Don't forget to drag the png. into a Word Document an enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this adult coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.
Friday, March 14, 2025
The Gospel of Luke Mosaic Coloring Page
Don't forget to drag the png. into a Word Document an enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this adult coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.
Book Arts Glossary
This glossary is by no means complete. However, by the time I have finished with it, it should cover our topic quite nicely.
Aldine or Italian: Ornaments of solid face without any shading whatever, such as used by Aldus and other early Italian printers. The ornaments are of Arabic character. A style appropriate for early printed literature.
Alignment: A term used in typography for trueness to marginal, top or bottom lines and applied commonly to the even relation of initial letters or other decorations of the type page.
Anchor: In religious use it is the symbol of hope and is one of the great motifs used in devices.
Arabesque: is a form of artistic decoration consisting of "surface decorations based on rhythmic linear patterns of scrolling and interlacing foliage, tendrils" or plain lines, often combined with other elements.
Azured: Ornamentation outlined in gold and crossed with horizontal lines.
Bands: (1) The cord whereon the sheets of a volume are sewn. (2) The ridges on the back caused by the bands raising the leather. Head Band: A knitting of silk or thread worked in at the head and foot of the shelf back of the book.
Boards: A temporary binding with a cover made of boards and paper. Mill Boards: The boards that are attached to the book, giving stiffening to the cover.
Book of Hours: A Christian devotional book popular in the Middle Ages. It is the most common type of surviving medieval illuminated manuscript.
Bosses: Brass or other metal pieces attached to the covers of a book, for ornamentation or protection.
Burnish: The gloss produced by the application of the burnisher to the edges after coloring, marbling or gilding.
Codicology: The related study of physical aspects of manuscript codexes. It is often referred to as 'the archaeology of the book', concerning itself with the materials (parchment, sometimes referred to as membrane or vellum, paper, pigments, inks and so on), and techniques used to make books, including their binding.
Collating: Examining the signatures, after a volume has been folded and gathered, to ascertain if they be in correct sequence.
Dentelle: A style resembling lace work, finished with very finely cut tools.
Derome: This style has ornaments of a leafy character, with a more solid face, though lightly shaded by the graver and is best exemplified in borders. The ornaments are often styled Renaissance, being an entire change from the Gascon. Time, 18th century.
Doublé: When the inside of the cover is lined with leather, it is termed a double.
End Papers or Lining Papers: The papers, plain or fancy, placed at each end of the volume and pasted down upon the boards.
Etymology: is the study of the history of words, their origins, and how their form and meaning have changed over time. By extension, the term "the etymology of [a word]" means the origin of the particular word.
Éve: A framework of various geometrical-shaped compartments linked together by interlaced circles; the centers of the compartments are filled with small floral ornaments, and the irregular spaces surrounding them, with circular scrolls and branches of laurel and palm. An elaborate style used at the end of the 16th and beginning of the 17th century.
Fillet: A cylindrical tool used in finishing, upon which a line or lines are engraved.
Finishing: Comprises tooling, lettering, polishing, etc.
Flexible: A book sewn on raised bands, with the thread passed entirely around each band, allowing the book to open freely.
Fore edge: The front edge of the leaves.
Forwarding: Comprises all the operations between preparing and finishing, including the forming and trimming of the books, and the covering of the boards.
Gaufre Edges: Impressions made with the linisher's tools on the edges of the book after gilding.
Gloss: is a brief marginal notation of the meaning of a word or wording in a text. It may be in the language of the text, or in the reader's language if that is different.
Glossary: also known as a vocabulary, or clavis, is an alphabetical list of terms in a particular domain of knowledge with the definitions for those terms. Traditionally, a glossary appears at the end of a book and includes terms within that book that are either newly introduced, uncommon, or specialized.
Gouge: A finishing tool forming the segment of a circle.
Grolier: An interlaced framework of geometrical figures-circles, squares, and diamonds-with scrollwork running through it, the ornaments which are of Moresque character, generally azured in whole or part, sometimes in outline only. Parts of the design are often studded with gold dots. Time, first half of the 16th century.
Guards: Strips of paper inserted in the backs of books, upon which inserts are mounted, intended to prevent the books being uneven in thickness when filled.
Illuminated Manuscript: A manuscript in which the text is supplemented with such decoration as initials, borders (marginalia) and miniature illustrations. In the strictest definition of the term, an illuminated manuscript refers only to manuscripts decorated with gold or silver, but in both common usage and modern scholarship, the term refers to any decorated or illustrated manuscript from Western traditions.
Initial: In a written or published work, an initial or dropcap is a letter at the beginning of a word, a chapter, or a paragraph that is larger than the rest of the text. The word is derived from the Latin initialis, which means standing at the beginning. An initial often is several lines in height and in older books or manuscripts, sometimes ornately decorated. In illuminated manuscripts, initials with images inside them are known as Historiated Initials. They were an invention of the Insular art of the British Isles in the eighth century. Initials containing, typically, plant-form spirals with small figures of animals or humans that do not represent a specific person or scene are known as Inhabited Initials. Certain important initials, such as the B of Beatus vir... at the opening of Psalm 1 at the start of a vulgate Latin psalter, could occupy a whole page of a manuscript. These specific initials, in an illuminated manuscript, also were called Initiums.
Inlaying: (1) Extending "extra" illustrations by inserting them in leaves to correspond to the size of a book. (2) A style of Mosaic work made by the insertion of vari-colored leathers or other material on the cover or double.
Jansen: Without line or ornament either in blank or gold. It permits decoration on the inside of the cover, but demands absolute plainness on the outside, with the exception of lettering. It is only appropriate for crushed levant, being dependent for its beauty on the polished surface of the leather. It takes its name from the followers of Jansenius, Bishop of Ypres, who were advocates of plainness in worship.
Kettle-Stitch: A catch-stitch formed in sewing at the head and foot.
Lacing-In: Lacing the bands on which the hook is sewn through holes in the boards to attach them.
Le Gascon: The distinguishing features of this style is the dotted face of the ornaments instead of the continuous or solid line. In vogue the first half of the 17th century, immediately succeeding the period of Nicholas and Clovis Eve.
Limp: A cover without boards or other stiff materials, allowing the sides to be pliable.
Maioli: A style prior to and contemporary with the early (Italian) examples of the Grolier. Generally composed of a framework of shields or medallions, with a design of scrollwork flowing through it. Portions of the design are usually studded with gold dots. Ornaments are of Moresque character.
Manuscript: Any document written by hand or typewritten, as opposed to being mechanically printed or reproduced in some automated way. More recently it is understood to be an author's written, typed, or word-processed copy of a work, as distinguished from the print of the same. Before the arrival of printing, all documents and books were manuscripts. Manuscripts are not defined by their contents, which may combine writing with mathematical calculations, maps, explanatory figures or illustrations. Manuscripts may be in book form, scrolls or in codex format. Illuminated manuscripts are enriched with pictures, border decorations, elaborately embossed initial letters or full-page illustrations.
Marbling: A method of coloring the edges or end papers in various patterns, obtained by floating colors on a gum solution.
Marginalia: (or Apostil) are scribbles, comments and illuminations in the margins of a book.
Miniature: derived from the Latin minium, red lead, is a picture in an ancient or medieval illuminated manuscript; the simple decoration of the early codices having been miniated or delineated with that pigment. The generally small scale of the medieval pictures has led secondly to an etymological confusion of the term with minuteness and to its application to small paintings especially portrait miniatures, which did however grow from the same tradition and at least initially use similar techniques.
Mitred: Tooled lines meeting at a right angle without overrunning.
Morocco: A fine kind of grained leather prepared from goatskin. Levant Morocco: The skin of the monarch breed of goat; a large grained Morocco.
Mosaic Book Cover: A design inlaid with different colors. The cover may be of any shade, but the style is especially effective when the cover is of white vellum in imitation of illuminated manuscripts.
Overcasting: Oversewing the back edges of single leaves of weak sections; also called whip stitching or whipping.
Parchment: is a material made from processed animal skin and used, mainly in the past, for writing on. There are now styles of paper made to look like parchment and are most usually 'acid free.'
Palaeography: The study of historical handwritten scripts.
Pigment: used for coloring paint or ink in illuminated manuscripts. Most pigments used in the visual arts are dry colorants, usually ground into a fine powder. This powder is added to a binder (or vehicle), a relatively neutral or colorless material that suspends the pigment and gives the paint its adhesion. This binder could be water, oil, or eggs in the instances of those paints used by illuminators.
Pointillé: The dotted style of Le Gascon.
Preparing: Comprising all the preliminary operations up to "forwarding," including folding, gathering, collating, and sewing.
Psalter: a volume containing the Book of Psalms, often with other devotional material bound in as well, such as a liturgical calendar and litany of the Saints.
Register: When the printing on one side of a leaf falls exactly over that on the other it is said to "register."
Roger Payne: The ornaments of this style are easily identified, being free and flowing in stem and flower; whereas before Payne's time they had been stiff and formal. The honeysuckle is a customary ornament. The impressions of the tools are usually studded round with gold dots, whether used in borders, corners, or center pieces.
Rolls: Cylindrical ornamental tools used in finishing book covers.
Sawing-in: When grooves are made in the back with a saw to receive the bands.
Semis: A diaper design made up of the repetition of one or more small tools.
Signature: Each folded sheet or section of a book.
Squares: The portion of the covers projecting beyond the edges of the book.
Tall Copy: So called when the book has not been reduced in size by trimming, with the leaves entirely incut.
Tooling: Impressing the design or pattern in gold leaf, with finishing tools, by hand. Blind Tooling: The impression of finishing tools without gold leaf.
Vellum: is derived from the Latin word "vitulinum" meaning "made from calf", leading to Old French "vélin" ("calfskin"). The term often refers to a parchment made from calf skin, as opposed to that from other animals. It is prepared for writing or printing on, to produce single pages, scrolls, codices or books. The term is sometimes used with a more general meaning referring to finer-quality parchments made from a variety of animal skins. Modern "paper vellum" (vegetable vellum) is a quite different synthetic material, used for a variety of purposes, including plans, technical drawings, and blueprints.
Vernacular: or vernacular language is the native language or native dialect of a specific population, especially as distinguished from a literary, national or standard language, or a lingua franca used in the region or state inhabited by that population.
Vulgate: is a late fourth-century Latin translation of the Bible that became, during the 16th century, the Catholic Church's officially promulgated Latin version of the Bible.
Cross and Crown Mosaic Design
The threefold office (Latin: munus triplex) of Jesus Christ is a Christian doctrine based upon the teachings of the Old Testament of which Christians hold different views. It was described by Eusebius and more fully developed by John Calvin.
Don't forget to drag the png. into a Word Document an enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this adult coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.
A Scribe Writes Psalm 119:11
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The above cutis from the Poliphilo, Edit. Ald. 1499.Vol. I |
Thursday, March 13, 2025
Easter Booklet Craft for Spring Poems
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Teacher's samples of the book covers or card designs. |
To make these Easter gift cards or booklets you will need the following supplies: typing paper, home printer, pencil for tracing, white watercolor paper, a set of watercolors and a black permanent fine tipped pen for outlining the designs.
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- Print out the black and white template below, enlarging the patterns as much as possible on a white piece of typing paper.
- Cut out the designs carefully.
- Fold a piece of watercolor paper in half lengthwise and trace around each card or the one design of your own choosing. Make sure the folded edge of the paper is even with the vertical, left side of each card design.
- Cut out the design leaving the folded left half sides intact so that the flower cover opens and has both an identical front and back.
- Trace the inside features of each Spring flower by placing the white watercolor paper over the designs while holding the papers against a back-lit window or on top of a light box.
- Watercolor the flowers however you want to with either jewel tone colors or pastel hues.
- Insert extra pages inside the covers and staple these in place on the edge of the left hand fold.
- Copy a lovely Easter poem or two and a private message about the holiday or person you are remembering.
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Three different floral designs for the Easter project shown above include: daffodils and tulips. |
"God Is Love" heart shaped window craft
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"God is love" 1 John 4:8 |
To make a heart filled window cling, you will need the following supplies: tissue papers, black construction paper, a white crayon, a permanent ink marker, newsprint, white school glue, scissors, a home computer and paper for the printer.
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- Print out the pattern for the window "cling" decoration.
- Cut it out and then trace around all of it's parts on top of a piece of black construction paper using a white crayon so that the lines will show up.
- Cut out the window "tracery" carefully.
- Carefully cut large enough tissues to glue behind each opening so that these look like "stained glass.'
- If you like, you can repeat step 2 and then glue a second black pattern to the backside of the heart window to give it two finished sides.
- To add the verse, "God Is Love" place the finished project face up on top of a newsprint paper to protect the table surface. Then use a permanent black marker to write the scripture in the center.
- Tape the window cling to the Sunday School classroom window.
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Pattern for the heart shapes cut from black construction paper. |
Wednesday, March 12, 2025
How to make a little lamb using paper hearts...
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The sample lamb has determined features. I gave his ears a bit of pink color with a pencil as well... |
- Revelation 5:12
- John 1:29
- John 10:27-28
- John 10:11
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- To make a little paper lamb using heart shapes you will need to print out the template below.
- Cut out all of the shapes and trace around these on top of your paper of choice.
- I used plain white paper and then later drew in the features of the lamb shown here in the photo. However, you could choose to glue on additional cotton or use a decorative ivory on white scrap paper alternatively.
- Give the lamb some pasture to feed on using green colored papers and blue for the sky beyond.
More Little Lambs for Sunday School:
- Jesus Tenderly Watches His Flock
- Watching The Sheep -coloring page and Caring for a lost lamb...
- "I know my sheep..." coloring page - stained glass
- More lambs for children to watch . . .
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Pattern for the heart shaped lamb. |
Thursday, February 27, 2025
"Teach Me To Pray" Praying Hands Craft
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The Lord's Prayer in English pasted between the teacher's sample of praying hands. |
Jesus instructed his people to pray like this, "After this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen." Matthew 6:9-24 KJV
Take the time and effort to trace around each student's left and right hands to make their "praying hands" unique to this craft! They will be proud to show off his or her own hands to their family members afterwards.
Then print out The Lord's Prayer printables below in their own language. Cut out the printable in a neat rectangular shape and accordion fold this prayer. Paste each end to both the left and right inside paper palms of the hand cut-outs.
Parents or guardians can read and point to the prayer text as they recite it along with their child at night before bedtime. This practice teaches Bible memory work, word recognition, quality time spent together and most important how to pray to God respectfully.
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
A Coloring Sheet of Jesus Praying
Description of the Illustration: by August Gaber, Jesus prays to his Father in heaven, The female figure depicted off to the side is the ''bride of Christ'' she waits for Him with her lantern lighted and ready. Mary and Joseph look on near the wellspring of life. There is also a shepherd watching over his flock in the background.
Don't forget to drag the png. or jpg into a Word Document and enlarge the image as much as possible before printing it folks. If you have a question about this coloring page, just type into the comment box located directly below this post and I'll try to get back to you as soon as I can.
"The Old, Old Story" Silhouettes
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Both the cut-out black silhouette and the pastel painted background are assembled in this teacher's sample. The silhouette is stapled on top of the sunset scenery. |
If you have four siblings in a family or at least as many in a Sunday school, each child can pick one of the four templates to make in this Christmas series.
A teacher may assign a different template representing the Christmas story to different students if they prefer this kind of assignment instead.
Supply List:
- standard sized construction papers: one black and one white
- choose one of four templates below to print
- colored chalks or pastels
- inexpensive hair spray in can or a fixative for pastels may be used
- scissors
- white crayon or a white pencil or chalk to use when tracing around the stencils onto black construction paper
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Children long ago designed these silhouette pictures for their Sunday school classroom wall. Now you can make them too. |
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The wisemen were guided by a star to find the new King, a special King of kings. |
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Mary, Joseph, and the three kings visit Jesus later in the story. |
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Angels with instruments announce the Messiah's birth to the shepherds watching over their flocks in the fields. |
How to memorize the books of the Bible with craft sticks
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Each Popsicle stick is labeled with a book from the Bible. |
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Left, the recycled can is covered with yarn for a decorative feature. Right, see the wooden, labeled tongue depressors or Popsicle sticks in the can. |
Saturday, February 22, 2025
"Noah Leaves the Ark" mixed media collage
Noah's family rejoices once the have finally the ark and set their feet on dry land! To make a mixed media collage similar to this one, you will need all kinds of supplies: white tacky glue, foam core board, colorful foam sheets, embroidery floss, water color pens or paint, a home printer, and brown/tan paper to print on or draw on.
Step-by-Step Instructions:
- Cut a piece of foam core board to any size you wish to make your mixed media collage. Foam core board is very rigid and won't warp as easily as cardboard while working with glue.
- I chose to base this mixed media collage on an illustration by Dore. In our blog here there are many subjects to choose from. I chose to print the figures of Noah, his wife and children on a beige paper. Then I cut out the parts of that print to fit inside of the collage of the ark, pasting them down of a rigid, strong piece of foam core.
- Then I sketched the outlines of the larger elements of my design like: the ark, the swirling sands and sky and then the flow of the rainbow colored foam tiles.
- Glue in the embroidery floss for the sand and sky in a swirling pattern. I chose to contrast very bold colors: blue, red, orange, hot pink and yellow, as accents against the majority of the other elements like the ground, clothing of the people and ark, in a soft neutral color palette: tans, browns, beige etc...
- I cut the tiny mosaic tiles from craft foam as these were glued down in rows.
- Then after giving the floss and tiles plenty of time to dry, I used a brown pen to draw on the woodgraining of the ark and small window.
- Next, I applied a soft tan shading to the skin tones of Noah, wife, sons and daughters.
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Left, the contrast between textures is subtle but effective. Right, the tiny tiles continue the from the sky and down in front of the ark. |
Search our Genesis coloring sheet for more ideas relating to the flood story...