DIY

Make an Easy Kid-Friendly Collage Inspired by Pixar’s ‘Soul’

The morning after the Oscars are held, I check the entertainment news to see who won only one category, “Best Animated Feature,” and this year Pixar’s Soul gave the company another trophy for a feature film release.

One of the things that I loved about this film was the blending of Pixar’s clean, computer animation style with what looked like some mid-century style line character drawings.

Here is Soul director Pete Docter describing the influences and evolution of different character styles.

In honor of the big win for Soul this year, here is a fun little kid-friendly, Soul-inspired collage using upcycled materials.

First, find a nice piece of cardboard and paint it with some “cool” colors, like blues, purples, greens, or pinks. Check out my post on “cutout silhouette” postcard prints on a fun way to blend colors.

Start with a simple blended backdrop to look like the “Great Before” by painting an upcycled cardboard surface with acrylics.

The Souls

For the “souls” themselves, Docter said the look comes partly from a material called “aerogel,” the lightest material on Earth. Since we don’t have that, we’ll use something much easier to find, pom poms and some googly eyes, to make a little soul.

Use one large and one small light blue pom pom and glue them on the painting. Glue the googly eyes on the larger “head” pom pom.

To add more details, make a mouth from felt or place a small rhinestone or felt dot on the “chest” area. Dab a small bit of pink paint on the face for the “cheeks.”

A pair of pom poms and googly eyes stand-in for a “soul.”

The Counselors (Kindergarten Teachers)

This line style, Docter said, was partially inspired by the early 1900s style of Pablo Picasso’s cubist experiments in taking a three-dimensional form and making all sides visible on a two-dimensional surface. One artist on the Soul team also came up with the idea of bending wire in the character shapes, then projecting the shadows on a wall, as a guide to how the characters will look. Very cool.

Personally, I also saw the fun line style of the jazzy 1940s and ’50s UPA (United Productions of America) Animation Studio projects, like the type used in the classic cartoon Gerald McBoing-Boing.

Related Post

For our purposes, there’s really only one easy way to make a cool, curvy, squiggly line for a collage: string!

Use just white yarn or plain old packing string for this one.

The ropy, wiry Counselor Jerry can be created with simple string art.

Draw the character you want (lightly) on the background surface, and little by little, glue the string over the design. Tacky glue works best for younger crafters, but I used a glue gun. Once finished, take a small black paintbrush and fill in the “eyes,” then lightly dab some white or light pink or blue paint inside the line image to give it a glow.

My collage features 22 and the Jerry B, but do any favorite characters you want, or design your own.

Add a little hint of the movie logo with a handpainted “sun.”

Finally, if you want to add the cool, hand-painted looking style of the movie’s title logo, find another piece of cardboard, and simply paint the “O” on it with acrylic or craft paint. Stick it on the collage with a piece of double-sided mounting tape. You can do the whole logo if you want, but I really like the way the sunny “O”  looks floating on its own.

There it is! An easy, kid-friendly collage with a lot of color, a lot of character, and most importantly, a lot of “soul.”

Little string and pom pom collage: easy enough for kids, cool enough for older souls. Image: Lisa Tate
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This post was last modified on May 1, 2021 10:12 am

Lisa Tate

Lisa Kay Tate is a veteran feature writer with nearly 25 years experience in newspaper, magazine and freelance writing. She and her husband, a history and world geography teacher, live on the edge of "New Texico" where they keep busy raising their two geeklings and sharing space with their dog, Sirius Black, and cat, Loki.

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