Easy Collaborative Art Podcast Episode 8: Why Use Only 3 Colours in Collaborative Art. Blue text on white background, showing the episode title and podcast branding.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 8: Why Use Only 3 Colours in Collaborative Art?

Quick Takeaway

Using three colours in collaborative art can simplify decisions, create harmony, and make group projects more fun. I’ve guided over 60 community and school-based projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework to help everyone contribute with confidence. In this post, you’ll discover why three colours work so well, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.

🎧 Listen to ‘Why Use Only 3 Colours in Collaborative Art?’

Listen on Spotify

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


Episode 8 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share why a limited colour palette in collaborative art makes painting easier, more fun, and more visually stunning. By working with just three colours, you simplify choices for your painters, cut down on waste, and naturally build harmony into your artwork. I’ll walk you through how to select colours, use them layer by layer, and show you some practical examples that prove you don’t need dozens of shades to create something rich, vibrant, and unique.


Episode 8 Highlights

  • Discover why using only three colours reduces overwhelm and creates instant harmony in collaborative art projects.
  • Learn practical ways to build depth and variation with a simple three-colour scheme, including layering and mixing tips.
  • Explore example palettes—like Forest colours of green, blue, and purple—that show how limited choices can still lead to rich, interesting results.

Episode Transcript – Episode 8: Why Use Only 3 Colours in Collaborative Art?

“Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, where I share three insights each week into Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I’m Charndra, and today I’m talking about the power of using only three colours in collaborative art—and why it makes painting simpler, more fun, and visually stunning.”

Idea 1 – Why three colours

“Using just three colours keeps it simple. It reduces decision fatigue, cuts down on supplies, and lets painters focus on painting rather than worrying about colour choices. This isn’t an art lesson—it’s a painting experience!

When choosing colours, use what you have and what’s accessible. I’m not going to tell you to use “Ultramarine Blue”—pick a bright blue you like. Brands vary so much; one brand’s Ultramarine might be another’s Phthalo, which is confusing and unnecessary. I use “aqua” to represent teal, turquoise, or cyan—a blue-green, perhaps with some white to lighten. By giving painters colours that naturally work together, you’re teaching basic colour theory without spelling it out. It’s a success strategy built right into the process.”

Idea 2 – How to use three colours

“Pick three colours from your scheme for each layer. Imagine this: for a warm palette, start with red, yellow, and orange. Next, layer orange, yellow, and pink (red + white). Then, on the next stage, try red, pink, and peach (yellow + light orange). If the pink runs out, mix it with orange to make coral. You can also add a layer of white patterns at any stage to brighten things up.

Even a simple palette—red, orange, and yellow—can give many variations and still look amazing. For most projects, I put four cups in a tray with a small blob of paint and one brush. It’s easier to add more paint as needed, and it creates less waste. You’d be surprised how far paint goes—a 10c coin-sized amount can cover an A3 sheet!”

Idea 3 – Three colours in action with a cool colour scheme

“For your first project, try the Forest colour scheme: a green, a blue, and a purple. Or use a light green, dark blue, and bright blue. White can lighten colours. On another layer, use purple, aqua (blue + green + white), and light blue. Sticking to three colours per layer keeps it easy, but your artwork still ends up rich, varied, and interesting.”

Recap

  1. Three colours simplify choices for painters and facilitator.
  2. Layering variations adds depth and interest.
  3. Patterns, sizes, and repetition make each artwork unique—even with a minimal palette.

Encouragement

“Three colours keep things manageable and fun. Small tweaks can make your artwork look amazing, and the combination of your painters’ patterns, sizes, and repetition ensures every piece is unique. You can also sign up for my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art to see lots of examples of both cool and warm colour schemes in action.”

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


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Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for running easy collaborative art projects with families, homeschool groups, or casual small groups of friends:

How to Start a Simple Collaborative Art Project at Home!

Imagine you’re a parent, friend, or volunteer guiding a small group of children or mixed ages through a fun, beginner-friendly group art project at home or in a casual setting.

Here’s an easy process to follow:

Step 1: Messy Playing

Start with freedom and fun. Use medium or large brushes for this first expressive layer. Invite everyone to cover the surface – a large sheet of card, sturdy paper, or a canvas—with circles, spirals, dots, and clusters of simple marks. Keep the palette to two or three harmonious colours for an easy, visually appealing result. This stage helps everyone relax and experience what collaborative art is: creating together rather than individually.

Step 2: Exploring

Once the base layer has dried, invite participants to add patterns and clusters of shapes. These can flow from the edges, follow lines, or gather around earlier marks. Use Pattern Play resources to spark ideas, then let everyone find their own creativity. Repeating, layering, and varying the size of patterns helps create flow and unity. Facilitator tip: Provide one brush size per layer and switch to smaller brushes as you go. This builds depth and sophistication without overwhelming with too many choices.

Step 3: Bling!

Add finishing touches with paint pens, adding doodles and patterns to create small highlights. Clusters of dots, stick-on gems, or dot stickers add sparkle and tie the artwork together. This final stage ensures everyone feels proud of their contribution, it’s a relaxing and mindful part of the process – with no paint to manage!

This process makes it simple for parents or casual group leaders to run fun, beginner-friendly collaborative art projects. It’s playful, inclusive, and a creative way to connect children and adults through shared artmaking.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


Mixed-colour A6 collaborative panels by a family group using finishing touches from the Pattern Play Collaborative Art method.
Final highlights bring this mixed-toned collaborative artwork to life using the Bling stage of Pattern Play Collaborative Art. (1 of 12)
Warm-coloured collaborative art painted by people with intellectual disability using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process.
‘Self Advocacy’ combines warm tones and empowering final marks to complete this collaborative artwork using the Pattern Play method.
Galaxy-themed mural with finishing details by 20 teenage girls using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
In this mural, 20 teens added their final touches using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process to layer courage and creativity. (WIP)

Start a Collaborative Art Project – 3 Essentials for Beginners podcast episode graphic with blue text on white background

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 7: Three Things You Need to Start a Collaborative Art Project

Quick Takeaway

If you want to start a collaborative art project, this post breaks it down into the three things that matter most, so you can begin with clarity and confidence. I’m sharing what works based on facilitating over 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 my helpful digital resources, designed to make group art projects easier, more inclusive, and genuinely fun to run.

🎧 Listen to ‘What Are Three Things You Need to Start a Collaborative Art Project?’

Listen on Spotify

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


Episode 7 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share the three essentials you need to start a collaborative art project with confidence. Whether you’re creating with your family, a classroom, or a group at an event, keeping it simple helps you focus on the playful process and enjoy making art together.

You’ll discover how to:

  • Choose from different surfaces like paper, small canvases, cardboard, or even a wall.
  • Keep your paint and brush setup simple and beginner-friendly.
  • Bring a playful mindset, the most important “tool” for collaborative art.

Episode 7 Highlights

  1. ·  A sturdy surface is all you need to begin—paper, small canvases, cardboard, or even a wall.
  2. ·  A minimal set of paints and brushes is enough to create fun, layered group artwork. ·  
  3. A playful mindset is your most important tool for collaborative art and makes it easy to start a collaborative art project with confidence.


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.

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Episode Transcript – Episode 7: Three Things You Need to Start a Collaborative Art Project

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art—the podcast that helps you create inclusive, fun painting experiences for all ages and abilities. I’m Charndra, and in this episode, I’ll share the three essential things you need to begin your own collaborative painting project. Whether you’re working with your family, a class, or a group of strangers at an event, these three essentials will help you start simple and start strong.

Key Idea 1 – A Surface to Paint On

“Let’s start with the basics—your canvas, or whatever acts as one. You don’t need anything fancy. You can use a stretched canvas, a piece of watercolour paper, light cardboard, or even a wall. The key is to pick something sturdy enough for layering paint and large enough that multiple people can work on it together.

If you’re brand-new, start small—something like a 30cm square canvas is perfect for building confidence before moving on to a mural or bigger project.”

Key Idea 2 – Paints & Brushes (Keep It Simple)

“Next, let’s talk about tools. I always recommend limiting your palette to just three paints in one colour family—either warm (reds, oranges, yellows) or cool (blues, greens, purples). Too many colours can feel overwhelming.

If you’d like ideas, check out my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art—it has two effective colour schemes perfect for beginners that work beautifully in group art projects.

For brushes, you only need three: one large, one medium, and one small. That’s it. This simple set lets you create broad shapes, medium marks, and fine details. And since collaborative art is about layering and play, you don’t need expensive tools to get great results.”

Key Idea 3 – A Playful Mindset

“The most important thing you need to bring is not paint, not brushes—but a playful mindset. Collaborative art is about exploring, not perfecting. The three-stage Pattern Play method—Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling—gives enough structure to avoid overwhelm while leaving space for spontaneous, freeform creativity.

You don’t have to know what the final piece will look like. Each new layer surprises you as different marks interact. Whomever you are painting with, it’s the playful process that builds connection.”

Recap – The Three Essentials

“So, what do you really need to start a collaborative art project?

  1. A surface—canvas, paper, cardboard, or a wall when you’re ready.
  2. Basic tools—3 colours in a warm or cool palette, plus a set of 3 brushes.
  3. A playful mindset—the willingness to explore and let the art emerge naturally.

With these three, you’re ready to begin.

Ready to start? Grab your three essentials and give it a go—you’ll be amazed at how quickly the creativity flows.

If you’d like help choosing colours or want a simple step-by-step start, check out my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art that’s linked in the show notes.

Remember: Everyone is creative. Even you. Especially you. Until next time—keep painting, keep playing, and keep connecting.”


Podcast Home


Here’s a quick guide to running collaborative art projects with seniors and older adult groups

Imagine you are a facilitator, activity coordinator, or community leader working with a group of older adults or seniors, and you’d like to guide them through a simple, beginner-friendly group art project. Here’s a process you might follow:

Step 1: Messy Playing

Begin with a relaxed, low-pressure activity. Provide large brushes and encourage participants to cover the surface with broad strokes, circles, swirls, and simple clusters of marks like dots or dashes. Limit the palette to two or three harmonious colours per layer for ease and visual impact. This playful stage helps participants feel comfortable, confident, and engaged, while introducing them to the idea of collaborative art: creating together rather than individually.

Step 2: Exploring

Once the base layer has dried with lovely brushstrokes of colour and visual texture, invite participants to add patterns and simple shapes with medium brushes. Use Pattern Play resources for accessible designs, or let participants choose patterns for you to add if they prefer. Focus on repetition, layering, and mindful placement so each contribution feels part of the whole.

Tip for facilitators: offer a different sized brush for each layer to create depth, keeping instructions clear and simple. Use prompts like, “Do three circles” or “Let’s change to a different colour.” Rotate the canvas as needed and demonstrate visually—reminding them that uneven shapes and irregular marks often make the artwork more eye-catching.

Step 3: Bling!

Finish by adding decorative touches. Seniors can use paint pens to draw around shapes, add clusters of marks, or doodle patterns. These smaller details add a real pop of energy to the artwork. Celebrate and highlight contributions along the way—“Look at this detail, so creative!” Hold up the piece at the end so everyone can see how their marks come together into something beautiful. This step not only ties the artwork together but also gives participants a sense of pride, shared memory, and mindful relaxation.

Extra tips for seniors groups

  • Celebrate the process, not perfection — every mark adds value.
  • Use larger handles or easy-grip brushes if needed.
  • Incorporate music, conversation, or storytelling to deepen connection.
  • Acknowledge the relaxation and mindfulness benefits, as well as the joy of creating together.
  • Collaborative art can even stimulate memory and bring forward stories, making it especially powerful for groups with mixed abilities.
  • Novel experiences and new memories are of essential importance.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art showing a cool underpainting with blues, greens, and purples as the base for layering patterns
Starting with a cool underpainting sets the stage for layering fun patterns in collaborative art projects.
First Pattern Play Page laying on a cool underpainting, showing simple marks, circles, and patterns for beginners
Add your first Pattern Play layer to a cool underpainting and watch the collaborative artwork begin to come alive.
Collaborative artwork in action with white paint applied over a cool underpainting, showing highlights and final details
Finishing with white paint adds depth and highlights, completing your collaborative Pattern Play artwork on a cool underpainting.
Podcast episode 6 of Easy Collaborative Art: “Why Did I Start Creating Collaborative Art?” — personal story on facilitating inclusive, beginner-friendly collaborative art using Pattern Play.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 6: Why Did I Start Creating Collaborative Art?

Quick Takeaway

My collaborative art story shares why I began creating inclusive, group-based art experiences and what they’ve taught me along the way. After facilitating 60+ community and school collaborative art projects with over 2,000 participants, I’ve shaped a simple, repeatable framework called Pattern Play Collaborative Art. I want to help you do the same with clear guidance and helpful digital resources designed for educators and facilitators.

🎧 Listen to Why Did I Start Creating Collaborative Art?

Listen on Spotify

Note: Prefer another app? Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your podcast player. Listen to the podcast trailer here.


Episode 6 Summary

In this personal episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share why I began creating collaborative art and how my life experiences — especially parenting and teaching — shaped the way I run group projects. I discuss how breaking projects into simple, achievable steps helps everyone feel confident, relaxed, and able to contribute in their own way. You’ll hear how creating a safe, supportive, and fun environment allows people to surprise themselves, connect with others, and enjoy the process of making art together.


🎨 Hidden Game Alert: Collect the letters from Episodes 2–9 (your first clue starts in Episode 2!) and you’ll uncover a secret creative challenge to enjoy with my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art!


Episode 6 Highlights

  1. How parenting and teaching experiences influenced the way I facilitate collaborative art.
  2. The importance of breaking projects into simple, manageable steps to help everyone succeed.
  3. Creating a safe, supportive environment where people can explore, contribute, and feel proud of their art.


Episode Transcript – Episode 6: Why Did I Start Creating Collaborative Art?

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art, the podcast where I explore fun, inclusive, and beginner-friendly ways to create art together, using my own process called Pattern Play Collaborative Art.

This episode is called “Why I Started Creating Collaborative Art” — and it’s a little more personal.


I’ve always been creative, and I was an art teacher for many years. Like everyone, what caught my attention gradually changed over time depending on what interested me. Becoming a parent ultimately led to what I do today, and what has become one of my passions.

I have three kids — each with fascinating personalities, interests, and learning styles. Over the years, I adapted in many ways to help them succeed, and I found — especially with my second child, who has special needs — that it was all about breaking things into steps, finding strategies that worked, and celebrating progress along the way.

That approach naturally seeped into how I run my group art projects — creating an environment where everyone feels comfortable, supported, and able to contribute in their own way, while still making something effective, eye-catching, and unique. People want to feel good about what they’ve made.

When you give people a simple starting point, let them explore at their own pace, and add little wins along the way, suddenly they relax. The “I’m not creative” worries start to fade, and people discover they can create something beautiful together.

I learned early on that breaking things into clear, manageable steps — and giving people simple, achievable wins — can make all the difference.

This works whether you’re guiding kids, teens, or adults. When people have a safe place to try something without the pressure of perfection, they open up. They take part. And the results are always richer when everyone contributes in their own way.

I felt such a thrill when people created in this way that I decided this was my new pathway, and I’ve been developing and refining the process with every project I do ever since. The simple structure, with freeform creativity built in, seems to offer everyone success. It’s so adaptable — and I hope you catch the collaborative art bug too!

That’s really why I started creating collaborative art — to make space for those moments where people surprise themselves, connect with others, and see their contribution as part of something bigger. Where they smile and feel proud, and so do I.”


Recapping 3 Takeaways from This Episode:

  • Collaborative art works best when everyone’s unique input is valued.
  • Your life experiences can shape the way you create and share art — lean into them.
  • Breaking projects into simple steps helps everyone feel confident to join in.

Start Your Collaborative Art Journey – Free Guide + Mini Course

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.


Podcast Home


Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for running easy collaborative mural projects with groups.

Imagine you are a teacher, facilitator, or community group leader working with a group who wants to create a larger-scale, beginner-friendly mural together. Here’s a process you might follow for a project that is ceiling height, so no one needs to climb on steps or use ladders:

Preparation Stage: Underpainting

Begin by preparing a large surface, such as a wall or panel that can be attached to a wall after being painted indoors or under cover. Prime it with a three-part primer, then add a second layer of tinted primer using large brushes, rollers, or sponges. This softens the stark whiteness and creates a background that will peek through to the end. Completing this stage gives painters ownership of the process, helping them feel relaxed and confident, especially for public mural projects.

Step 1: Messy Playing

Provide large brushes and encourage participants to cover the surface with broad strokes, large circles, arches from the edges, and swirling spirals with clusters of simple marks. Limit the palette to three or four harmonious colours per layer for simplicity and impact. Offer large chalk prompts of circles, spirals, and arches to get them started, as participants often default to small marks. Keep them moving around and changing colours. This playful stage helps participants feel relaxed, confident, and comfortable contributing to a shared, large-scale collaborative artwork.

Step 2: Exploring

Once the base layer is alive with colour and exciting brushwork, invite participants to add patterns and clusters of marks. Use Pattern Play resources to get them started, then allow them to create and evolve their own designs individually or in small groups. Steer them away from branding, words, or copyrighted imagery. Encourage layering, varying size, and mindful placement so each person’s contribution becomes part of the larger mural, while still overlapping to build visual complexity.
Tip for facilitators: offer progressively smaller brushes as layers build, helping to create depth and visual interest while keeping it manageable on a large surface.

Step 3: Bling!

Finish by adding decorative touches. Participants can use medium or larger paint pens to add impactful details. Even small embellishments encourage viewers to move closer and notice the intricacies. Move around the mural to offer encouragement and support, making sure every participant feels acknowledged. This stage ensures everyone leaves proud of their contribution to the large-scale collaborative artwork. Consider adding the first names of all painters when adding the title of the mural, letting participants enjoy spotting their name and friends’ names later.

This process shows teachers, facilitators, and community leaders how easy it is to run beginner-friendly collaborative mural projects. It’s simple, fun, and a creative way for groups to connect through shared group art on a large scale.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about shared connection and creativity.


Mixed-colour A6 collaborative panels by a family group using finishing touches from the Pattern Play Collaborative Art method.
Final highlights bring this mixed-toned collaborative artwork to life using the Bling stage of Pattern Play Collaborative Art. (1 of 12)
Warm-coloured collaborative art painted by people with intellectual disability using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process.
‘Self Advocacy’ combines warm tones and empowering final marks to complete this collaborative artwork using the Pattern Play method.
Galaxy-themed mural with finishing details by 20 teenage girls using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
In this mural, 20 teens added their final touches using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process to layer courage and creativity. (WIP)

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast Episode 3 – Messy Playing: How Do You Start a Collaborative Art Project? Blue and grey title graphic on a white background.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast — Episode 3: How Do You Start Collaborative Art? (Messy Playing Stage)

Quick Takeaway

Wondering how to start collaborative art projects? I’ll guide you through the Messy Playing stage, the first step in my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school projects with more than 2,000 participants, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources. You’ll learn practical tips to get groups creating together, even if no one has painted before.

🎧 Listen to ‘How Do You Start Collaborative Art?’

Listen on Spotify

Note: Prefer another app? Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your favourite podcast player. Listen to the podcast trailer here.


Episode Summary

In this episode of the Easy Collaborative Art Podcast, I explore the first stage of the Pattern Play method—Messy Playing. Starting with loose, playful marks is the key to breaking through the fear of a blank canvas. You’ll learn how to encourage freedom, create depth with random layers, and build true collaboration through overlapping.

Episode Highlights

  • Why starting messy melts fear and builds creative confidence.
  • How random marks and layers create unexpected beauty and energy.
  • Why overlapping marks is the secret to real group collaboration.


Episode Transcript – Episode 3: How Do You Start Collaborative Art? (Messy Playing Stage)

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art

Welcome to the Easy Collaborative Art podcast—I’m Charndra, and I believe that creating together is something everyone can enjoy, no matter your age or experience.

Collaborative art is simply painting a surface—a canvas, a banner, a mural—with two or more people, bouncing off each other creatively.

If you’ve ever stared at a blank canvas, frozen, unsure where to begin—this episode is for you. Stick around, and before you know it, you’ll be confidently leading a fun collective painting activity over a few sessions, creating an artwork that has never been seen before—something unique to your group and the conversations shared along the way.

Each week, I share three tips to help you feel more confident leading or helping run group art experiences.

Today, we’re starting where every Pattern Play project begins: with Messy Playing—a stage that invites freedom, fun, and that first brushstroke of courage.


Why We Start Loose and Free

A lot of people worry about ‘messing it up’ when they start a painting. But the truth is—mess is exactly where we should begin. We make a mess, so we CAN’T ruin it! It can only get better…

The first stage of Pattern Play is called Messy Playing for a reason. It’s about loosening up, letting go of expectations, and simply putting paint on the canvas.

Why? Because that blank space can feel scary. People hesitate, wondering, “What if I wreck it?”

So instead—we start messy. Big brushes. Loose spirals. Bold circles. Repeating clusters of marks. There’s no pressure to make something beautiful—this is about giving yourself (and others) permission to play.

I love watching the moment someone’s shoulders drop as they make their first big swirl or circle—it’s the moment they realise, “Oh, this is fun!”

Takeaway: Start loose. Grab a big brush and make one bold mark—that’s all it takes to break the ice. And if you’d like some easy patterns to try—like dots, rain dashes, or cat’s ears, you can grab my free beginner’s guide in the show notes.


The Magic of Random Layers

At first, these marks might feel random or even pointless—but they’re doing something really important.

They’re building layers—depth, energy, and a feeling of movement. It’s like laying down a musical rhythm that others can respond to.

There’s no need to plan ahead. Just react to what’s already there—add a swirl near someone else’s shape, add a cluster of dashes, try a different colour and do the same thing in another area, dot around a cluster of circles.

This is when people start to say things like, “Oh! That actually looks cool!” More importantly, they stop worrying about what others are thinking and start playing around creatively.

Takeaway: Random marks create energy and surprises—let them build the rhythm for the group.


Overlapping = True Collaboration

One of the most powerful things about Messy Playing is how it naturally invites people to connect.

Instead of each person working in a little corner, we encourage overlap. You might paint into someone else’s swirl or dot over a shape they left behind. You’re adding to each other’s marks—not covering them up, but building on them.

Overlapping is true collaboration because it’s only partial—new areas are created, exciting places emerge, and people are encouraged to repeat these discoveries in a few different places.

This creates a real sense of shared creation. The canvas doesn’t look like separate parts—it becomes one vibrant, messy, joyful whole. It looks like it was painted by one person.

Takeaway: Overlap with others—it’s what turns individual marks into a shared story.


Why Messy Playing Works

So here’s what Messy Playing gives you—and your group:

  • It replaces fear with freedom.
  • It turns random marks into the beginnings of something layered and rich.
  • And it helps people connect through overlapping marks—creating something that’s truly shared.

You don’t need to know what you’re doing. You just need to begin. That’s how creative confidence starts.

In the next episode, we’ll move into the second stage of Pattern Play: Exploring—where we begin using playful pattern prompts to add structure and inspiration to our painting.


Encouragement

Thanks for being here with me today!

If Messy Playing sounds like something you’d love to try, check the show notes for free and beginner-friendly resources to help you get started—including a simple pattern guide that will take the guesswork out of your first marks.

And if you’d like ongoing ideas and encouragement, join my email list—I’ll send you tips and tools to make your group art experiences easy and fun. You’ll also get my free guide, The Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art: The Pattern Play Method.

You don’t need to be an artist. You just need to start.

Let’s make art more about connection than perfection.

Until next time—keep it messy!


Three Key Takeaways

  • Start loose and free—messy marks melt the fear of the blank canvas.
  • Random layers create energy and surprises—there’s no need to plan ahead.
  • Overlapping is true collaboration—it turns individual contributions into one shared creation.

Podcast Home


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Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for running easy collaborative art projects with adult groups.

Imagine you are a group facilitator or community group leader working with a group of women who want to try a simple, beginner-friendly group art project. Here’s a process you might follow:

Step 1: Messy Playing

Start with freedom and fun. Provide a slightly larger size of brush and encourage participants to cover the surface with broad strokes, swirls, or simple clusters of marks like dots or dashes. Use two or three harmonious colours to keep it easy and inviting. This playful stage helps participants relax, build confidence, and experience firsthand what collaborative art is: creating something together rather than individually.

Step 2: Exploring

Once the background is alive with colour, invite participants to add simple patterns or repeating shapes. Use my Pattern Play resources or encourage them to invent their own designs. You can layer patterns in clusters, vary their size, and encourage participants to notice how their contributions interact with the group.

Tip for facilitators: offer progressively smaller brushes for additional layers to create depth and visual interest. This stage shows how individual choices contribute to a shared group art project.

Step 3: Bling!

Finish with playful decorations. Participants can use paint pens or Sharpie markers to add doodles and ornamentation for eye-catching highlights. Stick-on gems or dot stickers make the artwork pop — and yes, adults enjoy these playful touches as much as kids! This stage ties the collaborative art together and helps each participant feel proud of their contribution.

This process shows group facilitators and community group leaders how easy it is to run beginner-friendly collaborative art projects for adult women. It’s simple, fun, and a creative way to connect a group through shared group art and artistic expression.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


Collaborative family painting in bold colours, early messy stage of Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
‘Utopia’ is a bold, colourful group artwork at the Exploring stage of its journey—created by a family group using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
Bold A6 panel artworks created by a family group using collaborative art for disability advocacy.
This piece was created collaboratively by a family group as part of an inclusive exhibition, using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art method.
Multicoloured layered art created by a multi-generational group over a year using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art method.
‘Playgroup People’ was created over time by 20 participants aged 2–70, showing the evolving messy playing stage in collaborative art – just process art techniques.
Podcast episode graphic for “What Comes After the First Messy Layer in Collaborative Art? (Exploring Stage)” from Easy Collaborative Art.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast — Episode 4: What Comes After the First Messy Layer in Collaborative Art? (Exploring Stage)

Quick Takeaway

Exploring collaborative art stages helps you understand my Pattern Play Collaborative Art process and how to guide a group toward playful, creative expression. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants using my simple group painting framework. In this post and podcast, you’ll discover practical tips and ideas, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources. What follows is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for running easy collaborative art projects for Art Teachers.

🎧 Listen to ‘What Comes After the First Messy Layer in Collaborative Art?’

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Prefer another app? Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your podcast player. Listen to the podcast trailer here.


Episode Summary

What comes after the first messy, fearless layer in collaborative art? In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share the Exploring stage of the Pattern Play process. This is where you and your group build on that first playful chaos—adding layers of patterns, experimenting with colour, and finding the rhythm of true collaboration.

Episode Highlights

  • How to guide a group from spontaneous marks to playful, collaborative responses.
  • Why Pattern Play prompts give everyone confidence and spark creativity.
  • Easy ways to use size, colour, and contrast to bring energy and flow to your group painting.


Episode Transcript – Episode 4: What Comes After the First Messy Layer in Collaborative Art? (Exploring Stage)

Welcome to the Exploring Stage

Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art! I’m Charndra, and I love helping you discover simple, inclusive ways to bring people together through painting. My goal is to help you feel confident leading group artworks—because it really is fun!

In this episode, we’re stepping into the second stage of the Pattern Play process: Exploring.

This is where you shift gears with your group—not by overthinking, but by adding playful patterns with a gentle framework. Instead of the wild freedom of that first messy layer, you’ll keep things spontaneous but a little more structured. Together, you’ll layer patterns—big and small—that start shaping the canvas in surprising ways.

If you’ve ever wondered what comes next after that first fearless stage, this is the episode for you.


From Reacting to Responding

After all the energy of Messy Playing, Exploring invites something new: playful attention.

You can offer simple prompts like, “Pick a pattern and add it three times,” then encourage people to try another pattern in a different spot, swap colours with someone nearby, and keep going.

At first, I sometimes ask people to imagine they’re starting on a fresh canvas. It helps ease any nerves about painting over someone else’s marks. But that’s the beauty of collaborative art—we’re not precious about every mark. We build on what others have done, and those new layers create exciting surprises.

Soon, everyone relaxes. You’ll see them go with the flow, invent new patterns, and respond to what’s already there.

One person might add something to a quiet space, while another enhances a cluster with something bold or contrasting. Maybe they repeat a shape or layer a fresh colour over the top. Each decision sparks ideas for the next person.

This is where collaboration really begins—it’s not about filling gaps, but noticing. Ask yourself: Where can I add something that supports the whole painting?

This subtle shift from reacting to responding is powerful. It’s the moment your group stops painting side-by-side and starts working together.


Playful Pattern Prompts Give Confidence

Sometimes, slowing down makes people hesitate. You might notice them pausing, unsure of what to do next.

That’s where Pattern Play prompts save the day—whether it’s my Pattern Play Cards or Pattern Play Pages. They offer endless ideas without feeling like rules.

These prompts are simple: a swirl, a cluster of dots, a zigzag. They’re playful invitations anyone can try. I even give them fun names like Cat’s Ears, Lightning Bolts, or Fronds, which always starts a bit of chatter and sharing!

Some people copy a pattern exactly. Others turn it into their own version. Some make them huge, sweeping across the canvas, while others do tiny, delicate details that pull the eye in.

I like to say, “Think big or small,” because medium sizes tend to happen naturally.

Prompts give structure without pressure. They’re a springboard that helps everyone keep moving—and it really works.


Play with Size and Colour for Visual Impact

Exploring is also about playing with contrast: big vs small, light vs dark, thick vs thin.

I love encouraging variety because it adds so much energy to the canvas. It keeps things interesting—for your painters and for anyone who sees the final piece.

You might prompt your group with questions like: What happens if you make this shape bigger? Or, What if you do three of them coming from an edge or a corner?

Repeating shapes across the canvas creates a rhythm—just like music. Those small creative choices make people feel like, Wow, I’m really shaping this artwork!

Exploring is still playful—but now there’s a bit of direction in the fun.


Exploring Isn’t Just Once

One of the things I love about the Exploring stage is that you can repeat it as many times as you like.

For small artworks, one round of patterns might be enough. But on larger pieces, we often add layer after layer—sometimes five, or even more!

Each new layer adds more depth, variety, and detail.

It’s not about rushing or finishing; it’s about enjoying the process—trying different patterns, mixing colours with white or blending them, and watching the painting evolve.

With every layer, people gain more experience and confidence with the brushes and paint. It’s all about building comfort and creativity, one playful layer at a time.


From Chaos to Structured Play

Exploring is the turning point. You’ll notice your group moving from instinctive, messy marks to playful, thoughtful responses.

With Pattern Play prompts as gentle guides, and encouragement to experiment with size, colour, and contrast, the painting begins to come alive.

This stage is still freeform—but there’s intention behind it. It’s about making decisions that work with the whole canvas, not just adding random marks.


What’s Next?

Exploring is one of my favourite stages. It’s when people really start surprising themselves and leaning into the process.

Next time, we’ll move into the third stage: Bling! This is when the whole artwork lights up with sparkle, contrast, and those special finishing touches. It’s often slower and doesn’t always involve wet paint, which makes it even easier to prepare for.

If this episode has helped you imagine guiding a group through this playful stage, share it with a teacher, parent, or art-loving friend.

And don’t forget to grab my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art at PaintingAroundisFun.com. It’s full of tips and includes pattern prompts you can try right away. You’ll find the link in the show notes.

Until next time—keep painting, keep playing, and keep connecting.


Three Key Takeaways

  • Size, colour, and contrast add rhythm and energy, turning playful chaos into a connected, intentional artwork.
  • Exploring shifts your group from spontaneous painting to thoughtful collaboration—each mark responds to what’s already there.
  • Pattern Play prompts give structure without pressure, helping everyone feel creative and confident.

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Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for running easy collaborative art projects for Art Teachers.

Imagine you are a classroom art teacher who wants a simple, beginner-friendly group art project. Here’s a process you might follow:

If you’re an art teacher looking for fresh ways to build teamwork and creativity, collaborative art projects are a perfect fit. They encourage students to share ideas, solve problems together, and create something bigger than themselves.

Here’s a simple 3-step process you can use in class:
Step 1 – Messy Playing 🎨
Invite students to loosen up with free marks: circles, spirals, or dots. This breaks the ice and removes the fear of a blank canvas. Keep colours limited to 2–3 for harmony.

Step 2 – Exploring 🌀
Guide students to layer patterns and vary brush sizes. This builds depth and structure while letting individual styles shine. Pattern Play resources can provide visual inspiration.

Step 3 – Bling! ✨
Add details with markers, doodles, or small highlights. This final stage gives students ownership and pride in the finished work.

💡 Why it works: The Power of Three (three stages, brushes, and colours) simplifies management in busy classrooms and ensures each student contributes meaningfully.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about shared connection and creativity.


Cool-toned artwork by a community group including people with intellectual disability using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
‘Peer Support’ celebrates inclusion and creativity with cool hues added in the exploring stage of collaborative art using Pattern Play.
Warm-coloured soccer-themed mural created by 35+ kids using the exploring stage of Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
Made by over 35 children, this warm-toned soccer mural used the exploring stage of Pattern Play Collaborative Art to refine its playful base layers.
Cool pastel A6 artwork made by a family group for a charity exhibition, using the Pattern Play method.
Soft pastels and playful shapes emerge in the exploring stage of ‘Mermaid Incognito,’ a joint family collaboration for disability advocacy.
Episode 5 of Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Bling! — The Final Stage of Collaborative Art – blue and grey title graphic on white background

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast — Episode 5: How Do You Add the Final Touches to Collaborative Art? (Bling Stage)

Quick Takeaway

Adding finishing touches to group paintings can transform a project from lovely to lively. In this post, you’ll discover the podcast transcript outlining 3 simple ways to bring colour, texture, and sparkle to collaborative art during the Bling stage, followed by a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for running easy collaborative art projects with special needs or neurodiverse groups. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.

🎧 Listen to ‘How Do You Add the Final Touches to Collaborative Art?’

Listen on Spotify

Note: Prefer another app? Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your favourite podcast player. Listen to the podcast trailer here.


Episode 5 Summary

In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, you’ll discover the Bling stage—the final step in the Pattern Play process. This is where your collaborative artwork shines with decoration, doodling, and thoughtful finishing touches. I’ll share 3 creative ideas to help you add small but powerful details that bring your group’s artwork to life.


Episode 5 Highlights

  • How you can use paint pens and small details to transform your artwork—enhancing it without overwhelming it.
  • Ways to keep your ideas flowing with Pattern Play prompts so your doodles have big impact with little effort.
  • Fun finishing touches—like sticker gems, paint pens, and gold leaf—that you can use to celebrate and uplift a group’s artwork.


Episode Transcript – Episode 5: How Do You Add the Final Touches to Collaborative Art? (Bling Stage)

“Welcome to Easy Collaborative Art — the podcast that helps you create fun, inclusive Pattern Play collaborative art with people of all ages and abilities. I’m Charndra, and in just a few minutes, I’ll share 3 creative tips to keep your BLING layer fun and achievable.

This is Episode 5 — Bling! — the final stage of our collaborative process. It’s where decoration, ornamentation, and detail come in. Let’s get sparkling!”


🎨 Idea 1 – Bling = Decoration, Doodling & Ornamentation

“In this stage, we switch from paintbrushes to paint pens—tidy, controlled, and oh-so-satisfying! This is where we slow down and enhance the artwork with fine linework, delicate doodles, and little sparkly bits that make it shine.

Start by outlining or inlining your favourite patterns—maybe add dashes inside a line, dots along a swirl, or a zigzag hugging a curve.

For some participants—especially those with special needs—simple scribbles are perfect. We call this ‘spaghetti,’ and it looks fantastic! Keep turning the canvas to encourage variety and new perspectives.

Remember—you’re not painting big areas anymore. These are joyful finishing touches that enhance the artwork, not overwhelm it. Think of it like adding a well-chosen accessory: the bling highlights what’s already beautiful without taking over. Encourage people to move around or swap seats so everyone can add their personal style of bling across different areas.”


🌀 Idea 2 – Inspired by Pattern Play = Small Touches with Big Impact

“Keep your Pattern Play Cards or Pages close by—they’re just as helpful now as they were during the Exploring stage. Look for the finer, more detailed patterns.

Pick a few favourites and let them inspire your unique doodles—maybe a happy spiral here, a trail of dots leading the eye, or some whimsical flourishes linking shapes together.

This is the moment to play with small or medium paint pens—choosing subtle tones for a soft look, or bold contrasts to make details pop. Stick to the colours already in the artwork, or add simple neutrals like black and white. Metallics—gold, silver, bronze, or copper—can also add a beautiful, reflective sparkle.

The energy in this stage is often calm and happy. Some people doodle quietly in deep focus, while others chat and laugh as they create. Both moods are perfect.”


🌈 Idea 3 – Gems, Stickers & a Touch of Gold

“Now it’s time for the finishing flourishes—the part everyone loves! Bring out the sticker gems, dot stickers, or even a hint of gold leaf. These tactile, shiny details are especially popular with younger painters or anyone who loves adding intricate touches. You can even surprise the group with nail polish—tiny dots of glossy colour add unexpected sparkle!

To keep the design strong and cohesive, guide people to place these accents in clusters, along lines, or framing a shape—instead of scattering them randomly. For example, a ring of shiny red gems around a green circle will stand out far more than if they’re sprinkled everywhere.

Glitter bursts are another crowd-pleaser. I usually add a few controlled blobs of glitter glue and let people swirl them gently into the artwork. (With little kids, I guide this step, otherwise it’s glitter mayhem!) Keep some wet wipes nearby for sparkly fingertips.

I often start this stage by adding gold leaf to one of the visual centres—a quiet symbol of strength and value. It’s a reminder that we are capable of more than we think—especially when we support one another. And that, really, is what collaborative art is all about.”


Recap – Why Bling Completes the Artwork

“Let’s recap the magic of the Bling stage.

  1. We use paint pens to outline, inline, and decorate patterns—small, controlled details that add crispness and charm.
  2. We doodle creatively, taking inspiration from Pattern Play prompts to add playful, intuitive touches that bring the artwork to life.
  3. We finish with tactile accents like sticker gems, dot stickers, glitter bursts, or gold leaf—little celebratory details that sparkle and uplift the piece.

This is where the artwork truly comes alive, not just with colour and line, but with joyful, shared attention from everyone involved.”


Encouragement

“The Bling stage is where people truly shine—not only through the art itself, but in how they support and celebrate each other’s contributions.

You’ll see it when someone admires a new doodle or when a cluster of shiny gems brings a collective smile. Collaborative art has this wonderful way of drawing out the best in people.

So go ahead—doodle that swirl, add that gold, place that dot, draw that perfect little line. Trust the group. Trust yourself. You’re creating something joyful—together.

Until next time—keep painting, keep playing, and keep celebrating the beauty of collaboration. The 3 stages aren’t the end—they’re simply the framework of this style of collaborative art. I have many more tips to share—like why I use limited colour schemes and how these gentle constraints actually free people to be more creative. And why all this focus on the number three? Keep listening for more mindset shifts to make group art easier, more fun, and beautifully structured for success!

If you’ve enjoyed this series on the three Pattern Play stages—Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling!—don’t forget to grab my free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art at PaintingAroundisFun.com. It’s packed with pattern prompts, simple steps, and extra tips—like the power of an underpainting to help people paint with confidence from the very first brushstroke.”


Three Key Takeaways

  1. When you focus on small, joyful details, your artwork becomes balanced and full of character without being overworked.
  2. Pattern Play prompts make it easy for you to add meaningful, cohesive touches that tie everything together.
  3. Adding gems, glitter, or gold leaf gives you a simple way to celebrate your group’s creativity and bring the artwork to life.

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.

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

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Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide for running easy collaborative art projects with special needs or neurodiverse groups.

Imagine you are a teacher, support worker, or group facilitator guiding a group of people living with intellectual disabilities, sensory differences, or neurodiverse needs through a simple, beginner-friendly group art project. Here’s a process you might follow:

Step 1: Messy Playing

Begin with an open, sensory-friendly activity – painting on a large canvas pre-painted with a busy underpainting to reduce the shock of a blank white surface. Provide larger brushes and encourage participants to explore circles, dots, and dashes—both large and small—on different parts of the artwork. Participants can move around or you can rotate the canvas as feels right. Limit the colour scheme to two or three harmonious colours to keep it simple. This stage helps participants feel relaxed, engaged, and confident, while experiencing what collaborative art is: creating together rather than alone.

Step 2: Exploring

Once the background is lively with brushwork and colour, invite participants to add simple patterns or shapes using a medium-sized brush. Use my Pattern Play resources for them to copy ideas—this is how artists learn. Encourage layering and repetition, and demonstrate patterns clearly and confidently. Perfection is not the goal—a circle can be an oval or blob.


Tip for facilitators: provide one brush size per layer and model each step visually. Simple instructions like “Do this:” (paint a circle) or SHOWING THEM how to swirl a circle into a spiral helps participants see how their marks matter and connect to the larger group art project while they practice and build skills.

Step 3: Bling!

Finish by adding decorative touches. Participants can use paint pens to add doodles and patterns once the paint is dry. Ask them to outline favourite shapes or “march a row of ants” (dashes) along a line. Stick-on gems, dot stickers, or even small additions like nail polish dots (sensory-safe with ventilation) add excitement and help tie the artwork together. Move around the group to offer support and encouragement, highlighting contributions: “Look at what Mary did—so cool! Copy her idea over there in another colour, Paul.” This stage ensures participants feel proud of their part in the collaborative artwork.

Tip for facilitators: if a participant is only able to ‘scribble’—that’s fine (we call this ‘spaghetti’). Simply play “Swapsies!” regularly with colours and keep turning the canvas.

This process shows teachers, support workers, and facilitators how easy it is to run beginner-friendly, inclusive collaborative art projects. It’s simple, fun, and a creative way for neurodiverse or special needs participants to connect through shared group art and self-expression.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about shared connection and creativity.


Mixed-colour A6 collaborative panels by a family group using finishing touches from the Pattern Play Collaborative Art method.
Final highlights bring this mixed-toned collaborative artwork to life using the Bling stage of Pattern Play Collaborative Art. (1 of 12)
Warm-coloured collaborative art painted by people with intellectual disability using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process.
‘Self Advocacy’ combines warm tones and empowering final marks to complete this collaborative artwork using the Pattern Play method.
Galaxy-themed mural with finishing details by 20 teenage girls using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
In this mural, 20 teens added their final touches using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process to layer courage and creativity. (WIP)

Podcast episode 2 graphic with the title “What Is Pattern Play Collaborative Art (and How Does It Work)?” in blue and grey on a white background.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 2: What is Pattern Play Collaborative Art (and How Does It Work)?

Quick Takeaway

Curious about free collaborative art projects? In this post, you’ll discover how Pattern Play Collaborative Art makes group painting simple, fun, and inclusive. I’ve guided over 60 community and school projects with more than 2,000 participants, and I’ll share practical tips and a step-by-step approach so you can get your students or groups creating together right away. Scroll down for a quick ‘How to Start’ guide after full podcast transcript.

🎧 Listen to ‘What is Pattern Play Collaborative Art?’

Listen on Spotify

🎧 Listen to the podcast trailer here. Prefer another app? Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your favourite podcast player.


Episode Summary

Are you curious about how simple patterns can transform a blank canvas into a vibrant, collaborative artwork? In this episode, we dive into the creative world of Pattern Play—a fun, beginner-friendly approach to collaborative art that anyone can join in on, no matter their skill level.

Episode Highlights

  • What Pattern Play Collaborative Art is and why it works for all ages and abilities.
  • The three stages of Pattern Play—Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling!—and how they build confidence and creativity.
  • Why playful patterns like dots, spirals, and arches are powerful tools for group creativity.


Episode Transcript

🎙️ Episode 2: What is Pattern Play Collaborative Art (and How Does It Work)?

Welcome to the Easy Collaborative Art Podcast

Welcome to the Easy Collaborative Art podcast! I’m Charndra, and I believe that creating art together is one of the most joyful, surprising, and connecting things we can do.

But if you’ve ever thought, “I’m not creative,” or “I wouldn’t know where to start with group art,”—you’re not alone.

This podcast is here to guide you. Whether you’re a teacher, a parent, a facilitator, or just someone who wants to get people painting together, you’ll find ideas, tips, and a process that’s easy to follow—and really fun.

Each episode I share three key takeaways to help you feel more confident. And today, we’re answering a big one: What is Pattern Play Collaborative Art?


Why Pattern Play Works for Everyone

Here’s the truth: a lot of people love the idea of creating with others, but they don’t know how to make it work.

That’s where Pattern Play Collaborative Art comes in.

It’s a simple, flexible approach to painting together in a way that’s structured but free, easy but expressive, and most of all—welcoming to absolutely everyone.

There are three playful stages: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling!

Instead of following rules, we layer patterns, shapes, and colour in a shared artwork. People of all ages and abilities join in—each mark adds something special.

The result? A vibrant, layered piece filled with personality. It’s a process that makes people feel included, creative, and proud.


A Simple Approach to Group Creativity

In traditional art settings, there’s often pressure to perform—to get a technique right, or compare yourself to others.

With collaborative art, that pressure melts away.

You don’t have to start with confidence. You just start. You add a shape here, copy an idea there, follow a colour that catches your eye. And gradually—you learn by doing.

No one is judging your work. People feel free to explore. That little voice that says, “I’m not good at art”? It goes quiet.

And here’s the magic: people do build skill and confidence—but through play. Through repetition. Through joyful experimentation.

That’s the Pattern Play way. It’s a simple plan that meets you right where you are.


The Joy of Painting Together

When people paint together using this process, something beautiful happens.

There’s laughter. Curiosity. Quiet concentration. Encouragement between strangers.

The artwork grows layer by layer—not just in colour, but in connection.

This kind of shared creativity builds confidence and community at the same time. And that’s what I love most: it’s not just art—it’s belonging, it’s expression, it’s joy.

And anyone can do it.


Key Ideas

So, here’s what we explored today:

  • Pattern Play Collaborative Art solves the common problem of “I don’t know where to start”—by giving you a simple, inclusive method.
  • It replaces performance pressure with permission to explore—and skills grow naturally, through play.
  • And it leads to connection, confidence, and creativity that feels good—because it’s shared.

You can guide this kind of experience. Whether you’re a teacher, a parent, or just someone keen to paint with others—I want you to feel like, “I could do this!”

In the next episode, I’ll walk you through the first stage of the process: Messy Playing—and how it helps everyone let go and begin.


Join the Fun

If this sounds like something you’d love to try, I invite you to check the show notes and join my email list. I’ll send you tips, inspiration, and beginner-friendly tools to help you get started.

You don’t have to be an artist. You just have to begin.

Everyone can paint. Everyone can play. And together—we create something beautiful.

Until next time—happy painting!


Related Links & Resources


Listen to More Episodes

Want to explore more creative ideas?
Browse all podcast episodes on Spotify

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection & creativity.

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.

Explore more collaborative art ideas →

Best Collaborative Art Ideas: Projects, Guides & Resources for All Ages


Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide if you’re looking for a free collaborative art project to try with primary or elementary students.

Imagine you are a classroom teacher (not an art specialist) with a group of students in grades 1–6, and you’d like to run a simple, beginner-friendly group art project. Here’s a process you might follow:

Step 1: Messy Playing

Begin with easy painting activities that get everyone involved. Have several large surfaces—one per table group. Using perhaps two colours from a family (red and yellow, or green and blue), have the students cover the artwork with broad strokes, clusters of dots, swirls, or the easiest shape—circles (which can be suns, eggs, or blob shapes). This playful stage breaks the ice, helps students relax, and shows how collaborative art starts with simple marks anyone can make.

Step 2: Exploring

Once the background is alive with colour, invite students to add patterns. Use the Pattern Play resources or demonstrate basic shapes like circles, hearts, arches, or waves. Students can copy a pattern or invent their own, layering them in clusters or varying the size. Tip for teachers: You can do several ‘Exploring’ layers, providing one brush size per layer. As you add more layers, switch to smaller brushes to build depth and visual interest. This stage highlights how individual choices contribute to a shared group art project.

Step 3: Bling!

Finish by decorating with paint pens or markers. Encourage students to doodle around shapes, add more patterns, and include their own creative flourishes. Stick-on gems, dot stickers, or shiny details (swirls of glitter glue where YOU put blobs of it around for the kids to swirl with a finger) really make the artwork POP. This final stage ties the collaborative artwork together and ensures every student feels proud of their part.

This process shows teachers how to create a beginner-friendly collaborative art project using free resources in any primary or elementary classroom. It’s easy painting, fun, and a great way to help students connect through group art.


School mural in warm and cool tones, created by 35 children using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
Created by 35 primary students, this warm and cool-toned tennis mural used Pattern Play Collaborative Art to guide its layered design.
Cool-coloured collaborative art made by 120 junior students over three sessions using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
‘Striving for Excellence’ is a layered, cool-coloured group artwork made over three sessions by 120 junior primary children using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
Mixed-colour collaborative painting by 600 public participants using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
‘Community’ showcases a layered, mixed-colour artwork created by 600 people in a live art event using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach.
Easy Collaborative Art Podcast Episode 1 title graphic in blue and grey on a white background.

Easy Collaborative Art Podcast – Episode 1: What Is Collaborative Art – and Why Does This Podcast Exist?

Quick Takeaway

What is collaborative art? It’s a way for people of all ages and abilities to create together, exploring, playing, and adding their own unique touch. 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, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources. In this post, you’ll discover how collaborative art works, why it’s so engaging, and how to start your own group projects with ease.

🎧 Listen to ‘What Is Collaborative Art – and Why Does This Podcast Exist?’

Listen on Spotify

🎧 Listen to the podcast trailer here. Prefer another app? Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your favourite podcast player.


Episode Summary

In this first episode of the Easy Collaborative Art Podcast, we explore what collaborative art is and why it’s such a powerful way to bring people together. I share how Pattern Play Collaborative Art works, who it’s designed for, and why you don’t need to be “good at art” to create something meaningful with a group. If you’re an art teacher, facilitator, or simply someone who wants to make creative moments inclusive and fun, this episode is for you to be introduced to the Pattern Play style of collaborative art.

Episode Highlights

  • What is collaborative art?
    Collaborative art is all about creating something together where the process matters just as much as the final result.
  • The 3 simple stages of Pattern Play.
    Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling! provide a beginner-friendly structure that makes group creativity both easy and enjoyable.
  • Who this podcast is for.
    This approach is perfect for art teachers, group facilitators, parents, or anyone wanting to lead joyful, inclusive, and stress-free creative sessions.


Episode Transcript

Hello and welcome to the Easy Collaborative Art Podcast!
I’m Charndra—a social artist, your creative guide, and the creator of Pattern Play Collaborative Art, and I’m glad you’re here.

This short introductory episode will answer a big question—what is collaborative art?—and give you a feel for who this podcast is for, how it works, and why I created it. By the end of this episode, you’ll know exactly how this podcast can help you confidently lead creative group art sessions that are fun, inclusive, and surprisingly easy.


Who This Podcast Is For

So—who is this podcast for?

You might be an art teacher looking for a fresh way to spark connection in your classroom…
You might be a group facilitator or community worker wanting a creative activity that feels welcoming and achievable…
Or maybe you’re a parent or volunteer who wants to make something fun and meaningful with your family.

Wherever you’re coming from—if you want to bring people together through creative group art, you’re in the right place.

And here’s the best part:
You don’t need to be “good at art” to do this. The approach works for absolute beginners and experienced artists alike. It’s inclusive, adaptable, and has just enough structure to make group creativity feel simple—even when it looks like chaos at first!


What Is Collaborative Art?

Collaborative art is simply creating something together—where the process matters just as much as the final result.

The way I approach it is through Pattern Play Collaborative Art:
A flexible, beginner-friendly method where people of all ages create together using simple patterns—spirals, circles, arches, dots, dashes, and a hundred other pattern ideas I’ve developed over the years.

We build the artwork layer by layer—starting playful, then adding colour and detail until the canvas feels alive and uniquely “ours.”

The best part? Every project turns out differently, but always with a strong sense of joy, connection, and shared effort. It’s great fun!


How It Works — The 3 Stages

The process is simple—and I’ll guide you through it step by step here on the podcast.

It’s built around three easy stages:

  1. Messy Playing – The freeing, colourful first layer. Bigger brushes, lots of energy in the brushwork, no pressure. You cover the whole canvas and have fun.
  2. Exploring – This is where you slow down, layering in patterns, contrast, and rhythm. Several layers happen.
    Tip: Use smaller brushes as the layers rise to create depth and visual sophistication.
  3. Bling! – Finally, add pops of brightness, highlights, and finishing details to pull everything together. It’s very relaxing.

Each stage supports the next, and the structure helps people feel confident even if they’re new to painting. For experienced artists, the process is just as fun—because it’s about freedom, collaboration, and creative flow.

It’s spontaneous, but not chaotic. Structured, but not strict. I call it structured creativity, or guided spontaneity. And it’s deeply satisfying to watch everything come together as a group.


Why This Podcast Exists

So, why does this podcast exist?

My goal is to help you become a skilled and confident group art facilitator—someone who can guide others in creating something meaningful together.

Whether you’re planning a class activity, a community project, a mural, or just something fun at home on the kitchen table with your kids, grandkids, or friends—this method will help you:

  • Manage group chaos with gentle structure.
  • Embrace creativity at every ability level.
  • Celebrate what happens when we create together.

I’ll share practical tips, real-life stories from projects, and ideas to help you adapt the process to suit your own group—big or small.


Are You Ready to Get Started?

If you’d like to try this for yourself, I’ve got a free gift for you.

You can download my Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art—a simple, step-by-step PDF to help you create your first collaborative painting project at home with your family or maybe dive straight in with a group you run.

Just head to the Podcast menu on my website, paintingaroundisfun.com, and you’ll find the show notes for this episode—with a form to grab your free guide.


Thank you so much for listening!

I hope this podcast gives you the tools, confidence, and encouragement to start your own collaborative art journey—one brushstroke at a time.

Key Takeaways:

  • This podcast is your guide to creating art that brings people together.
  • Let’s make art more about connection than perfection.
  • Start simple. Start messy. Just start.

💡 Related Links & Resources


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Below is a quick ‘How to Start’ guide if you’re wondering what collaborative art is and how to use it with younger children.

Imagine you are an early childhood educator with a class of preschoolers or kindergarten students and want to guide them through their very first group art project (without losing your mind).

Here’s a simple process you might follow:

Step 1: Messy Playing

Begin with play. Give each child a brush or sponge and let them explore bold strokes, dots, and swirls of colour. Don’t worry about neatness—this stage is all about fun, freedom, and getting comfortable. When children see their marks mixing together, they experience firsthand what collaborative art is: creating something as a group, not just alone.

Step 2: Exploring

Add simple, child-friendly patterns. Use the Pattern Play resources in the free Beginner’s Guide or encourage the children to repeat shapes they already know—like circles, wiggly worms, or clusters of raindrops and Cat’s Ears: ‘V V’. They can copy patterns, or invent their own. Tip for teachers: provide a different brush size each layer so the children can notice how their artwork becomes more detailed. This step helps them see how their individual contributions connect to the larger group art project.

Step 3: Bling!

Invite the children to decorate. Paint pens or markers, stickers, or dot makers are perfect at this age. They can doodle around patterns, trace over lines, or add bright finishing touches with the stickers in little clusters. These stick-on gems or shiny dot stickers can add extra excitement. The bling step helps the artwork come together, and each child leaves proud of their part in the collaborative piece.

This simple process shows early childhood educators what collaborative art is in practice: a creative, beginner-friendly way to help children explore, play, paint and work together while making a group art project they can all feel part of.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about connection and creativity.


Warm-coloured collaborative art made by 600 people during a public art project using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
‘Conversation’ was made by 600 visitors contributing warm-coloured layers to a public artwork guided by the Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach.
Cool-coloured collaborative painting made by 30 children in one day using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art method.
‘Growing Together’ is a collaborative artwork in cool colours, painted in one day by 30 children using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art method.
Warm-toned group artwork painted by 20 children using collaborative Pattern Play techniques.
Created by 20 children, ‘Our Fiery Circles’ is a joint collaborative group artwork made with warm colours and the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process.