Feature graphic with the post title ‘How Can Families Enjoy Painting Together with Collaborative Art?’ and Episode 18 of Easy Collaborative Art in blue and grey on a white minimalist background

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 18: How Can Families Enjoy Painting Together with Collaborative Art?

Quick Takeaway

Family collaborative painting is a simple, fun way for parents and kids to connect creatively over time — adding to a shared artwork during holidays, family gatherings, or quiet weekends. Drawing on my experience facilitating over 60 community and school-based art projects with more than 2,000 participants, I share my easy Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework to help your family start, explore, and celebrate painting together with confidence.

🎧 Listen to ‘How Can Families Enjoy Painting Together with Collaborative Art?

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Episode 18 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share how families can enjoy painting together through Pattern Play Collaborative Art. You’ll discover how a shared artwork can become an ongoing creative activity, something you revisit during school holidays, family gatherings, or quiet weekends at home. I’ll walk you through three simple ideas to help everyone join in and watch your family’s creativity evolve over time.


Episode 18 Highlights

  • Make it easy and playful – start small, relax, and focus on fun, not perfection.
  • Explore together, layer by layer – build teamwork and depth as your artwork grows.
  • Add the bling – finish with accents, names, and a celebration of your collective creativity.

Episode Transcript – Episode 18: How Can Families Enjoy Painting Together with Collaborative Art?

A simple painting activity that you can revisit regularly during the school holidays, at family gatherings, or even on a Sunday afternoon before or after a family meal. That’s what Pattern Play Collaborative Art can be: an artwork that lives on your wall between sessions and evolves over time. It’s a creative reminder that art is a process. Sometimes it looks ‘meh,’ and that’s okay! Keep layering and playing, and soon it becomes something unique and beautiful.


Idea 1 – Make It Easy and Playful

Start simple and keep it fun. Choose a small shared canvas — about 30 centimetres square — and a limited colour scheme with three or four colours everyone loves. Begin with the Messy Playing stage, where the goal is simply to relax and enjoy painting side by side. Use large brushes and make marks together — dots, circles, spirals, arches, or random shapes — anything goes to cover the canvas in playful visual texture. My tip is to stick to either warm or cool colours for each layer, so when they inevitably mix, you don’t end up with a brown mess. This stage is all about enjoying the shared process of creativity, not about making it perfect — just have fun together and see what unfolds.

Idea 2 – Explore Together, Layer by Layer

Once your first layer dries, start adding the simple patterns from my Pattern Play resources in clusters of three. Then swap colours, add another three patterns. Vary the sizes – you might do three small and three large, or 3 varied sizes for each colour.  Watch what the other painters are doing. You might see something to outline, repeat or add to. This is your Exploring stage.
Switch to smaller brushes as the layers rise to create depth and visual sophistication, that’s one of my favourite Pattern Play tips! Encourage copying and overlapping, adapting simple patterns, so everyone can join in confidently. Overlapping and layering naturally create a sense of connection across the artwork, and in your family too. Then let it dry.


Idea 3 – Add the Bling

Now for the Bling! stage — time to bring it all together. Use paint pens to add fine lined patterns, outline (or inline) patterns already there, add new clusters of marks to make the artwork pop. Paint the edges with a neutral grey, sign your names on the back, and give your artwork a fun family title — something that makes you smile every time you see it. Hang it up and admire how each person’s style adds to the whole.
Collaborative art is really about celebrating what happens when everyone’s contribution comes together — and that’s something beautiful to share.


Recap of Highlights

  1. Make it easy and playful — keep it relaxed and fun.
  2. Explore together, layer by layer — build connection through shared creativity.
  3. Add the bling — celebrate your family’s collective art.

Encouragement

If you’ve ever wanted to paint as a family but weren’t sure how to start, try this! It doesn’t have to be fancy, just grab a canvas, a few paints, and begin. Let it evolve over time and enjoy watching it change.

Download my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art at PaintingAroundisFun.com to get step-by-step support for your first family collaborative painting.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art means creating side by side with three stages: Messy Playing to start with fun, Exploring to build layers, and Bling to add the sparkle. It’s beginner-friendly, and everyone can join in.


Podcast Home


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
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How-to guide for families using Pattern Play Collaborative Art

How do you create a family collaborative painting at home?

Painting together as a family is a fun, flexible way to connect creatively. It’s easy to set up, works for all ages, and can become a special tradition you return to during holidays or quiet weekends.

Here’s some tips for doing such a project, which you might follow:

Step 1 – Messy Playing

Start with a shared canvas in the middle of the table on an old sheet or party tablecloth. Have a splodge of paint in 3-4 paper cups with a brush in each, kept in a cup try to stop them falling over, or use a paper plate with a 2cm blob of each colour on it. Everyone adds marks or simple shapes – think dots, spirals, circles, and arches on the edges. Cover the artwork, have fun! You’re building a shared first layer. There’s no right or wrong, just playful exploration.

💡 Family Tip: If you’ve got a wide age range, let the little ones start first and then take turns adding marks and circles. “Do three circles in each colour” is always my first instruction, which is actually an invitation.


Step 2 – Exploring

Once the first layer is dry, introduce new patterns and a slightly smaller brush size. Think medium whereas the first layer was a 1 inch brush. Using progressively smaller brushes as the layers rise creates lovely depth and visual interest. Stick to three or four colours each layer from a colour family for easy harmony.

💡 Family Tip: This stage is where teamwork shines. Each layer you are building on what each other are doing, reacting to, being inspired by and encouraged to play around by what each of you is doing. As the person leading the activity, keep reinforcing that every mark has it’s place, and to look for something brand new each time. This is the stage you can repeat – over time, add new layers, hanging it up between stages as it’s a beautiful reminder of shared creativity to see daily.


Step 3 – Bling!

Add highlights using paint pens, do patterns, doodles, or add dot stickers and gem stickers to finish your artwork together. It’s a relaxing stage that unifies the artwork, and it’s a stage everyone really enjoys for it’s different energy, plus it’s a few markers on a tray and no brushes to wash!

💡 Family Tip: Paint the edges in a grey blend, sign your names on the back, give the artwork a name and hang the artwork back up for admiration!

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.

If you’re new here, you can also read more about how my collaborative art process works on the About page.


Family collaborative painting created for a charity art show, featuring layered patterns in mixed colours where each family member added their own bling layer using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process
A family of four created this collaborative painting for a charity art show, layering colours and patterns using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process.
Family collaborative painting featuring bright layered colours and patterns, created by four people each adding their own bling details in the final stage
A vibrant collaborative artwork made by four family members, each adding their unique bling layer to complete the painting using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process.
Collaborative family artwork with colourful layered patterns, created by four family members for a charity art show using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process
One of three artworks created by a family of four for a charity art show, using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach to explore colour and pattern.
Podcast feature graphic for Episode 17 of Easy Collaborative Art — “What Are 3 Success Strategies for Collaborative Art?”

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 17: What Are 3 Success Strategies for Collaborative Art? (+ a Bonus)

Quick Takeaway:

In this post on success strategies for art projects, you’ll discover three simple techniques (plus a bonus tip) that make collaborative art sessions easier, more inclusive, and creatively rewarding for groups of all ages. Drawing on my experience facilitating over 60 community and school-based projects with more than 2,000 participants, I share how my Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework helps teachers, facilitators, parents, and community project organisers to guide group art with confidence. You’ll also find a practical how-to guide for using these strategies in art therapy or mental health settings.

🎧 Listen to ‘What Are 3 Success Strategies for Collaborative Art?

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Episode 17 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share three success strategies that make collaborative art projects run smoothly, stay fun, and build creative confidence — plus a bonus tip to manage larger groups and participants with special needs.


Episode 17 Highlights

  • Start with underpainting to create an inviting, reassuring background.
  • Use the three stages – Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling – for structured freedom and variety.
  • Limit your colour scheme to three colours to simplify, guide, and inspire creativity.
  • BONUS: Use contact paper masks to protect areas or provide a fun reveal activity for novelty.

Episode Transcript – Episode 17: What Are 3 Success Strategies for Collaborative Art? (+ a Bonus)

Introduction:

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, where I share practical insights into Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I’m Charndra, and in episode 17, I’m talking about three success strategies that make collaborative art projects run smoothly, stay fun, and produce beautiful results — plus a bonus tip that helps manage any group size. A success strategy is a technique or process that helps your painters achieve an easy win, building both creative confidence and artistic bravery with the simplest of prompts. These strategies work again and again — even hesitant painters soon find themselves painting freely while chatting and enjoying the process.

Success Strategy #1 – Underpainting:

Start your project with a helpful background. Cover the stark white of the canvas with a bold or pale wash, or a cloud-like mix of two or three colours. Add simple visual prompts — like a circle, an arch, a spiral, or a line across the canvas — to give painters an inviting starting point. This reassures anyone feeling unsure and encourages them to dive right in.

Success Strategy #2 – Three Stages: Messy Playing, Exploring, Bling:

Using the three Pattern Play stages gives your project instant structure. Each stage introduces variety — different brush sizes, colours, and patterns — while keeping instructions simple and clear. This structured freedom allows painters to express themselves confidently and naturally builds a layered, visually interesting artwork.

Success Strategy #3 – Three Colours:

Limiting your colour scheme to just three colours might seem restrictive, but it actually simplifies the process. It’s not about teaching art; it’s about creating a relaxing, playful experience. Painters can mix the colours with white, blend them together, or add pearl paints for subtle shimmer. This helps everyone build skills, explore colour, and create variation without overthinking.

Bonus Tip – Masking Magic:

Use shaped contact paper masks to preserve glimpses of earlier layers. This is a great way to manage larger groups, or kids and participants with special needs, who might quickly cover a whole area with one colour. Peeling off the masks at the end creates a fun reveal and adds an extra layer of excitement to the project — a real lifesaver if you’ve experienced this before!

Recap of Highlights:

  1. Underpainting to create an inviting starting point.
  2. Using the three stages — Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling — for structured freedom.
  3. Limiting your colour scheme to three colours to simplify, guide, and inspire creativity.
    Bonus: Masking magic to preserve earlier layers and create a fun reveal.

Encouragement:

Collaborative art doesn’t have to be complicated. With a few simple strategies, anyone can enjoy creating together, build confidence, and see their unique patterns emerge. Try these strategies in your next project, and remember: it’s all about play, exploration, and fun!

Next, sign up for my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art to see these projects in action using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.

Outro:

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is my simple three-stage framework for creating art together — Messy Playing to loosen up, Exploring to layer playful patterns, and Bling for those fun finishing touches. I’m so glad you’re here discovering it with me.


Podcast Home


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.


Tips for Collaborative Art Projects for Art Therapy or Mental Health Groups

Imagine you’re running a group for people in an art therapy or mental health setting — perhaps a mix of individuals who are feeling anxious, uncertain, or out of touch with their creative side. Here’s a structure you could follow:

Collaborative art can gently support mindfulness, emotional expression, and group connection. It’s inclusive and beginner-friendly, helping participants feel safe and confident even if they haven’t painted in years.

One of the most powerful aspects is that no one’s work stands out on its own. Each person contributes marks, shapes, or colours that blend into a shared artwork, allowing participants to “hide” their individual painting within the collective creation. This removes the fear of judgment that can come from having personal art on display.

Over time, people start to relax and enjoy the process — copying marks they see, experimenting with colour, and realising that together, they’re creating something unique and beautiful. This shared creative experience helps build confidence, connection, and a sense of belonging within the group. That sense of belonging can then grow beyond the sessions themselves, encouraging people to explore creative hobbies, join community art activities, or even continue painting on their own for enjoyment and self-expression.

Step 1 – Messy Playing 

Invite participants to make broad, expressive marks on a shared canvas or set of canvases placed together as one. Limit the colour palette to two or three harmonious colours to reduce overwhelm and encourage flow.

Step 2 – Exploring 

Encourage layering simple shapes, common symbols, or easy patterns. Repetition and variation in size build rhythm and cohesion. Pattern Play prompts can provide gentle guidance.

Step 3 – Bling! 

Add final touches — think decorative embellishments by doodling using paint pens. This stage is calming and gives a sense of accomplishment. Painters mindfully add patterns and decorate the lines and shapes, chatting companionably and feeling pride at their creativity.

 Therapist tip: Using three brushes, three colours, and three stages provides structure, making it easier to guide participants while keeping the experience open and creative.

Why This Works

This simple framework makes collaborative art projects easy to run in community groups. It gives structure without stifling creativity, so every child can feel included. Best of all, it turns artmaking into a shared experience of play and connection.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


Child adding details with paint pens on a collaborative artwork using contact paper masks — an example of success strategies for art projects.
Using contact paper masks helps manage group art sessions and creates fun reveals — a simple success strategy for collaborative art.
Underpainting example using the Serenity colour scheme with visual prompts of a spiral, arch, and circle scratched in sgraffito — success strategies art projects.
An underpainting with simple visual prompts helps painters start easily and confidently — one of three key success strategies for collaborative art.
Limited colour scheme example — the Forest colour scheme of blue, green, and purple in the Ethereal Forest Pattern Play group artwork.
Using a limited colour scheme, like the calming blue, green, and purple of Forest, simplifies and unifies collaborative artworks.
Easy Collaborative Art Podcast Episode 16 on how to create collaborative art murals

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 16: How to Create Collaborative Art Murals?

Quick Takeaway

In this episode on how to create collaborative art murals, I share how to scale a small-group painting process into an inclusive wall project using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. With over 60 community and school-based projects involving more than 2,000 participants, I’ve found that murals can stay playful, spontaneous, and beginner-friendly — while building confidence, creativity, and connection in any group. You can do this with your group too! At the end you’ll see a simple example of how to implement the process in a school setting, like in the images on this post.

🎧 Listen to ‘How to Create Collaborative Art Murals?

Listen on Spotify

 Prefer another app? Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your podcast player.


Episode 16 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share how to create collaborative art murals — expanding the same inclusive, Pattern Play process you can use on a canvas to a mural scale. You’ll discover how preparation builds confidence, how the three Pattern Play stages translate beautifully to large walls, and how spontaneity and structure can work together to make inclusive mural projects shine.


Episode 16 Highlights

  • How preparation and tinted primer set the stage for comfort and ownership.
  • How to scale up the Pattern Play process — Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling.
  • How to keep your mural projects spontaneous, inclusive, and fun.

Episode Transcript – Episode 16: How to Create Collaborative Art Murals?

Introduction

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, where I share three simple insights into Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I’m Charndra, and in Episode 16, we’re looking at how to create collaborative art murals — how to take your small-scale group art process and bring it to a wall! I’ll show you how the same playful, inclusive framework works beautifully on a larger scale.


Idea 1 – Preparation Sets the Stage

Before your group mural painting begins, prepare the wall — together. Start with a regular three-part primer in white to seal and ready the surface using large rollers and brushes. Then, apply a second coat using the primer tinted with your base colours. Use smaller rollers, house brushes, or sponges to add interesting visual textures.

This step helps everyone feel comfortable starting on a large shared surface. It transforms a blank wall into an inviting base for collaborative art murals, reducing intimidation and building early ownership among participants. They’re part of every step, understanding all aspects of creating a public mural — and that’s powerful learning!


Idea 2 – Pattern Play Scaled Up

The same three-stage Pattern Play mural process used on canvas works beautifully on a wall — just on a bigger scale!

  • Messy Playing: Begin with house brushes or rollers to make loose, overlapping marks — circles, arches, spirals — in groups of three. Add clusters of simple shapes like dots, dashes, and “cat’s ears” (that fun little V shape). Chalk prompts encourage big gestural shapes and free play as everyone paints across the wall.
  • Exploring: Add a few large chalk prompts again (just three to five) to guide painters to think big. Participants then layer new patterns, swap colours, and switch to smaller brushes to create depth and rhythm across the collaborative mural. We’d usually do at least two layers of ‘Exploring’ circles and patterns so we can go from medium to smaller brushes.
  • Bling: Finally, bring out the paint pens for fine decoration with the same patterns — think ornamentation and detail. These highlights draw viewers in to look closer and celebrate each contributor’s individuality. At the end, I like to add the name of the mural along an edge and hide all the painters’ first names ‘in plain sight’ somewhere within the mural. It’s a thrill for them to hunt and find their names later!

Idea 3 – Spontaneity Within Structure

Unlike mural projects that may have the painters colouring in sections of an artist’s design, Pattern Play murals stay spontaneous and accessible to any age or ability. Painters can move anywhere, responding to each other’s marks and collaborating naturally. It’s a different approach that might suit your group better.

It’s a different kind of collaboration — one where painters have real agency in the finished work. And that wonderful surprise of how it all turns out is part of the joy for me too!

The three-stage structure keeps the artwork cohesive but still freeform — ideal for inclusive mural projects where every participant, regardless of age or ability, can contribute confidently. The result: a fun, expressive collaborative art mural that reflects true group creativity.


Recap of Key Ideas

  1. Prepare your wall together — tinted primer sets the stage and builds early ownership.
  2. Scale up your Pattern Play process — same stages, bigger brushes, more movement.
  3. Keep it spontaneous within structure — freedom and flow within a cohesive framework.

Encouragement

Collaborative art murals don’t need to be complicated — they’re just the next step up from the joyful, layered process you already know. Try starting small with a shared wall panel, and you’ll be amazed how natural it feels to expand the Pattern Play process to mural scale.

If you’d like to see how I guide groups through these stages, sign up for my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art. It walks you through the steps with examples you can try at home with family or friends, with your community group, or in your classroom.


Outro

Every project I share is built around Pattern Play Collaborative Art — three playful steps: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling. It’s all about making marks, layering patterns, and finishing with fun details that bring a group artwork to life.

Podcast Home


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your free guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
You can unsubscribe anytime – get your free guide first!


Tips for Collaborative Art Projects for School Mural Projects

Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for running easy, school-based collaborative mural projects with classes or mixed-age groups.

Imagine you’re a teacher, school wellbeing leader, or social worker in a school guiding students to create a small-scale, beginner-friendly mural together. This process works beautifully for walls that are at or below ceiling height — perfect for school corridors, shared spaces, or outdoor play areas where no ladders or even steps are needed in the process because – let’s just not even risk a fall!


Preparation Stage: Underpainting

Begin by preparing your mural surface — this could be a primed school wall or large panels you paint indoors and install later. Use a three-part primer first to seal the surface, then add a second coat tinted with your base colours. Apply it using large rollers, brushes, or sponges to create soft texture and energy.

This tinted primer transforms the blank surface into an inviting base that reduces the fear of “making the first mark.” Involving students in this early stage helps them feel ownership and pride, setting the tone for a positive, inclusive mural project from the start. It helps them to relax into what can seem a scary experience – creating a public artwork!


Step 1: Messy Playing

Hand out large brushes or house brushes and encourage students to paint bold, overlapping marks — circles, arches, spirals, and clusters of simple shapes like dots or dashes. Encourage the kids to move from place to place, to work in pairs or triples in an area before moving to another area and continuing with someone else – or on their own.

Use a limited colour palette of three to four harmonious colours per layer for simplicity and visual unity. Offer chalk prompts of big circles, spirals or arches on the edges to encourage students to paint large and move around. This playful first layer helps everyone relax, explore movement, and build confidence while contributing equally to the collaborative art mural. Lots of the kids enjoy this layer the most due to the feeling of freedom they experience.


Step 2: Exploring

Once the first layer is full of colour and movement, it’s time to layer in patterns and embrace overlapping! You can use any of my Pattern Play Pages to spark ideas, or invite students to invent their own designs inspired by shapes they see emerging in the mural.

Encourage variation in size, rhythm, and layering — overlapping marks to create depth and visual richness. Keep reminding painters to think about the mural as a shared artwork, to step back and think about the overall balance from time to time. It’s also important to reinforce that people will be painting over your work – and to think of this as building on your ideas, adapting them, being inspired by your marks just as you are responding to theirs.

Facilitator tip: As the mural develops, offer progressively smaller brushes so students can refine details. This gradual shift from big to small tools creates depth and a sense of sophistication while keeping the process simple and beginner-friendly.


Step 3: Bling!

Time to add finishing touches! Students can use paint pens for decorative highlights with dots, dashes and other simple patterns on and around lines and shapes, adding outlines, and using the inspiration of the patterns that bring sparkle and personality to the mural. Encourage them to explore ornamentation and detail work inspired by the Pattern Play Collaborative Art stages.

This final layer ties the whole mural together and gives everyone a sense of completion and pride. Add the mural’s name along an edge and the first names of all participants, hidden subtly in the design — students love finding their names later!


This simple three-step process shows how teachers and facilitators can easily guide students to create collaborative art murals that are fun, inclusive, and visually rich. Whether it’s on a classroom wall or a shared school space, this beginner-friendly mural process builds teamwork, creativity, and confidence — turning every mural into a unique reflection of your school community.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


Suneden Sensory Garden Mural painted by 100 children and support staff using Pattern Play Collaborative Art
The Suneden Sensory Garden Mural, created by 100 children and support staff using colourful, layered Pattern Play Collaborative Art techniques.
Teenage girls painting the Find Your Courage mural using Pattern Play Collaborative Art
Teenage girls in action, painting the “Find Your Courage” mural through the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process.
Carer’s Garden Mural painted by parent carers with layered patterns using Pattern Play Collaborative Art
The Carer’s Garden Mural, painted by parent carers using layered patterns and multiple colours with the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process.
Easy Collaborative Art Podcast Episode 15 graphic with blue text on white background, titled “How to Teach Collaborative Art Skills to Beginners.”

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 15: How to Teach Collaborative Art Skills to Beginners?

Quick Takeaway

Learning how to teach collaborative art skills can be simple, fun, and beginner-friendly. Collaborative art is all about confidence, connection, and creativity, and in this post, you’ll discover practical ways to guide groups through the Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling stages of the Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. Drawing on 60+ community and school projects with over 2,000 participants, I’ll show you how to help any group create something unique and enjoyable together.

🎧 Listen to ‘How to Teach Collaborative Art Skills to Beginners?

Listen on Spotify

 Prefer another app? Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your podcast player.


Episode 15 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share how to teach collaborative art skills to beginners — whether you’re guiding children, adults, or running your first-ever group art project. You’ll learn three simple ideas that make any session flow easily, even if you’ve never taught art before. This framework helps both facilitators and painters feel supported, creative, and confident through every stage of the process.


Episode 15 Highlights

  • Start with Structure — why beginners feel more confident when there’s a clear, three-stage framework.
  • Scaffold for Success — how to prepare your space, tools, and prompts so everyone can join in easily.
  • Confidence Over Perfection — why teaching through experience builds courage and connection.

Episode Transcript – Episode 15: How to Teach Collaborative Art Skills to Beginners?

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, where I share three insights into Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I’m Charndra, and in Episode 15, I’m talking about how to teach collaborative art skills to beginners. You might be teaching kids, adults, or running your very first group art project – this process will work for you. I’ll go through three simple ideas that make your sessions flow easily, even if you’ve never taught art before. The secret is to add layers for the magic of depth and visual interest.


Idea 1 – Start with Structure

Collaborative art feels easiest when everyone knows what’s happening next. That’s why the Pattern Play framework is divided into three clear stages: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling.
This structure gives beginners — both painters and facilitators — a clear path to follow. When people know what step they’re in, they relax and enjoy the process instead of worrying about “doing it right.”
Think of it as a friendly map that makes the creative journey easier for everyone. I’ve been using this structure since 2017 and in all sorts of projects from artworks to murals to collages and mixed media, themed and abstract paintings with beginners to professional artists, toddlers to seniors, so I can reassure you it is adaptable.


Idea 2 – Scaffold for Success

Good facilitation isn’t about teaching; it’s about preparing. When you set up your environment, tools, and prompts so that everyone can succeed, the whole session runs smoothly.
Start with low-pressure fun in Messy Playing, introduce small challenges during Exploring, and finish with celebration and sparkle in Bling.
By scaffolding the experience this way, you make it inclusive and accessible — no art experience required. I’m a high school art teacher by trade, but I can also reassure you that you can do this without that background. As I keep saying – the magic is in the layering of patterns and the limits that support creativity and confidence!


Idea 3 – Confidence Over Perfection

Collaborative art isn’t about teaching people to “paint properly” — it’s about helping them feel brave enough to try.
Your role as facilitator is to guide, observe, and celebrate progress.
When participants see how their patterns connect with others, their confidence grows.
The goal isn’t a perfect painting — it’s that moment when someone says, “Oh, I can do this!” The cool thing is that the artworks look good – the layering of disparate or similar patterns gives a ‘magic eye’ feel from the visual sophistication – quite often someone will say it reminds them of a magic eye image. I know for sure that my camera tries to read it as a qrcode every single time. I’d love to work out how to actually build that into an artwork – perhaps as a stencil? I wonder…


Recap of Highlights:

  1. Start with structure — a simple three-stage framework keeps beginners confident and clear.
  2. Scaffold for success — prepare the environment so everyone can join in.
  3. Focus on confidence, not perfection — celebrate courage and connection over outcomes.

Encouragement

Remember, you don’t need to be an art teacher to guide a group through a creative experience. You just need a structure that helps everyone — including you — feel supported and successful. I’ve used my background and then experience with supporting special needs to build a framework that is all about success strategies so people have fun painting and are proud, even thrilled, at what they produce as a group!
Have a go using the Pattern Play stages in your next group art session and watch how their creative confidence spreads across the canvas.
Next, I invite you to sign up for my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art to see exactly how these stages work in real projects. You’ll find it linked in the show notes, or simply go to Painting Around is Fun.com and click on the orange button to enter your name and email.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is my simple three-stage framework for creating art together — Messy Playing to loosen up, Exploring to layer playful patterns, and Bling for those fun finishing touches.
I’m so glad you’re here discovering it with me.


Podcast Home


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.


How-to Guide for Creating Collaborative Art with Inclusive Groups – Beginner-friendly!

Tips for Collaborative Art Projects for Inclusive Groups

Collaborative art can be adapted for participants with diverse abilities, encouraging self-expression, inclusion, and shared creativity. Perfect for beginners, as adapting for accessibility benefits everyone.

Imagine you have a beginner group of mixed abilities, including people with special needs. You want to run some simple sessions doing collaborative art to get people together in a fun, creative and accessible way. This is the process you might follow:

Step 1 – Messy Playing 🎨

Use large brushes or tools and 2–3 harmonious colours to keep the process simple and accessible. Encourage broad, expressive marks. Use the Pattern Play Page and Cards in my Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art – it’s all you will need for your first group art work! The artwork called “Ethereal Forest” shown below was done with those patterns.

Step 2 – Exploring 🌀

Layer a variety of patterns, simple shapes, or clusters of marks in a slightly smaller brush than that used in the Messy Playing stage. Repetition and size variation help create structure while leaving room for easy creativity. Pattern Play prompts will guide participation.

Step 3 – Bling! ✨

Add finishing touches: highlights, stickers, or simple embellishments. This stage allows everyone to contribute in a meaningful way.

💡 Facilitator tip: Using three stages, three colours, and three brushes simplifies the process and supports inclusive participation for diverse abilities – beginners, experienced painters slot right in, and painters with special needs find it equally as easy to join in!

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


Ethereal Forest collaborative artwork in cool blues and greens, created by beginners learning collaborative art skills.
‘Ethereal Forest’ is a calming, cool-toned collaborative artwork—an ideal starting point for teaching beginners how to layer, share space, and build confidence in group art.
Striving for Excellence collaborative artwork in cool tones created by 120 junior primary students learning collaborative art.
Over 120 junior primary students, all new to collaborative art, worked together on this cool-toned painting to explore teamwork, pattern play, and shared creativity.
Growing Together collaborative artwork painted by beginners in cool greens, blues, and purples.
Created with beginners, ‘Growing Together’ celebrates inclusion and creativity. Each layer reflects teamwork, learning, and shared joy in the collaborative art process.
Easy Collaborative Art Podcast Episode 14 graphic with blue and grey text on a white background.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 14: What Are the Best Colour Schemes for Collaborative Art Projects?

🎧 Listen to ‘What Are the Best Colour Schemes for Collaborative Art Projects?

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Episode 14 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share how using limited colour schemes can make your collaborative art projects easier, more fun, and more visually striking. You’ll discover why keeping it simple with 3–4 colours helps prevent muddy results, reduces decision-making, and builds confidence for everyone painting together.


Episode 14 Highlights

  • Keep it simple with just 3–4 colours per session.
  • Add variety by creating small variations between layers.
  • Use pre-planned colour schemes to make painting easier and more cohesive.

Episode Transcript – Episode 14: What Are the Best Colour Schemes for Collaborative Art Projects?

Introduction
Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, where I share three insights into Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I’m Charndra, and in this episode, I’m talking about how using limited colour schemes can make your collaborative art projects easier, more fun, and visually striking – and why keeping it simple works so well.


Idea 1 – Keep it simple with 3–4 colours

Using just three colours per session makes it easy to manage paint and removes overwhelm for painters. A fourth can be a mix of the others with white, or just white alone to brighten a layer. Limited choices also help prevent muddy colours as we limit layers to either warm or cool colours.


Idea 2 – Create variations between the layers

You can create subtle changes between layers without overcomplicating your colour scheme. For example, you might tweak a warm scheme slightly by adding a tiny dash of red to some white and making pink. This adds interest while keeping each layer clear and vibrant. In a cool scheme, make a light blue or mix white, blue, and green to create an aqua.


Idea 3 – Pre-planned schemes save decision-making

With a pre-planned colour scheme you and your painters don’t have to overthink what to choose — the three options are there to pick from. My suggestions to start with are a either a simple cool colour scheme of blue, green and purple with white to add variations, or a warm colour scheme of red, yellow and orange, but to elevate it by using a bright blue underpainting and adding blue paint pens to the bling layer. In my guide called ‘7 Group Art Colour Schemes’ I have 7 simple colour schemes that I have used in many collaborative artworks and murals that are all based on 7 basic colours plus black and white for variations.


Recap

  1. Keep it simple with just 3–4 colours.
  2. Use small variations between layers to keep the painting interesting.
  3. Pre-plan colour schemes to make painting easy and visually harmonious.

Encouragement

Collaborative art doesn’t have to be complicated — using a limited palette is one of the simplest ways to help your group create something beautiful together. Try it in your next session and notice how much easier it is to focus on creativity rather than endless colour choices.

Next, I invite you to sign up for my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art to see projects like this in action using Pattern Play Collaborative Art. Simply add your email at Painting Around is Fun.com or via the link in the show notes. I’ll also send you encouragement and tips each Tuesday until you’re chomping at the bit to run a collaborative art session! (It’s thrilling and addictive.)

Pattern Play Collaborative Art means creating side by side, with three stages: Messy Playing to start with fun, Exploring to build layers, and Bling to add the sparkle. It’s beginner-friendly, and everyone can join in – any age, any ability level – it’s very adaptable.


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Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

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Tips for Collaborative Art Projects for Art Therapy or Mental Health Groups

Imagine you’re running a group for people in an art therapy or mental health setting — perhaps a mix of individuals who are feeling anxious, uncertain, or out of touch with their creative side. Here’s a structure you could follow:

Collaborative art can gently support mindfulness, emotional expression, and group connection. It’s inclusive and beginner-friendly, helping participants feel safe and confident even if they haven’t painted in years.

One of the most powerful aspects is that no one’s work stands out on its own. Each person contributes marks, shapes, or colours that blend into a shared artwork, allowing participants to “hide” their individual painting within the collective creation. This removes the fear of judgment that can come from having personal art on display.

Over time, people start to relax and enjoy the process — copying marks they see, experimenting with colour, and realising that together, they’re creating something unique and beautiful. This shared creative experience helps build confidence, connection, and a sense of belonging within the group. That sense of belonging can then grow beyond the sessions themselves, encouraging people to explore creative hobbies, join community art activities, or even continue painting on their own for enjoyment and self-expression.

Step 1 – Messy Playing 🎨

Invite participants to make broad, expressive marks on a shared canvas or set of canvases placed together as one. Limit the colour palette to two or three harmonious colours to reduce overwhelm and encourage flow.

Step 2 – Exploring 🌀

Encourage layering simple shapes, common symbols, or easy patterns. Repetition and variation in size build rhythm and cohesion. Pattern Play prompts can provide gentle guidance.

Step 3 – Bling! ✨

Add final touches — think decorative embellishments by doodling using paint pens. This stage is calming and gives a sense of accomplishment. Painters mindfully add patterns and decorate the lines and shapes, chatting companionably and feeling pride at their creativity.

💡 Therapist tip: Using three brushes, three colours, and three stages provides structure, making it easier to guide participants while keeping the experience open and creative.

Why This Works

This simple framework makes collaborative art projects easy to run in community groups. It gives structure without stifling creativity, so every child can feel included. Best of all, it turns artmaking into a shared experience of play and connection.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


Growing Together group artwork painted by 30 children using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process in cool forest colours.
Growing Together was created by 30 children using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process, exploring a cool forest colour palette.
Forest colour scheme swatch showing cool tones of blue, green, purple, and white for group painting projects.
A simple cool colour scheme swatch featuring blue, green, purple, and white — perfect for collaborative art projects.
Ethereal Forest group artwork painted by six people using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process with a cool, layered palette.
Ethereal Forest, painted by six people, is the signature artwork featured in the free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art.

Feature graphic for Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 13: What Are Closed Choices and Why Do They Empower Group Artists

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 13: What Are Closed Choices – and Why Do They Empower Group Artists?

Quick Takeaway

Closed choices in group art help teachers guide creativity without overwhelm, making group painting calmer, more inclusive, and more successful. In this post a transcript of the podcast, I share what closed choices are, why they work, and how I’ve used them across 60+ community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. I want to help you do the same with clear strategies and my helpful digital resources designed for real classrooms and real groups.

🎧 Listen to ‘What Are Closed Choices – and Why Do They Empower Group Artists?

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Episode 13 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share how closed choices can simplify collaborative art projects, empower group artists, and support skill development and creative confidence.


Episode 13 Highlights

  • What closed choices are and how they reduce overwhelm.
  • Why closed choices empower artists and support beginner-friendly skill development.
  • How to use closed choices with the “this or that” approach and the power of three.

Episode Transcript – Episode 13: What Are Closed Choices – and Why Do They Empower Group Artists?

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, where I share three insights into Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I’m Charndra, and in episode 13 I’m talking about closed choices — what they are, and why they help empower your group artists.

Idea 1 – What Are Closed Choices?
Closed choices are a facilitation strategy where you offer structured options — “this or that” — instead of unlimited freedom. They reduce overwhelm, make decision-making simpler, and keep your session flowing smoothly. By narrowing options, you give painters control without confusion — a safe entry point into creativity.

Idea 2 – Why They Empower Artists.
Closed choices help hesitant painters feel confident, and they’re especially useful for participants with special needs who might otherwise feel overwhelmed. For teachers and facilitators, they simplify the process of guiding a group. Remember: creativity loves constraints. Closed choices create the supportive structure that allows creativity to thrive.

They also create a single clear path for participants. This simplicity supports focus and skill development, which is especially helpful in beginner-friendly projects. By narrowing down the steps, painters can grow their creative confidence without being overloaded by too many decisions.

Idea 3 – How to Use Closed Choices?
The easiest way is the “this or that” approach – for example: red or yellow? dots or spirals? patterns in a cluster or from the edge? It’s as simple as that. For each stage of Pattern Play – Messy Play, Exploring, Bling – keep to a maximum of three choices. This “power of three” gives painters direction without shutting down freedom.

Recap

  1. Closed choices are structured “this or that” options that make sessions simpler.
  2. They empower artists by reducing overwhelm, helping creativity flourish, and supporting focus, skill development, and creative confidence.
  3. You can use them through prompts like red or yellow, dots or spirals, cluster or edge – with no more than three choices per stage.

Encouragement
Remember, collaborative art doesn’t have to be complicated. By limiting options, you actually make space for creativity to bloom. Experiment with closed choices in your next session and see how it changes the energy of your group, and how you feel it is so much easier to manage.

Every project I share is built around Pattern Play Collaborative Art with three steps: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling. It’s all about making marks, layering patterns, and finishing with fun details that bring a group artwork to life.


Podcast Home

FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.


Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for creating easy collaborative art for After-School Program Coordinators

After-school programs benefit from collaborative art as a structured yet playful activity for mixed-age student groups. Imagine you are going to paint with a group of kids in an after school program and want to do a group art project with them.

This is the process you might follow:

Step 1 – Messy Playing 

Invite children to make broad marks with larger brushes. Limit colours to 2–3 to create harmony and reduce decision fatigue. Paint on a roll of kraft paper, a fabric banner or a large shared canvas that you can later display on the wall. (This is the best option as you can revisit this same canvas over and over for a term, a semester or a whole year, saving on resources and maximising efficiency)

Step 2 – Exploring 

Encourage layering patterns and clusters, varying size and repetition to create a sense of flow. Pattern Play prompts provide ideas without restricting creativity. Start with the Pattern Play Page in the free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art, or the many ideas in the Pattern Play Starter Pack.

Step 3 – Bling! 

Add final touches such as doodles and patterns with paint pens and add clusters of dot or gem stickers to complete the artwork. Everyone leaves feeling proud of their contribution.

Coordinator tip: Using three brushes, three colours, and three stages makes the project easy to facilitate, efficient, and fun — ideal for managing busy groups of students, who can pop in and out of the activity over the session or over time.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


King Leo collaborative collage artwork using closed choices in art with red spirals and blue straight cuts
“King Leo” – a collage-based collaborative art project created by 30 primary school children using constraints of collage, red spirals, and straight blue cuts.
Growing Together collaborative painting in cool colours showing three stages of Pattern Play collaborative art
“Growing Together” – a cool-colour collaborative artwork painted in one day across three sessions using the Pattern Play process.
Fiery Circles collaborative artwork in warm colours with decorated circles painted across 20 canvases
“Fiery Circles” – a warm-colour collaborative project with decorated circles painted across 20 canvases, each child taking one home.
Easy Collaborative Art Episode 12 graphic with the title How Can You Boost Your Collaborative Art with Constraints? in bright blue on a white background.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 12: How Can You Boost Your Collaborative Art with Constraints?

Quick Takeaway

Collaborative art ideas with constraints can spark creativity and focus in any group project. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. In this post, you’ll discover practical ways to guide groups, explore creative limits, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.

🎧 Listen to ‘How Can You Boost Your Collaborative Art with Constraints?

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Episode 12 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share how simple boundaries can spark big creativity. You’ll hear why constraints make group art easier, how the “power of threes” works, and the benefits of using collaborative art ideas with constraints for kids, adults, teachers, and facilitators.


Episode 12 Highlights

  • Why “less is more” helps people start painting with confidence.
  • How the “power of threes” unlocks creativity without overwhelm.
  • The benefits of constraints for children, adults, teachers, and facilitators.

Episode Transcript – Episode 12: How Can You Boost Your Collaborative Art with Constraints?

Introduction
Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, where I share three insights into Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I’m Charndra, and in episode 12 I’m asking: how can you boost your collaborative art with constraints? In this episode, we’ll look at why creativity often thrives with a few gentle boundaries, and how these small structures can make group painting easier, more fun, and far more creative.

Idea 1 – Less is More
Too many choices can feel overwhelming. If you tell people to “do whatever you like,” they often don’t know where to begin. But when you offer a small, simple instruction, it gets them started right away.

One of my favourite examples is asking people to paint three circles. Just that one instruction leads to endless variations – blobs, suns, eggs, spirals, ripples, tiny dots. Circles can be big or small, neat or wobbly, flat or layered. Within this one simple constraint, people explore an incredible range of creative ideas.

Idea 2 – The Power of Threes
Constraints don’t limit creativity – they give it a framework. I often use the “power of threes” in group art. Three colours, three placements, three sizes. With that structure, people explore deeply instead of getting lost in endless possibilities.

Even a single tool can be used in multiple ways. A flat brush works flat for larger areas, on its edge for lines, and on its tip for details. And when using pattern cards, limiting choices to one page in three colours still creates enormous variety. These are all examples of collaborative art ideas with constraints that open up exploration.

Idea 3 – Benefits for Everyone
Constraints don’t just boost creativity; they also make the process rewarding for everyone.

For kids, constraints build creative confidence and make it easier to join in. For adults, they provide a safe, fun experience that can inspire them to try creative projects at home with their families. For teachers, constraints make collaborative exercises simple and accessible for all students, even those who might usually hang back. And for facilitators, constraints provide a clear, easy way to bring groups together and create something everyone feels proud of.

Recap

  1. Less is more – simple instructions help people start painting.
  2. The power of threes – small limits spark big creativity.
  3. Benefits for everyone – children, adults, teachers, and facilitators all gain more from the experience.

Encouragement
Next time you’re leading a group art activity, try starting with just one small constraint – three shapes, three colours, or one pattern. You’ll see how much easier it is for people to join in and how much more creative energy flows when freedom has a little structure. To explore this more, download my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art and see these ideas in action with Pattern Play Collaborative Art.

Outro
Every project I share is built around Pattern Play Collaborative Art with three steps: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling. It’s all about making marks, layering patterns, and finishing with fun details that bring a group artwork to life.


Podcast Home


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.


Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for running easy collaborative art projects for Church Sunday School Programs

Collaborative art is a fun and inclusive way to engage children in Sunday school or other church programs, encouraging teamwork, creativity, and reflection on group themes.

Step 1 – Messy Playing 🎨
Invite participants to freely add marks, patterns, or shapes to a shared canvas or large sheet of paper. Keep the palette to 2–3 harmonious colours for a visually unified result. This stage is about letting kids explore and enjoy making art together.

Step 2 – Exploring 🌀
Encourage layering patterns, shapes, or simple patterns related to the lesson or theme of the day. Repetition, size variation, and group prompts create flow and connection across the artwork.

Step 3 – Bling! ✨
Add finishing touches such as dots, highlights, or small stickers to tie the piece together. This stage is calming, fun, and gives each participant a sense of accomplishment.

💡 Facilitator tip: Using the Power of Three – three colours, three brushes, and three stages – simplifies planning, keeps everyone engaged, and ensures a cohesive final piece.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


Growing Together collaborative artwork in cool colours, painted by 30 children with a colour scheme constraint.
Thirty children painted this Growing Together artwork using a limited cool colour scheme, showing how colour constraints spark creativity in collaborative art.
Created by 16 people, the Self Advocacy artwork used warm colours and a simple three-stage process, showing how structure makes group art accessible.
Detail of the Together We Thrive mural, a layered collaborative artwork created with 100+ special needs students using process art techniques.
The Together We Thrive mural was built step by step with more than 100 students, showing how collaborative art ideas with constraints can guide a large group into creating something cohesive.
Easy Collaborative Art Podcast with Charndra – Episode 11: What are 3 Simple Tips for Collaborative Art Projects? Bold blue title with subtitle in grey below.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 11: What are 3 Simple Tips for Collaborative Art Projects?

Quick Takeaway

Tips for collaborative art projects don’t need to be complicated — this post shares three simple, practical ways to help groups create together with confidence. Drawing on my experience facilitating over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, you’ll learn how Pattern Play Collaborative Art makes group creativity clear, inclusive, and manageable. You’ll also find a full podcast transcript below, including a helpful “How to Start” guide that explains what collaborative art is and how to use it with a team or group of colleagues.

🎧 Listen to ‘What are 3 Simple Tips for Collaborative Art Projects?

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Episode 11 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share 3 simple tips for collaborative art projects inspired by the Power of Three. You’ll discover how threes create ease, structure, and freedom in group creativity — making your projects feel harmonious and fun. From choosing three colours to using three brushes and following three simple stages, you’ll see how this playful framework helps everyone feel confident and creative together.


Episode 11 Highlights

  • Lean on the Power of Three — it brings ease, control, and efficiency to collaborative art.
  • Use three colours — a simple palette keeps projects harmonious and beginner-friendly.
  • Put threes into action — three brushes, three stages, and natural layering build depth and fun.

Episode Transcript – Episode 11: What are 3 Simple Tips for Collaborative Art Projects?

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, where I share three insights into Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I’m Charndra, and in Episode 11 I’m asking: What are 3 Simple Tips for Collaborative Art Projects? Today we’ll explore the “Power of Three” and why it’s such a helpful guide when you’re creating art with others.

Idea 1 – Why Three Works

The first tip is to lean on the Power of Three.

Three shows up everywhere:

  • In design — the rule of thirds makes images balanced and appealing.
  • In stories — think Three Little Pigs or Goldilocks and the Three Bears.
  • In speech — Shakespeare’s “Friends, Romans, countrymen…” from Julius Caesar shows how threes stick in memory.

Three is the sweet spot — not too much, not too little.

In group art, threes bring:

  • Ease — three stages, three colours, three brush sizes.
  • Control — variety without overwhelm; swapping colours, patterns, or brushes keeps people engaged.
  • Efficiency — fewer choices mean less decision fatigue and more energy for playful experimenting.

Constraints spark creativity. By choosing three, you give everyone freedom within structure, and that’s where the magic happens.

Idea 2 – How to Use Three Colours

Keep your colour scheme simple: three colours, plus white if you like.

Three colours keep your artwork harmonious, no matter how many people are painting. It’s beginner-friendly — people can focus on creating, not overthinking choices.

Try three warm colours like red, orange, and pink for energy, or three cool colours like blue, green, and purple for calm. Same process, completely different mood.

Idea 3 – More Threes in Action

Use threes in your tools and process: three brushes — big, medium, small. Broad shapes first, medium strokes next, fine details last. This layering adds depth without confusion.

And of course, the three stages of Pattern Play Collaborative Art — Messy Play, Exploring, and Bling — are easy to remember, follow, and always fun.

Recap
So, 3 simple tips for collaborative art projects:

  1. Lean on the Power of Three for ease, control, and efficiency.
  2. Choose three colours to simplify choices and keep things harmonious.
  3. Use three brushes and three stages to build depth, structure, and fun.

Encouragement
Collaborative art is dynamic — even with the same people, each session feels unique as you vary patterns, respond to colours, and explore sequences.

This playful spontaneity happens within what may seem like boundaries — that’s where creativity thrives. The Power of Three is freeing. Give it a try and enjoy the surprises that emerge.

If you’d like to see these ideas in action, sign up for my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art. It walks you through a simple project you can try at home or with your group — yes, using the Power of Three!

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is my simple three-stage framework for creating art together — Messy Playing to loosen up, Exploring to layer playful patterns, and Bling for those fun finishing touches. I’m so glad you’re here discovering it with me.


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Tips for Collaborative Art Projects for Workplace & Team-Building Groups

Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide if you’re wondering what collaborative art is and how to use it with a team or group of colleagues.

Imagine you are a workplace team leader, HR coordinator, or facilitator wanting to guide a small group of employees through their very first collaborative art project (without losing your mind).

Here’s a simple process you might follow:

Collaborative art can be a fun, stress-free way to strengthen teamwork, spark creativity, and encourage connection in a workplace setting. Using the Power of Three makes it simple to run a project where everyone can participate confidently, no matter their experience level.

Here’s a straightforward 3-step process:

Step 1: Messy Playing 🎨

Start with freedom and fun. Provide medium or large brushes and a shared surface – a canvas, or large sheet of watercolour paper. Invite participants to make broad, expressive marks such as circles, spirals and arches from the edge with overlapping clusters of dots, dashes and wiggles.

👉 Keep the colour palette limited to three harmonious colours (plus white for variations) to make the results visually appealing while keeping decisions simple.

💡 Facilitator Tip: Emphasise play, not perfection. The goal is group creativity and engagement, not individual “correct” results.

Step 2: Exploring 🌀

Once the first layer is dry, introduce patterns and shapes that participants can repeat, layer, and vary in size. Encourage collaboration—marks can flow from edges, follow earlier shapes, or cluster in new areas.

💡 Facilitator Tip: Use three brush sizes—start with large for broad shapes, medium for intermediate strokes, and small for details – one brush size each stage. This creates natural depth without overwhelming participants.

Step 3: Bling! ✨

Add finishing touches using paint pens to decorate the painting, and small shiny bits in clusters like gem or dot stickers. These highlights give the artwork cohesion and a sense of completion.

💡 Facilitator Tip: This stage is mindful and relaxing. It’s a great way for team members to pause, reflect, and feel proud of the shared outcome.

Why the Power of Three Works

Using three colours, three brushes, and three stages simplifies decision-making, reduces overwhelm, and encourages playful experimentation. Teams can collaborate confidently, discover each other’s creativity, and enjoy the shared process without pressure.

Collaborative art in the workplace isn’t just about the final piece – it’s about building connection, communication, and energy among team members.

The Power of Three provides the structure that frees creativity and makes group art accessible and fun for everyone.


Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 10: How Do You Use Underpainting for Group Painting?

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 10: How Do You Use Underpainting for Group Painting?

Quick Takeaway

Underpainting for group painting is a simple way to help beginners feel confident, connected, and ready to start. In this post, you’ll hear a podcast conversation and then get practical tips for using underpainting with teens and adults, grounded in my Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. These ideas come from facilitating over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, so you can use them with real groups, not just in theory.

🎧Listen to ‘How Do You Use Underpainting for Group Painting?

Listen on Spotify

Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your podcast player.


Episode 10 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share the power of underpainting in collaborative art projects. You’ll discover how starting with a base layer removes the fear of a blank canvas, sparks confidence, and sets the tone for cooperative group painting. Practical tips include using colours from your scheme, creating playful textures, adding visual prompts, and building depth for a lively, engaging result.

Episode 10 Highlights

  • Why underpainting removes the fear of a blank canvas and encourages participation.
  • How to use colour, big brushes, and visual prompts to start a collaborative artwork.
  • How the first layer builds depth and sets a cooperative, confident tone for the group.

Transcript – Easy Collaborative Art Episode 10: How Do You Use Underpainting for Group Painting?

Introduction

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, where I share three insights each week into Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I’m Charndra, and in Episode 10 I’m talking about underpainting in collaborative art — and why it helps your group begin with confidence.

Idea 1: Why Underpainting Works

The blank white canvas can feel intimidating, but underpainting takes that pressure away. By adding a quick base coat, you remove the fear of making the first mark. Everyone is starting on colour instead of emptiness, and that creates instant harmony in the artwork. It also sets the tone for a cooperative project — the canvas already feels like a shared space.

Idea 2: How to Do It

Think of underpainting as the first step of Messy Playing. Choose a colour from your colour scheme — any colour works, and each one gives a different feel to the final artwork. Use a big brush and cover the canvas quickly. Brush in different directions, make swirls, or add bold textures. You can even choose two or three colours if you like, but one works perfectly.

Next, add a few visual prompts: maybe a big circle off-centre, an arch from the edge, or a spiral. You can paint these shapes in, or scratch them into the wet paint with the end of your brush — that’s called sgraffito. These marks give people something to respond to and model how to begin. It shows the canvas doesn’t need to be perfect. In fact, someone nearly always paints straight over one of those first lines — and that’s the invitation to join in.

Here’s the bonus: you’re also building depth. That first layer will peek through the layers on top, creating a lively, rich effect, or a glowing undertone depending on the colour chosen — without any extra effort.

Idea 3: What It Achieves

With underpainting, the project has already begun before anyone picks up a brush. Participants see a colourful, textured surface that feels approachable rather than intimidating. Those early marks act as visual prompts, lowering the barrier to entry and sparking confidence. Instead of hesitating, people dive in and start adding to what’s already there. That shared beginning sets a cooperative tone that carries through the whole painting process.

Recap

  1. Why underpainting works — it removes the fear of a blank canvas and sets the tone for a cooperative project.
  2. How to do it — use colour from your scheme, big brushes, playful marks, visual prompts, and sgraffito, building depth in the first layer.
  3. What it achieves — encourages participation, provides visual prompts, builds confidence, and creates a collaborative, shared painting experience.

Encouragement

Underpainting really is worth its own episode! It’s more than just paint on canvas — it’s a success strategy for group creativity. Next time you gather for a group art project, try it. Cover the white, let it dry, and watch how easily people dive in.

If you’d like to see this in action, sign up for my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art. You’ll discover how simple tips like these can help you create a unique piece of group art, using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art process.

Thank you for listening to Easy Collaborative Art. Keep exploring, keep painting, and most of all, enjoy the process of creating together.

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Tips for Collaborative Art Projects with Beginners (Teens & Adults)

If you’re running a group art session with beginners—whether teens or adults—you don’t need to be “artsy” to help them succeed. Collaborative art is about easing people in, reducing overwhelm, and building confidence step by step.

Here’s a simple 3-stage framework you can use:

Step 1: Messy Playing 🎨
Start by covering the canvas with colour to remove the fear of a blank surface. Use one or two colours from your palette and invite everyone to help fill it with loose brushstrokes, circles, or arches. Then layer over clusters of simple marks like ‘cat’s ears’, ‘raindrops’ and dashes. This is underpainting in action—it creates depth later and makes the canvas feel approachable.

💡 Tip for facilitators: Reassure the group that “it can only get better from here.” Starting loose and messy removes pressure and gets everyone engaged quickly.

Step 2: Exploring 🌀
Once the first layer is dry, introduce patterns and shapes. Invite participants to echo earlier marks or add new clusters. Encourage repetition of simple shapes from the Pattern Play resources in the Beginner’s guide – while shifting brush sizes to smaller ones for each new layer. This naturally creates depth and a lively, sophisticated look without being complicated.

💡 Tip for facilitators: Keep brush and colour choices limited. Fewer options reduce hesitation and help the artwork look unified.

Step 3: Bling! ✨
Add finishing touches for sparkle and energy. Use paint pens, dot stickers, or clusters of small marks again to tie everything together. This stage is relaxing and gives everyone a sense of accomplishment as the shared artwork comes alive.

💡 Tip for facilitators: Encourage mindfulness—small, simple marks can feel meditative and give participants a proud “I did this” moment.

Why This Works
This beginner-friendly framework lowers barriers, makes the first mark easy, and gently builds layers of collaboration. Participants leave not only with a finished artwork, but with a sense of connection and shared accomplishment.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about making creativity accessible, fun and inclusive.


Beginner Collaborative Art Guide – Easy 3-Step Pattern Play Method for group painting projects.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 9: Beginner Collaborative Art: How to Get Started with My Free Pattern Play Guide?

Quick Takeaway

Looking for a beginner collaborative art guide? I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based projects with more than 2,000 participants, and I want to help you do the same with my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. In this post, you’ll discover how to start your own group art project and use my free guide and digital resources to make it easy, fun, and inclusive for everyone.

🎧 Listen to ‘How to Get Started with My Free Pattern Play Guide?

Listen on Spotify

 Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your podcast player.

🎧 Listen to the trailer: Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art


Episode 9 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share a beginner-friendly, step-by-step guide to starting your first collaborative artwork using my Pattern Play method. You’ll learn how to set up your materials, follow the three-stage Pattern Play process, and use layering and overlap to create depth and engagement in your artwork.


Episode 9 Highlights

  • How to set up your materials and choose a simple Forest colour scheme.
  • The three stages of Pattern Play: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling!
  • Using layering and overlap to enhance collaborative art and build confidence.

Episode Transcript – Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 9: Beginner Collaborative Art: How to Get Started with My Free Pattern Play Guide?

Hi, and welcome to Easy Collaborative Art! I’m Charndra, and in Episode 9, I’m talking you through a beginner-friendly, step-by-step guide to collaborative art using the steps and ideas from my Beginner’s Guide. If you’re new to group painting and want a simple way to start, this episode will give you a clear three-step approach and the tools to begin your first collaborative artwork. You can grab all the tools in my free guide in the shownotes or at PaintingAroundisFun.com.

Step 1: Set Up & Materials, do your Underpainting

Start by gathering your materials. You don’t need much – just paper or canvas, a few brushes, and some paint. Print out your first Pattern Play page and a sample page of Pattern Play cards in black and white to save ink. Choose the Forest colour scheme – cool colours and white. It gives you lots of variations when you mix the colours with white for your 3 or 4 colours per layer or stage.

Step 2: The 3 Stages of Pattern Play

Once your materials are ready, follow the three-stage Pattern Play process. Each stage builds on the last:

  1. Messy Playing – Explore shapes, marks, and colours freely. This stage is all about comfort and creative flow.
  2. Exploring – Add layers using patterns from your cards or pages. Use progressively smaller brushes as the layers rise to create depth and visual interest. This is when the artwork starts to develop character and patterns interact.
  3. Bling! – Add highlights, accents, decorations, and patterns with paint pens, as well as finishing touches like gem or dot stickers. These details bring sparkle and personality to the piece, making it feel complete.

Each stage flows into the next, building richness, movement, and depth, which sets the stage for layering and overlap to bring your collaborative art to life.

Step 3: Add More Layers and Embrace Overlap

Adding more layers builds depth and gives painters extra practice. Collaborative art works best over a few sessions – this lets people revisit the piece, build confidence, and enjoy the process together. It also makes setup easier for the facilitator and results in a richer, more engaging artwork that invites viewers to explore every corner.

Highlights

  1. Set up your materials with the Forest colour scheme.
  2. Follow the three-stage Pattern Play process: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling!
  3. Use layering and overlap to enhance collaborative art and create depth.

Encouragement

Remember, collaborative art isn’t about perfection – it’s about expression and connection. Take your time, explore, and enjoy the process. As a leader or facilitator, breathe through the ‘messy middle’ stages – those layers will bring the beauty.

Thanks for joining me on Easy Collaborative Art. Pattern Play is all about making group art fun, simple, and beginner-friendly – no experience needed! Paint together in three stages: messy playing, exploring with patterns, and blinging it up with details. If you enjoyed this episode, share it with a friend who might love trying collaborative art.


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Start Your Collaborative Art Journey – Free Guide + Mini Course

Instant download. Free to access.

Sign up below to get the Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art and a mini email course that teaches the mindsets and skills to fall in love with Pattern Play.

Plus, weekly creative tips and encouragement from me.

Your free guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
You can unsubscribe anytime.


Tips for beginner-friendly collaborative art projects with kids (Ages 8 – 12)

If you’re a volunteer helping a group of children in a community setting, you don’t need to be “artsy” to guide a fun and successful collaborative art project. The key is to keep things simple, playful, and structured just enough so that everyone can join in with confidence.

Here’s an easy 3-step process you can use:

Step 1: Messy Playing 🎨

Start with freedom and fun. Give the kids medium or large brushes and invite them to fill the surface—a big sheet of card, sturdy paper, or a canvas – with simple marks like circles, spirals, or dots.
👉 Keep the colour palette small (two or three colours) for a visually appealing result.

💡 Tip for volunteers: This stage isn’t about “getting it right.” It’s about loosening up and experiencing what collaborative art really is: making something together, not individually.

Step 2: Exploring 🌀

Once the first layer is dry, introduce patterns and clusters of shapes. These can run along edges, follow earlier marks, or form new clusters. Encourage repetition, layering, and variety in size to build flow. Pattern Play cards or handouts can spark inspiration.

💡 Tip for teachers: Use one brush size per layer and switch to smaller brushes as you go. This naturally builds depth and visual sophistication while avoiding overwhelm from too many options.

Step 3: Bling! ✨

Now it’s time for finishing touches. Kids can use paint pens, doodle patterns, or add small clusters of dots. Stick-on gems or dot stickers can add sparkle and tie the whole artwork together.

💡 Tip for teachers: This stage is relaxing and mindful – perfect for winding down. Everyone leaves feeling proud of what they’ve contributed.

Why This Works

This simple framework makes collaborative art projects easy to run in community groups. It gives structure without stifling creativity, so every child can feel included. Best of all, it turns artmaking into a shared experience of play and connection.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.