Title | : | Bing: Paint Day (Bing Bunny) |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.72 (424 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0385750218 |
Format Type | : | Hardcover |
Number of Pages | : | 24 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2004-02-10 |
Genre | : |
Bing Bunny is a lovable, feisty preschool character created by Ted Dewan, who was short-listed for the Kate Greenaway Medal for illustration. Bing Bunny tackles preschool challenges such as getting dressed, eating breakfast, and going to the park in his own charming style—and always with a sense of humor. In an exciting new illustration style for Dewan, Bing Bunny has a freshness and friendliness that is both appealing and different, and sure to be a hit with toddlers and preschoolers. Bing: Paint Day is a celebration of color, paint, making pictures, and making a mess! Painting pictures—it’s a Bing thing!
Editorial : From Booklist Reviewed with Dewan's Bing: Get Dressed. PreS. It's hard to know what's more fun here, the computer-collage art or the satisfying way Dewan captures a child's world. The child is bunny-boy Bing. In Get Dressed, he and stuffed animal Flop awake, and Flop starts facilitating the dressing with comments every parent will recognize: take off the pajamas; can you put the shirt on by yourself? Bing gets a "good for you" as he completes each layer, but alas, when he's all dressed he wets himself and the process begins again. In Paint Day, a splash of each color helps Bing paint all sorts of nice pictures (with some parental advice from Flop), until a spill makes all the colors mush together. With eye-catching illustrations in neon-bright hues, these small books will easily attract children, and their easy-going message--messes sometimes happen--will reassure them. Each book ends with the phrase, "It's a Bing thing," but it's every kid's thing, too. Ilene C
I absolutely love this book! Great for children and adults alike. I highly recommend her work, her YouTube Channel is amazing! Her teachings are phenomenal and she has helped me to see that I too am more than enough! If you ever feel unseen, unheard, and dismissed in life than her work is for you!
As children growing up in the 60s and 70s the motto was that children are to be seen and not heard and unfortunately many of us came from homes like that and we didn't receive the sincere validation that has human beings is so vitally important for our development as kids.
Lisa walks you through her journey, through the muck and the mire and then she takes you on a journey of recovery. Now I just lace up my tennies, open my heart, hit the road, and talk to God! Though occasionally I run out of breath, thanks to Janet, now I never run out of prayer topics or inspiration!
Lynn D. I would feel comfortable reading it as a casual introduction to the Israeli-Egyptian conflict, for pl
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