KENDAL based papermaker teams up with local artist to host a nature workshop.

James Cropper and local artist Amy Williams partnered with St Oswald's CE Primary School this week to host a nature workshop, which saw pupils embrace the outdoors with poetry and creative line-art for a book which will be showcased next month.

The project tasked 15 children from years five and six to celebrate the great outdoors and the natural world around them, with the creation of drawings and poems which are being compiled into a children’s nature and conservation book.

Taking inspiration from the transformative nature book, The Lost Words by Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris, the children chose to research a species of animal, bird or plant that can be found in the British countryside that they knew nothing about. 

The Westmorland Gazette:

They then wrote poetry and created artwork in a Zen Doodle style - a form of line drawing incorporating intricate areas of patterned designs - with amazing results.

As well as a celebration of the creatures and plants which share our lives, the creative outcomes, which includes sketches of birds, small mammals, trees and fungi in all their characterful glory, nods to a new category in the well-known James Cropper Wainwright Prize – a literary prize which is awarded annually to the best work of nature and conservation writing.

The Westmorland Gazette: Amy Williams guiding children through the workshop.Amy Williams guiding children through the workshop. (Image: James Cropper)

The poems and art will be assembled into a book that will be presented to the school on World Book Day by Jordan Scott, the Project Lead at James Cropper, and showcased thereafter in the refurbished school library, which James Cropper helped to fund last year as part of its company community support programme.

Amy Williams, a local artist who led the workshops said: “It was wonderful to see the interest the children had in local wildlife, and how they used their imaginations to fuel their creativity and appreciate the beauty of our world. I can’t wait to see the finished book.”

Kim Allder, a teacher at St Oswald’s School says: ”We have thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to study poems about nature during this project. It was lovely working with Amy and introducing the children to a different style of artwork. We are all very excited to see the work published in our own special book."