Transcript Rubbings

Mrs. Tweedie
July 2010
Feel the top of your desk. How does it feel?
How do these things feel?
Texture
The way something feels is due
in part to its texture. Desks are
smooth, roads are rough,
cactuses are prickly, cats are
furry, and basketballs are
bumpy. Texture is caused by
the surface features on an
object-how far parts of the
surface extend up or down from
the surface, and how the
features are organized.
Coin Rubbings
This penny is a textured object. I can put it under
a piece of paper, hold it very still, and rub the
paper over the object with a pencil. Let’s see how
it works. (Demonstrate penny rubbing.)
Your Turn
Practice the technique using a pencil or a crayon
and a penny.
Materials
You will need:
Pennies
Paper
Crayons
Colored pencils
Time: 10 minutes
Discuss the Rubbing Technique
The technique that you used to reveal features on coins is
called rubbing. Rubbing often shows textures on an object
that are hard or impossible to see in any other way. What
you see is a pattern, or design, from the object being
rubbed. A pattern is not a texture but a representation, or
picture, of a texture.
Questions:
1. What features of the penny can you see
2.
3.
4.
5.
by rubbing?
Which tool, the crayon or the pencil, do
you think is better for making the
rubbing of the coin? Why?
How did you rub the coin? What
technique did you use?
How does your rubbing style make a
difference in the pattern that you make?
What happened to the pattern if the
coin moved as you were rubbing?
Make More Rubbings Activity
You will use the Rubbing Samples Sheet to collect
patterns of textured objects using rubbings.
Materials:
Rubbing Samples (No. 2-Student Sheet)
Set of objects
Time: 15 minutes
Teacher demonstrates how to place one of the circles
over a textured object and rub only inside the circle.
Discuss the Student Sheets
Which materials made the most interesting
rubbings?
What can you see now that was hard to see
when you looked at the material directly?
Rubbing is a good technique for recording
textures and patterns that are difficult to see.
Word Bank
technique-a way of doing something,
a method or procedure.
texture-the surface features of a
material or object. Texture can often
be felt, but fine texture is revealed
visually.
pattern-a design, how something is
arranged.
Summary
How can rubbings help you learn more
about an object’s surface?
(Teacher can read: Creative Solutions)
Leaf Rubbings
What might be revealed if we made
rubbings of leaves?
Parts of a Leaf
What is the function of each part?
Venation Patterns
The pattern that the veins make on the leaf
is called a venation pattern. There are three
basic patterns of leaf venation.
Venation Patterns
Parallel
Parallel leaves
have veins that
look like many
straight lines all
running in the
same direction
from the base to
the tip.
Venation Patterns
Palmate
Palmate leaves
have several main
veins that all start
from one point
near the base. The
veins resemble the
palm of the hand
with fingers
extending in
different
directions.
Venation Patterns
Pinnate
Pinnate leaves have one main vein with many
large veins that branch off sideways all along
the main vein. The veins look like a feather.
Leaf Rubbing Activity
Students will make a crayon or pencil rubbing of each
kind of leaf in the bag. Students will identify the type
of venation pattern of each leaf rubbed.
Materials:
 1 Bag of leaves
 Sheets of white paper (4)
 Crayons/ Colored Pencils
Venation Pattern Aid
Parallel
Palmate
Pinnate
Word Bank
blade-The flat part of the leaf.
veins-The raised lines on the
leaf.
venation pattern-The design
of the leaf veins.
Summary
How can the rubbing technique help us
learn more about leaves?
(Teacher can read: Looking at Leaves and Rubbings)
(Teacher can read: A Close Look at the World)
Shoe Rubbings Experiment
These are the shoes in my closet.
Shoe Rubbings Experiment
1. Croc
2. Tennis Shoe
3. High Heeled
Shoe
4. Slipper
5. Walking Boot
Can your team match the shoe with the
correct rubbing?
Rubbing Inventions
Can you come up with some other ways to use rubbings?
1. Invent a sorting/matching game.
2. Invent a way to color a map using rubbings.
3. Invent a way to find out something about
shoes.
4. Invent an art project using rubbings.
(Teacher can read: A Self-Made Inventor)