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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: alphabet, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 26 - 50 of 100
26. Letter Z

1 Comments on Letter Z, last added: 6/10/2012
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27. Letter X

1 Comments on Letter X, last added: 6/2/2012
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28. Letter W

1 Comments on Letter W, last added: 5/29/2012
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29. Letter V

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30. Letter U

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31. Letter S

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32. Letter Q

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33. Letter P

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34. Letter O

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35. Letter N

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36. Letter M

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37. Letter L

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38. Letter K

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39.

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40. Letter H

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41. Letter G

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42. Letter E

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43. The Writer’s Life with Children’s Author Nancy I. Sanders

Featured Book:
D is for Drinking Gourd: An African American Alphabet
Author: Nancy I. Sanders
Illustrator: E. B. Lewis
Publisher: Sleeping Bear Press
Book’s Website: www.DrinkingGourdAlphabet.wordpress.com



Mini Interview

Q. What is a typical writing day like for you?
A. Over the years, my writing schedule has reflected the seasons in my life. When I first started writing, I had a newborn and a two-year old. When I was busy caring for the boys during the day, I was constantly brainstorming ideas. When I put them down for their naps, I’d sit down to write.

Now I have the luxury of writing from the moment I get up until my husband, Jeff, comes home from teaching fourth grade in a public elementary school. Both our sons are grown and gone and live nearby. So I can be found writing some days from 6:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. It’s a writer’s dream come true! I keep pinching myself to make sure it’s real, but know as new phases and stages of life come by, new writing schedules will appear.

Every other week or so I have writing groups that meet in my home, so I’m usually writing four full days a week. Before breakfast, I work on little projects such as submitting my current book for state reading lists and awards. After breakfast, I work all morning on my current major project, which over the years has usually been a book deadline. After lunch, I work on short writing projects such as magazine articles, social networking, marketing, new book proposals, and writing for my church.

Q. Where do you write?
A. Now that our sons are grown, I have the luxury of writing all over the house! I remember those early years of writing on a card table on our porch or on a desk squeezed in the corner of our bedroom. I guess those memories help me appreciate all the space I can write in today!

In our office, there are three desks. Two of them are my writing desks. One desk is where my desktop is. The other desk is where my laptop is. Each desk has research books, file folders, and notes on a major writing project I’m currently working on.

I split half my computer time between my desktop and my laptop. Alternating between the two helps keep my eyestrain and wrist strain to a minimum. Also, I carry my laptop out to my couch/recliner where I can type with our two writing buddies, our kittens Sandman and Pitterpat, napping next to me. A

22 Comments on The Writer’s Life with Children’s Author Nancy I. Sanders, last added: 3/14/2012
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44. January Mosaic and A New Photographic Focus


This year, my Project 365 has a new focus.

I'm going to collect photos of numbers (actual and representations) and letters. By the end of the year, I'll be able to make my own Alpha-Numeric picture book through the iPhoto store!

Top row:
0 (garden stepping stone)
0 (knot in wood)
0 (classroom sink strainer)
00 (rings around the moon)

Row two:
00 (condensed milk can)
00 (goofy glasses)
1 (hemlock cone)
2 (hemlock cones)

Row three:
3 (oak leaves on the oak that's growing in the geranium on my classroom windowsill -- formerly the geranium on my front porch!)
3 (hemlock cones -- one of my favorite pictures of all time -- love the light and the sky...)
4 (acorn split by squirrels)
4 (number on sign at the deaf school soccer field)

Row four:
5 (sweet gum leaf)
12 (bloggers + 1 big red dog)
A (fence along McConnell walking trails)
Avocado Mismatch (not really part of the ABC/123 project)

Row five:
S (vine along McConnell walking trails)
W (tree trunks along McConnell walking trails)
Winter (not really part of the ABC/123 project; along McConnell walking trails)
Y (rabbit track in the snow along McConnell walking trails)

6 Comments on January Mosaic and A New Photographic Focus, last added: 2/6/2012
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45. Fall Fun!


September has flown by and the leaves are beginning to change already to wonderful golds and oranges and reds. The fall wind wooshes past, blowing in a new season.

This is the perfect time for fun writing adventures. Try an simple alphabetic poem. Print the alphabet on your paper, one letter on each line. Now think of something "fallish" for each letter.

A is for acorns.
B is for birds flying north.
C is for colors--red, gold, and orange.
D is for daylight becoming less and less.

So you get the idea. If you can't make it through all the alphabet, that's okay. Do as many letters as you can. Or if you're working in a group, assign different letters to different people--or work as teams.

Next week is October already. This month is Children's Magazine Month. Magazines are jam-packed with stories and activities and cool art work. Go see what magazines your school or public library have. Usually you can check out old issues. Or find online children's magazines like Guardian Angel Kids, Highlights Kids, or Literature For Kids, where I'll have a new story--SPIDER IN DISGUISE--in the October issue.

Why not try to write your own story with a fall setting? Perhaps you can write a mystery, or a silly story, or an adventure. Take a piece of paper and start brainstorming ideas. Put your main character in the middle of the paper. Now draw 3 circles above and write 3 possible problems for your main character. Down below write 3 different settings. On each side, write in possible minor characters. Then pick out your favorite problem, setting, and characters. Mix them up and see what happens!

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46. Something Old, Something New

Here are two pieces that are already on the website, but represent a bit of a jump for me, creatively.

I'm recognizing that I work best when I give myself a few constraints. For my Alumni Sale paintings, I think, "What's a weird animal, and a fitting or fittingly unfitting thing they could do?" (Okay, sometimes it only makes sense to me, but it's a usefuly questions.) I was entirely thwarted by the advice to make a book dummy from a classic fairy tale (everyone will tell you to do that) but the idea of doing a nursery rhyme was really freeing. (More on that soon, I promise.)

Lately, my default parameter is "Why not make this an alphabet?" This isn't always an ideal approach, not just because I don't always want to do 26 of something. Plus, how many words start with X, really?*



I've managed two of these, anyway, the first being "A Bichon frise teaches Ballet to a Beaver, a Bunny, and a Baracuda."

I am ridiculously happy with this piece. I intentionally limited the palette (cerulean is the only blue) and I'm really happy with the vignette edges, among other things. This and the next piece are both on Fabriano watercolor paper, and I think I prefer it to my regular Arches.



"Peccaries Parade in Pompadours and Ponchos, Packing a Pineapple Pinata, Piggy bank, and the Parade Princess."

I'm less utterly charmed by this piece (not: cerulean blue isn't actually the answer to everything) but it was fun. I think the format, which is wildly inappropriate for my website, might mean that this works well as a repeat. We'll see.


Finally, an all new painting. I made this card for an entirely lovely wedding a couple weeks ago. I was really happy I had time to make this (and go to the wedding!), and when two separate speeches mentioned the couple's affinity for wacky cards, I was pretty relieved.



Inside, the card says, "You're going to build an incredible life together." Get it?

*By the way, I hate workarounds, especially in alphabets but also generally. When I was little I had a video that showed an alphabet of animal clips. When they got to X, why just showed an ox, and flipped the word horizontally. Even at age 5, I felt like that was a cop out.

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47. If Rocks Could Sing: A Discovered Alphabet

If Rocks Could Sing: A Discovered Alphabet. Leslie McGuirk. 2011. Random House. 48 pages. 

A is for Addition
B is for Bird
C is for Couch potato
D is for Dog
E is for Elephant

What a fun and creative book. Leslie McGuirk shares her unique rock collection with readers in If Rocks Could Sing. She spent years searching for rocks in the shapes of all 26 letters in the alphabet, along with other fun shapes to pair with them. My favorite letters? O is for Ouch!,  D is for Dog, and P is for Penguin.

Yes, this is an alphabet book, a concept book. But it is so much more than that. It's just fascinating to look at all the rocks, to learn how this project came together after years of work.

© 2011 Becky Laney of Young Readers

1 Comments on If Rocks Could Sing: A Discovered Alphabet, last added: 6/23/2011
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48. Introducing the Letter "Rito"


... from my Super Alphabet series... soon to be a kids alphabet book.

2 Comments on Introducing the Letter "Rito", last added: 5/8/2011
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49. Alpha Ornament


I'm working on doing all the alphabet like this one... so, one down and many more to go...

-Mike

1 Comments on Alpha Ornament, last added: 1/9/2011
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50. Welcome to My Neighborhood! A Barrio ABC

173

Welcome to My Neighborhood! A Barrio ABC by Quiara Alegria Hudes, illustrated by Shino Arihara

This alphabet book, from the author of the musical In the Heights, takes a gritty and realistic look at urban life that will be familiar to many children while exposing other children to a new setting.  Ava takes her friend on a tour of her neighborhood and many words in Spanish.  She starts with a hug for her abuela and passes through G for graffiti, M for los muralistas painting murals on the walls, V for vegetables in what used to be a vacant lot, and ends at Z Street where the cars zoom past.  Ava adds lots of small details to her alphabet tour that really show her enthusiasm for her neighborhood as well as giving the reader more details about her home.  This is a tour worth taking!

This book does not sugarcoat what you will see in an urban neighborhood with abandoned cars, graffiti, and a burned building.  But for children who see these things in their own neighborhoods, they will find a picture book that depicts their own world, something invaluable for a child.  The Spanish words add a great rhythm to the book and another layer of information.  Airhara’s illustrations use a lot of open space, emphasizing the stretches of blocks, the expanse of the city.  They are simple and have a pleasant mix of bright color and earth tones. 

A book that fills a need in children’s alphabet books for books set in urban locations, this will be welcomed on library shelves.  Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Reviewed from copy received from Arthur A. Levine Books.

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