When morning frost is in the forecast, salt to melt the ice is thrown onto the pier…
Which is what all those specks of white dots are in this image.
It can get slippery sometimes!
Walk carefully!
When morning frost is in the forecast, salt to melt the ice is thrown onto the pier…
Which is what all those specks of white dots are in this image.
It can get slippery sometimes!
Walk carefully!
On March 25 2019, my Vancouver Public Labyrinth will celebrate its birthday.
That’s me in the background holding a box of chalk while wearing my Red Labyrinth T-Shirt.
I was chalking Hearts at the end of the Labryses.
That’s me and my friend Uthman walking my Chalk Labyrinth I drew over the weekend in Olympic Village, Vancouver…
chalk labyrinth in the middle of granville st last night. guy who made it described it as "urban acupuncture" 🔥🍇
— Sophie MacLean (@SophieMacLean3) January 27, 2019
. . . Robson Square Labyrinth makes the backdrop for this KPop Dance Cover . . .
Four Section pass-through Labyrinth chalked in my usual spot at the foot of Manitoba Street in Olympic Village.
I was satisfied and happy with how it eventually turned out.
There was so much I learned about the process of making Multi-Section Pass-Through Labyrinths that will help inform and improve my future designs.
“At Embodied~Play,
one of the common experiences we have is to approach our own edges,
not just the children, but also the adults.
What are we comfortable with?
What newness can we try today?
What do we need to approach this edge?
Do we need trust, autonomy, spotting, space, slowness, a hand held, a watching eye, a team?
Each child has different edges,
and so this is where a flexible container really helps,
and where structured activities or one site-fits-all rules can really be a disservice to our children’s learning.
Embodied play, big impact, exploring space and our own boundaries, trusting our bodies and our judgement.”
A different angle on the Heart shaped Labyrinth I drew a few days ago along the Seawall in False Creek, Vancouver . . .