Golden Chinese Dragon

Why

Celebrate Chinese New Year, or explore the country's fascinating art and culture, with this colorful Golden Chinese Dragon drawing.

Steps

1. Look at drawings of several dragons from the Chinese culture. The dragon often appears in Chinese art and as a decoration on clothing, dishes, boats, and other items. Are the dragon expressions friendly or fierce? Are they breathing fire?

2. On red construction paper, use Crayola® Metallic Colored Pencils to outline your dragon. Include the long neck and expression you found on the Chinese dragons.

3. Use a gold colored pencil to color most of your dragon. Embellish the design with a variety of other metallic colors as well for scales, claws, and perhaps fire coming from its mouth.

4. Use Crayola Glitter Glue to finish decorating your Golden Dragon. Dry. It's ready for a Chinese New Year celebration-or to celebrate Chinese culture and history any day!

Safety Guidelines

Adult supervision is required for any arts & crafts project. Observe children closely and intervene as necessary to prevent potential safety problems and ensure appropriate use of arts and crafts materials. Some craft items, particularly beads and buttons, are potential choking hazards for young children. Avoid use of such small parts with children younger than 3 years. Craft items such as scissors, push pins and chenille sticks may have sharp points or edges. Avoid use of materials with sharp points by children younger than 4 years. Read all manufacturers' safety warnings before using arts and craft supplies.

Glitter Glue— WARNING: CHOKING HAZARD—Small parts. Not for children under 3 years. Not for use on skin.

Related Crafts

Crafts

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Supplies

crayola supplies
  • Metallic Colored Pencils
  • Glitter Glue
  • Construction Paper

Where & When

"My son made a huge Golden Dragon for extra credit in social studies. His teacher was impressed!"
Vicky T., mother of ages 9 and 11.

"Residents made golden dragons with Chinese characters on red doorway banners for Chinese New Year."
Hai K., retirement facility craft volunteer.


Interesting Info

Although the origin of the use of the dragon in Chinese art and culture is unknown, it predates written history. The next Year of the Dragon begins on January 23, 2012.