why not just have students draw on the canvas?” then here are a few reasons why:
• You obviously can’t undo or erase permanent marker on canvas, and that wouldn’t work with adults, let along children.
• Even if you did draw on the canvas, the texture is pretty rough. Sharpies love a smooth surface and make MUCH brighter color they are on one.
• Drawing on the canvas would only let one student work at a time, instead of each letting each student make their own drawing, at their own desk.

If you are looking for a solution to make kindergarten self portraits that celebrate their charm, especially as seen in a classroom group, this project might be just what you need. The supplies are pretty inexpensive, aside from maybe the Sharpies, but once you do own them, all kinds of other projects are possible too!

For further inspiration, and to see how I used this combination of Sharpie drawing on canvas for years in all different kinds of ways, check out some other photos included below. Find out for yourself why it was my go to group project every year, for just about every 15 years I was there.

Making Canvas Art with Pre-K students

Pre-K art project Canvas made with the help of a step by step tutorial.

If your students are too young to draw faces yet – try having them draw something else instead. This canvas was done by a pre-K class (ages 4 and 5 I think?). They were asked to draw a flower and then add their name when they were done. I LOVE the scribbly-ness of this canvas!

Self Portrait Canvases on Display

Feeling ambitious? Get a large canvas and make a grade level composite. That’s what I did when I made this display for our local library. Each canvas represents a grade level. It takes some planning, but can make an amazing work of art when it’s all complete!

5th Grade Self Portrait Display

5th Grade Self Portrait Canvas, made with Sharpie Markers

This is taking the canvas idea an kind of putting it on steroids. Instead of doing a free sketch of themselves, 5th graders traced a photo of their faces onto the dry wax paper. It gave everyone an even chance of drawing something a little more realistic than they could have done on their own.

This canvas represents three fifth grade classes all combined into one. The flowers were used to be the dividers to separate them. Quite a labor of love, but the cool pop art look was so worth it!

Sample Kinder Self Portrait Directions

Kindergarten sample Self Portrait Canvas made with Sharpie markers and dry wax paper.

In order to share the process of how the canvas goes together, I made this scaled down version of just nine faces on a 8″x10″ canvas. The process is the same, only the sizes of the boxes are different.

The most important tip to share is that the paper needed must be DRY WAX paper. It’s not what you buy at the grocery store. It’s what restaurants put under food. It looks like wax paper, but is much thinner, which is important for it to cling to the canvas when you are decoupaging it on. I don’t think the brand matters, but the packaging must say DRY WAX PAPER. Fortunately, Amazon has many to choose from.

PLEASE NOTE: The application of the rectangles onto the canvas is, as you can see, pretty forgiving. Because of the casual drawings that you’ll have, a little overlap of the edges works fine too. That means that any drawings that were accidentally made a little too wide, or a little too narrow, can easily be adjusted to fill in the space. No perfect alignment of anything needed here! In fact, the more handmade this looks — the better!

Use the button below to download this PDF tutorial

A step by step tutorial for how to draw a Kindergarten Self Portrait project.

Materials for a Kindergarten Self Portrait

Directions to make a Kindergarten Self Portrait

More Sharpie and Canvas Art Ideas

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