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Bedroom Mural

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baseball mural

Using the overhead projector, that one-time staple of lecture halls, parents and kids can turn any traceable image into a mural. Simply project an easy-to-make transparency of an image onto the wall, trace it, then fill it in as though you're painting in a giant coloring book. The result is a professional-looking, inexpensive mural that can transform a blank wall into a truly unique focal point of a kid's room.

Tips
For straight lines (such as our baseball diamond), use masking or painter's tape as a paint guide.


Sources for clip art (uncopyrighted pictures):

Clip Art Online: Hundreds of Internet sites provide free and low-cost pictures. Two good places to start: www.barrysclip art.com and www.clipart.com.

Clip Art Books: Check your library or browse titles at store.doverpublications.com and search for "clip art," or go to Clippix.com and click on the "Clip Art Books" tab.

Clip Art Software: There are many CD-ROMS available, but you may already own software that contains clip art, such as Microsoft Word, or go to office.microsoft.com/clipart.

Prep Time: Weekend Project
What you need:
 Overhead projector (you can borrow or rent one)
Transparency film (available at office supply stores)
Fine-tip markers
Masking or painter's tape
Paints (interior latex and artists' acrylics)
Paintbrushes in various sizes for outlining, filling in, and detail work

Seasons: Year round
Materials: paints
Instructions:
1.Choose an image. We suggest sticking to fairly simple, two-dimensional pictures or designs that don't rely on elaborate shading or perspective. And the fewer colors the better. If your child has trouble selecting a favorite, check out the clip art sources at left (Daphne Jensen found her image on a CD-ROM of clip art). Any image that can be traced or printed onto transparency film will work.
2.Location, location, location. Decide where you want the mural. Do you want to incorporate architectural details? For instance, you might paint a jungle animal "sitting" on a radiator.
3.Make the transparency. There are three ways to transfer an image to transparency film: use a fine-tip marker to trace the picture onto the film, photocopy the picture onto the film, or use an ink-jet or laser printer to print a computer image onto the film. Decide which will work best for your image, then purchase transparency film (boxes of 25 sheets start at $4) at an office supply store. Note that different types are sold for tracing, photocopying, and various printers.
4.Project your picture. Borrow an overhead projector from a school or church or rent one from a rental shop. Experiment with the distance you project from and the size of the image on the transparency to get the mural dimensions you want. (For the mural Daphne made, the baseball diamond on the transparency was 5 inches tall, and we set the projector 10 feet from the wall to enlarge it to almost 4 feet tall.) Use a pencil to trace the outline of the projected image (including any shaded parts) onto the wall.
5.Select your paint. Interior latex paint, which comes in quarts, is best if you're painting a few colors and filling in relatively large areas. For detail work, use artists' acrylics, available in tubes and bottles at craft and art supply stores. You'll also need appropriately sized paintbrushes.
6.Paint like a pro. For a more realistic effect, paint the background before the foreground. Step back from your mural regularly to see how it looks from the distance it will be viewed from.

Variations
Bedroom mural variation You can use the same technique to create miniature works of art, like our unicorn, on a door panel or other small space. Adjust your transparency image--use a photocopier or a computer to reduce it if necessary--and distance from the wall to get the size you want. We used a 4-inch original and placed a projector 3 1/2 feet from the wall for a foot-tall mural. Print the Unicorn mural.



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Member Comments On...

Bedroom Mural

Princess_Peg
Princess_Peg says:
July 14, 2007

Love this idea. In fact, I loved it when we did our then 3-year-old's room. Now she's more of a PB Teen kind of girl, but the overhead is an amazing trick, to be sure! And instead of plain fine-tip markers, we used paint pens. I don't know if that makes any difference or not, but they sure lasted well, and the color was outstanding. I thought it would be awful to paint over, but when the time came, a couple of coats of KILZ did the job just great.

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