This is the story of my newest creation - a tree made by fingerpainting!
I know, I am not 5 anymore, but sometimes reverting to childhood can be both fun and therapeutic! So here we go...
Materials:
white canvas (whatever size or type you like)
burlap 
sticks from the yard
bark from a tree
hot glue/hot glue gun - with electrical outlet for power! :)
paints of your chosen colors
paper/styrofoam plate (or artist palette)
your fingers!
I started with a plain ol' blank white canvas (I really love canvas). I put something else I really love on it too - burlap.
Ok, technically mine is more like sackcloth (which I bought from a bolt,
 but you could probably reuse an old potato sack if you have one!)
I cut the burlap-sackcloth in a rectangle slightly smaller than my 
canvas so that some of the white would show around the edges. I then hot
 glued it down. Be sure to use plenty of hot glue to keep it on, but not
 so much that it weighs it down too much.
Once the burlap was glued down, I went a'huntin' outside. I first began 
looking only for sticks, but during my search I decided to use tree bark
 as the trunk of my tree (you know, since that's what God used and all).
 So I gathered bark and sticks.
After I selected my outdoor supplies, I placed them on top of the burlap
 to see how I wanted them arranged. Turns out, I placed them just like I
 wanted them on the first try! I placed my sticks where I wanted them to
 be for the branches of the tree (I had to
 break many of the sticks into smaller, more practically-sized pieces). I
 then glued all this down.
Now, you want to be careful on this step how much hot glue you use, 
because the bark and sticks can really weigh it down. So don't use too 
much glue (you don't really need a whole lot anyway).
After this was finished, it was time to get my hands dirty being a kid again!
I selected the colors that I wanted to use for my leaves. 
I wanted a fall tree, you know the way things will look here in a few
 weeks when the leaves really get to changing, but still with lots of 
green. So I selected 2 shades of green, 2 shades of yellow/gold, 2 
shades of red/maroon (although one bottle was veeery
 empty!), and orange.
[Insert pic]
I only purchased one of the green paints..I used what I already had for 
all the rest. Since my canvas is fairly small, it did not require a 
great deal of paint to accomplish my task.
I poured the greens out on my styrofoam plate and got to work! I dabbed 
each fingertip of my right hand into the paint, so that my leaves would 
be varying sizes. I only used my fingertips, but you could use your 
whole fingerprint if you like!
After I fingerpainted a good bit of green, I added in some other colors, like red and yellow.
Then I repeated the greens again, so that the green was the most 
prominent of all the colors (I wanted it to look like there were only 
traces of fall beginning).
I added the orange and other shades of yellow and red, then repeated again with my greens.
I continued this pattern (ok, it was more randomized than patterned) 
until I had very little burlap showing on the area where I wanted 
leaves. I let the leaves of the tree hang over the burlap and onto the 
canvas, one, because trees can become invasive, and
 two, because Nikki suggested it. :) Good teamwork!
I realized that the more "layers" I created by dabbing colors on top of 
other colors, the more full my tree appeared, which is what I really 
wanted.
I also put just a couple of leaves falling and a pile of leaves on the "ground" below my tree.
After awhile, my tree was complete! I was satisfied with its color and fullness.
I then signed Nikki's and my initials on the bottom right corner. I will
 admit my goof on this one...so, I like to sign my canvases in Sharpie, 
and this one was no different. I first tried signing directly onto the 
burlap, then quickly realized this was not
 legible. It kind of even looked bad. Oops! Luckily, I did it at the 
very bottom of the burlap, where there was no glue right on the edge. 
(Lucky me!)
So I took my scissors and cut off the very bottom of the burlap. This 
gave me a little more white space to sign our initials onto the canvas! 
Yay, it's finally complete!
Then of course, I let it dry.
Random tidbits & tips with this project:
-You can use paint for the trunk and branches if you don't like the use 
of nature but like the idea of the design. I first planned to do all 
paint then realized it would be cool to make it 3-dimensional and more 
fun..more like me!
-
You can make your tree be in whatever season you desire. 
Or, you could 
make one for every season! They could be interchanged throughout the 
year or placed together in a broken rectangle on your wall - whatever 
you like!
-You can make your tree as full or as naked as you like. As I said, 
layering the colors gives it a more full effect (as does repeating the 
same colors after using others in between). If you want to make a winter
 tree that is naked, you can use a lot fewer fingerprints!
-
This project can be really great for children, too! (You might want to 
help them with the hot glue gun, or use Mod Podge or some safer, colder 
adhesive.) 
Many kids would probably enjoy the nature hunt for sticks and
 bark, too!
-As you paint your leaves, be sure to get some paint on the sticks 
(branches) too. It adds a cool effect (who doesn't love polka-dotted 
sticks?!) and looks more realistic, because we all know leaves consume 
their branches!
Please share with us if you decide to make your own fingerpainting tree. We would love to see what you come up with!
Blessings and love,
Michelle