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Colouring - Smile - Christmas Cards3
Colouring
Christmas Pictures and Cards
Smile International, PO Box 3, Orpington, Kent, BR5 1WZ, UK Tel 01689 870932
Registered Charity No. 1079730 © Smile International 17Jun09
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CONTENTS
ALL YOU NEED IS:
Ten Christmas Story pictures with text
Paper or card
Scissors
Coloured pencils,
crayons or paints
3
Tips and Ideas
4-9
About the Christmas Story – pictures, maps and
background information
Envelopes for cards
10-20
Small A6 colouring cards, plus 1 blank – print 2
on an A4 sheet. You can cut these so they fold
at the side or the top.
21-31
Large A5 colouring cards, plus 1 blank – print
on one A4 sheet and fold in half. GO TO PAGE 21
32-41
Colouring sheets
You might also like to download the
free Christmas Colouring Cards PDF
All Bible quotations are from the New International Version
Free download from:
This PDF may be shared and used freely for home, educational and church purposes
and for charity fund-raising. The PDF and contents are not for commercial reproduction.
GROWNUPS! Use your teaching and craft skills to help disadvantaged children
around the world on a Step Out trip, career break or gap year with Smile International.
Copyright © Smile International
Drawings & illustrations copyright © Beryl L Pratt
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Tips and Ideas
If you are using thin paper, colour in with pencils or crayons,
because wet paints will make the paper crinkle.
If you are using marker pens, place a spare piece of paper
underneath, as the ink sometimes goes right through the paper. If
this happens, cut out the picture and stick it onto one of the blanks.
The blank cards are for you to make your own drawings. You can
get a good effect by printing the blanks on coloured card, and
sticking on a separate drawing made on white paper. You could
also cut out the coloured picture pages and stick on.
To get a better fold, use a ruler to mark a groove along your fold
line. Use a blunt point, like the corner of another ruler or the tip of
a biro that has run out of ink. The idea is to break the fibres of the
paper slightly so that the fold stays flat. Press a teaspoon along
the fold to help flatten it.
You can cut off the card borders so they fit your envelopes. Try out
on some scrap paper first to get the size right.
Don’t forget to sign the backs of the cards!
When you have coloured the Christmas card sheets, scan them
and print more, or have colour photocopies made, so you can
send them to everyone! Keep one for yourself and make up your
own artwork folder.
To make the star look brighter, outline it in
yellow, then draw lots of blue lines coming
out of it. The white spaces and stripy effect
will look like rays of light. Make the sky as
dark as you can.
Cut out the people or animals to make hanging decorations or gift
tags.
Stick the pictures on wrapping paper that needs some extra
decoration.
COL-CPC-p3 © Smile International
www.smileinternational.org
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About the Christmas Story
Mary was a young lady living in Nazareth. The
angel Gabriel brought a message to Mary that
she was chosen to have baby Jesus. This is
sometimes called the “Annunciation” which
means announcement.
In paintings, Mary is often shown wearing blue.
Ordinary people could use a plant dye called
indigo to make blue clothes. Dyes for really
bright blue and purple were extremely
expensive and only kings had them. This is
why it is called Royal Blue. In some paintings
Mary is shown wearing Royal Blue to honour
her place in history as the mother of Jesus.
Mary married Joseph who was a carpenter.
Joseph and Mary had to walk from Nazareth to
Bethlehem to be registered for taxes. This was
about the time that Mary’s baby was due to be
born.
The journey through the hills and countryside
would have taken about a week. The roads
were mostly rough rocky tracks and not at all
like our smooth roads. Donkeys were normally
used to carry people and bags.
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www.smileinternational.org
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There were lots of extra people in Bethlehem,
who also came to be registered. All the guest
rooms were full of these visitors, and Joseph
and Mary could not find a room. They had to
find somewhere else.
They may have stayed in a stable or a villager’s
house. In those days, people kept their animals
in the lower part of the house at night, to keep
them safe. The animals also provided warmth
for the house!
This is where Mary gave birth to baby Jesus.
The only place to put the baby was a manger,
which is a box to hold the animals’ food and hay.
Manger comes from the French word for “eat”.
Hay is very good at staying warm and dry, so the
baby was comfortable.
In those times people wrapped newborn babies in
strips of cloth called “swaddling clothes”. It kept the
baby warm, and made him or her feel safe and
calm. This picture shows the baby before he was
swaddled.
COL-CPC-p5 © Smile International
www.smileinternational.org
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