Ball Art for Preschoolers & Toddlers – Let’s Paint!


Ever hear of ball painting! It’s so unique and fun! Let’s do preschool ball art and crafts today! This very simple ball art painting idea is great for even the youngest artists because in this painting project, the balls do all the work. The process of this ball art is fun and easy and the finished artwork can often be surprising!

Let’s do a ball art project!

Painting With Balls Project

If you have ever walked through a modern art museum and thought…my toddler or preschooler could have painted this, we have the perfect ball art project for you!  I love this easy art idea for kids of all ages using balls to paint.

Related: Basketball facts for kids made fun! <–you can even print them out!

Grab some balls you have around the house: golf balls, tennis balls, Whiffle balls, marbles, sensory balls, dryer balls…whatever you can find because we are going to do a painting project with all those balls.

Watch Our Short Video Tutorial on Painting with Balls

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Supplies Needed to Create Preschool Ball Artwork

Note: This project was messy — no kid can resist squeezing or smooshing the paint!

Directions for Art Project with Balls & Paint

Set-Up

Put puddles of paint onto a paper plate and the canvas or poster board in the bottom of the cardboard box.

Step 1

Dip a ball into the paint puddle. Start with covering at least part of the ball.

Step 2

Place ball on canvas or poster board and start rolling the ball around leaving trails of paint.

Painting With Balls project for toddlers and preschoolers - canvas in the bottom of the cardboard box with paint-filled balls and trails of color.
Roll the balls around the canvas leaving a colorful trail of paint behind.

Step 3

Repeat with the same ball, other balls, the same color of paint or other colors of paint.

Painting With Balls- child holding up canvas of ball art with bright colors of orange, red, green, yellow and red
Let’s see that finished ball art!

Learning Opportunities with this Art Project

Do your kids enjoy making a mess?   I know that mine do!  And one of our favorite ways is Painting With Balls.

Try these conversations and little art experiments while you are painting with balls:

  • Race between two similar balls.   Dip one in plain paint and dip the other in paint mixed with either flour or cornstarch. Guess which ball would roll faster.   Why did you make that guess?
  • Does a ball roll faster if the canvas is tilted slightly or at a steep slant?
  • What happens when a ball dipped in red paint rolls over a ball path of yellow or blue paint?   What happens when all the colors smear together?
  • Which ball spreads the most paint?   Which one spreads the least?   We found that the tennis ball had the most coverage, while the dryer ball just left speckles.

Messy Art Projects for Kids

I got to thinking about the importance of being messy with kids sometimes from the book, Mess: The Manual of Accidents and Mistakes, by Keri Smith. This is such a fun book filled with activities and ideas of ways to make art from messes, or rather to appreciate mess as a form of art (I am starting to wonder if by her standards I have some budding Rembrandt’s).

The “manual” encourages us as the reader to destroy the book with our mess art. The part of me who married a librarian cringes at that thought. Our copy is pristine, but we had fun making a mess on a canvas  we had lying about.

One of the entries suggested that we make a mess by rolling and smearing. This reminded me of the activity I read about on where the kids experience physics and gravity by rolling marbles on a canvas. We didn’t have marbles, but we did have a giant canvas and a variety of different types of balls!

This was a blast!

Materials

  • canvas (or poster board)
  • acrylic paint
  • paper plates to put paint on for dipping the balls
  • old box to make a tray to set your canvas in
  • variety of balls (or marbles)
  • paint shirts, apron or smock

Instructions

    Put puddles of paint onto a paper plate and the canvas or poster board in the bottom of the cardboard box.

    Dip a ball into the paint puddle.

    Start with covering at least part of the ball.

    Place ball on canvas or poster board and start rolling the ball around leaving trails of paint.

    Repeat with the same ball, other balls, the same color of paint or other colors of paint.

Here’s some advice on how to keep your toddler quiet in public places like church!

Have your kids made a mess lately? What did they think of this painting with balls project? How did your art turn out?



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