Nature Journal Color Ideas for Kids

Montessori Art in the Natural World: Kids Nature Journal Color Lessons

What Nature Journal Color Lessons Are

Nature journal color lessons encourage children to notice and record the colors they see outside. Kids can use words, drawing, and color tools to capture what they observe. This supports careful looking and creative decision-making. It also helps children discover that color is not just “red” or “green.” Color becomes a range of shades, tones, and surprises.

color wheel with 12 colors

Why Color Observation Helps Kids See More

When children hunt for color details, they slow down. They begin comparing objects that seem similar at first glance. They might notice that one green is cooler and another is warmer. They may also see patterns of color repeating across a landscape. This kind of noticing supports deeper attention and richer creative choices.

Ways to Record Color in a Journal

Kids can record color through descriptive language, through color swatches, or through colored sketches. Some children enjoy writing color words, and others prefer matching a pencil or crayon to what they see. Either approach builds awareness. Encourage children to record what they truly observe, not what they think something “should” look like. This keeps the journal honest and engaging.

Example notes:

  • “Bright green with tiny yellow edges.”
  • “Dark brown with gray patches.”
  • “Blue that looks lighter near the horizon.”
picture of kids outdoor nature exploring

Simple Outdoor Color Prompts

Outdoor time can be energetic, so one clear focus helps. Color works well because it is everywhere. These prompts give children a purpose without turning the activity into a checklist. Keep sessions short at first, then extend as attention grows. Color lessons for kids work best when they feel playful.

Prompt ideas:

  • Find three different greens
  • Record warm colors you see today
  • Record cool colors you see today
  • Notice light and dark versions of one color
  • Find the most surprising color you can spot

Bringing Color Learning Back Inside

After outdoor journaling, children can revisit their notes and add small details later. This can be a calming continuation rather than a second “assignment.” They might refine a sketch, add labels, or deepen color areas. The journal becomes a growing record of their noticing. For deeper guidance and creative structure, explore my books and art teaching resources.

Montessori Art in the Natural World: Kids Art Journaling, Part I] color theory

Montessori Art Early Childhood Guide for 13 months to 6 years, auhor spramani elaun, cover with art palette, paintbrush, pencil, scissorcs and art shapes in red, green, yellow and blue

One Step Further:

This Outdoor Journal Checklist will help you guide your students and keep them on track to make sure they’re implementing both scientific and artistic principles during their expedition. You can print it out or save it on your phone so you have it with you the next time you lead your students outside to journal.

A Short Cut Just for You

I think nature journaling is the perfect way to introduce art to Montessori students, since it relies so heavily on natural and scientific observations. It opens to the door for so many more interesting art projects!

If you know that you want to bring art into your classroom but aren’t sure how to do it, check out my Theming Art & The Natural World

A Short Cut Just for You

montessori art early childhood

I explore the importance and how-to of color theory in my book, Kids Color Theory. I share the reasons kids should be able to identify primary pigments and secondary color, as well as how to create art and color mixing Montessori environments to allow kids to thrive as little artists. Plus, I even give you 11 color-mixing lessons to make your life so much easier! You can purchase the book here.

Kids Color Theory

Of course, understanding the principles of color theory is just the first part; to be able to share that knowledge with your students involves creating fun, exciting, and effective art activities. My book includes 11 art lessons, but I’ve created an entire curriculum that revolves around this essential art concept. Kids Color Theory Practice & Process Curriculum has more than three dozen color theory lessons for early childhood, lower elementary, and upper elementary Montessori students. And every lesson is laid out, step-by-step, so all you have to do is read up and follow the instructions! To purchase Color Theory Curriculum for your classroom, click here.

cover of shapes traced and painted, with a drawing pencil
This is the cover of Childrens drawing curriculum cover, the art has a hand doodle with colorful bubble wrap texture on the back.
arts and craft book by Spramani Elaun

Spramani’s Books

Teach children visual arts

Curriculum For Children

Get step-by-step art curriculum to teach visual arts. Check out our 4 art curriculums:
Painting
Drawing
Color Theory
Clay Modeling

All rights reserved © 2026, Nature of Art®


Nature of Art® provides art pedagogy

This website and its blogs supports individual educators in teaching children visual arts. It does not authorize professional development, staff training, or adaptation of the Science Art Method™ for institutional use.

No part of this blog may be used or be reproduced in any manner whatsoever including reproducing, publishing, performing, and making any adaptions of the work – including translation into another foreign language without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

Nature of Art® Publishing P.O. Box 443 Solana Beach, California 92075.

TERMS OF SERVICE