Rangoli Tracing Page 5
Here's another simple rangoli pattern for the kids to trace. It's not only good pencil practice, but it is fun to draw the symmetrical pattern too. Younger children can trace within the dotted lines.
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Here's another simple rangoli pattern for the kids to trace. It's not only good pencil practice, but it is fun to draw the symmetrical pattern too. Younger children can trace within the dotted lines.
This pretty rangoli design is going to be tricky to trace. Make it a little easier if you like by tracing within the lines rather than direclty on them.
Our third rangoli tracing page follows a fairly simple square design. This is a good starter tracing page for younger children, who can draw between the lines with a felt tip pen or crayon. Older kids can draw along all the lines.
This second of our rangoli tracing pages also suggests a dotted grid, with loops forming around it. Start by drawing in the circles and then see how carefully you can trace the loops. Tricky!
Our first rangoli tracing page echoes the sort of traditional rangoli design where a grid of dots is set up and then lines drawn around them in a continuous, loopy pattern. It's a real study in pencil control!
Here is a really lovely, intricate but also pleasingly simple rangoli design to colour in! It would be interesting to see how differently a group of children would interpret the pattern, all using the same colours...
This is a traditional grid-based rangoli design, where dots are first marked and then loopy lines drawn around them to create a clever pattern. You see these drawn in white chalk powder, and then possibly embellished with other colours.
This pretty circular design is fun to colour in. Use bright rangoli colours or do something completely different!
Trace the word "rangoli" and colour in the pretty picture...
Here's some fun handwriting practise for Diwali. Kids can trace the letter of the word "rangoli" until they can write it on their own, and then colour in the rangoli designs.