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paintingpainting child

Basic child canvas painting ideas

  1. On the Insert tab, select Shapes, and then select a shape from the menu that appears.
  2. On the slide canvas, click and drag to draw the shape.
  3. Select the Shape tab on the ribbon. Open the Shape Styles gallery to quickly add a color and style (including shading) to the selected shape.


Basic tasks for creating a PowerPoint presentation

PowerPoint presentations work like slide shows. To convey a message or a story, you break it down into slides. Think of each slide as a blank canvas for the pictures and words that help you tell your story.

When you open PowerPoint, you’ll see some built-in themes and templates. A theme is a slide design that contains matching colors, fonts, and special effects like shadows, reflections, and more.

Shows the Create New presentation from Theme dialog in PowerPoint

  1. On the File tab of the Ribbon, select New, and then choose a theme. PowerPoint shows you a preview of the theme, with four color variations to choose from on the right side.
  2. Click Create, or pick a color variation and then click Create.

Insert a new slide

Shows New Slide button on Home tab of the ribbon in PowerPoint

  • On the Home tab, click the bottom half of New Slide, and pick a slide layout.
  1. On the File tab, choose Save.
  2. Pick or browse to a folder.
  3. In the File name box, type a name for your presentation, and then choose Save.

Note: If you frequently save files to a certain folder, you can ‘pin’ the path so that it is always available (as shown below).

Save your PowerPoint presentation

Tip: Save your work as you go. Press Ctrl+S often or save the file to OneDrive and let AutoSave take care of it for you.


Shows the Drawing Tools tab on the ribbon in PowerPoint

  1. Select the text.
  2. Under Drawing Tools, choose Format.
  3. Do one of the following:
    • To change the color of your text, choose Text Fill, and then choose a color.
    • To change the outline color of your text, choose Text Outline, and then choose a color.
    • To apply a shadow, reflection, glow, bevel, 3-D rotation, a transform, choose Text Effects, and then choose the effect you want.
  • Change the fonts
  • Change the color of text on a slide
  • Add bullets or numbers to text
  • Format text as superscript or subscript

On the Insert tab, select Pictures, then do one of the following:

Insert image location in the ribbon.

  • To insert a picture that is saved on your local drive or an internal server, choose This Device, browse for the picture, and then choose Insert.
  • (For Microsoft 365 subscribers) To insert a picture from our library, choose Stock Images, browse for a picture, select it and choose Insert.
  • To insert a picture from the web, choose Online Pictures, and use the search box to find a picture. Choose a picture, and then click Insert.


This Artist Mixes a Methane-Reducing Enzyme into His Paint

EVAN SHARMA IS A MULTIDISCIPLINARY artist working at the intersection of art and science. He finds these opposing fields provide a creative friction that enables art to bring people into the conversation around the urgency of climate change. Art is not bound by the confines of science, and yet, science is where real world possibilities, knowledge and solutions are born. Ideas formed in the lab can be expanded on canvas. For Sharma, art is where dreaming happens. Science is where dreams are tested and applied.

During his research, Sharma found that the enzyme monooxygenase (MMO), which reduces methane emissions by up to 70%, could be transferred to cattle, who emit methane at a rate ten times the potency of carbon dioxide. By mixing the enzyme into paint, his 2050 series highlights the complicity of each of us in preserving (or destroying) the landscapes we love.

In 2050 , iconic landscapes thrive again if we, as a society, curb climate change. Each painting depicts the contour of a cow, symbolizing both our society’s reliance on beef–a significant contributor to global warming–and how the MMO enzyme may provide a scientific solution. Sharma’s use of strong red and blue hues symbolizes methane build-up (the gas absorbs red light and reflects blue) in the atmosphere in the absence of collective action. Through a uniquely scientific lens, he presents the viewer with both a utopia and dystopia leaving it to them to choose a future.

Planet Icarus, 2050 series, 2023. Acrylic and methane monooxygenase on canvas, 48″ x 60″.

The World Is Yours, 2050 series, 2023. Acrylic and methane monooxygenase on canvas, 60″ x 96″.

Machu Picchu, 2050 series, 2023. Acrylic and methane monooxygenase on canvas, 60″ x 48″.

Left: Charity Shoal, 2050 Series, 2023. Acrylic and methane monooxygenase on canvas, 36″ x 48″.
Right: Kanchenjunga, 2050 series, 2023. Acrylic paint and methane monooxygenase on canvas, 36″ x 48″.

Evan Sharma is a multidisciplinary artist working at the intersection of art and science.

At the young age of twelve, Sharma was selected to exhibit at The Artist Project, a well-regarded contemporary art fair in Canada, as the youngest artist to ever exhibit there. Now, as an award-winning researcher and STEM major at Queen’s University, his time in the lab serves as inspiration for his art. He also hosts the first artist-run Snapchat channel and uses his platform to educate and rally folks worldwide around climate change. Sharma has been called one of Canada’s most talented young artists by Nuvo magazine, one of Toronto’s best artists by Toronto Life, and one of 5 youths worldwide who are affecting social change (along with Greta Thunberg and Mala Yousafzai). His work is being acquired by collectors in NYC, LA, London, and Dubai. Sharma’s artistic process centers around the idea that we can predict the future we want to see – we all have a choice. His art is often manifested through a hands-on lens of altruism. During COVID-19, his non-profit Covart gathered the work of artists all over the world to be auctioned off, providing over 140,000 meals for Kenyan children whose education was affected by pandemic-related food insecurity.

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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