We sculpt a lamb from plasticine. Plasticine lamb

Let's start sculpting a lamb from the head, for which we roll a large ball out of white plasticine, and two smaller balls for the ears from black plasticine. For the tongue, we use a little red plasticine, also rolled into a small ball.

Give the resulting details a pear-shaped shape.


We squeeze the tongue and ears with our fingers and get such droplets.


We fasten the ears on the top of the head.


With the help of a stack, we make holes for the nose and cut through the mouth.


Gently stick the tongue in your mouth.


Now let's start sculpting the body. Roll up two balls - one large for the body, the second small for the neck.


We give the large ball the shape of an oval, the small one - an oval, narrowed on one side.


Attach the neck to the body using half a toothpick.


For the peephole, roll six balls: two blue small, two white more and two black smallest


We put black balls on white ones - these are the pupils, and we flatten the blue ones - these will be the eyelids.


We stick the eyelids on the eyes, and the eyes on the face of the lamb.


Roll 4 round balls of the same size for the legs.


Each ball, in turn, is rolled into a sausage of the same length.


Roll 4 sausages out of just four small balls and bend them in half. We get the hooves.


Stick the hooves to the soles of the feet, and the legs themselves to the body.


Let's roll many small balls out of black plasticine.


We stick around the body of the sheep with balls - it will be wool.


We place the head on a toothpick and also stick it around with balls. Plasticine sheep, ready.

Plasticine herringbone:

To mold a Christmas tree, take green plasticine and roll it into a large ball.


Roll the ball into a cone.


Using scissors, we make cuts in a circle, placing each branch of the tree in a checkerboard pattern.


From a small piece of brown plasticine, we will mold such a stump and stick a half of a toothpick into it - this will be the trunk for our Christmas tree.


Place the plasticine tree on the trunk. Here's a beauty turns out. Optionally, you can decorate it with small multi-colored plasticine balls.

Making various animals from plasticine is a simple and exciting activity for people of absolutely any age. Since making a lamb is one of the simplest tasks, further we will focus on this process.

First of all, you need to take a strip of white plasticine, a little brown and just a little black. Plasticine softens in the hands so that it can be shaped into any shape. Then the white piece is divided into three unequal parts, one of which will become the head, the second - the body, and the third - the curls of the sheep. For reliability, it is advisable to connect both parts with a match.

When the sheep frame is ready, you should start creating curls. Plucking off pieces from this mass, you should roll them into thin tubes and roll them up with curls. Already such ready-made curls are gradually glued to the entire body of the lamb.

To give the sheep a natural look, it is necessary, of course, to take care of the ears, legs and tail. All this is made from black plasticine. Thick reliable sausages are created for the legs, the ears are thinly rolled and twisted, and the tail is created by analogy with curls.

When all the details are attached, you need to add attractiveness to the sheep by working on its face. From black plasticine, you can blind eyes and a neat nose. Cutting the muzzle with a stack, you need to give the sheep a joyful look, and then your craft will truly delight you.

Having mastered the principle of sculpting on the cheapest material, you can try to mold a figurine from polymer clay, a self-hardening mass, or papier-mâché. Then the craft will be able to decorate your interior, turn into a trinket or become an excellent gift to someone close.

And if you mold a figurine from marzipan or sugar mastic, then you can safely seat it on a birthday cake. This will be especially relevant when celebrating the New Year of the Sheep according to the Eastern calendar.

We also offer you a short video tutorial on sculpting a slightly different sheep:

Make this sheep family together with the child. The craft is not very difficult, children 4-5 years old can handle it. Talk to your child about these pets before starting work, or after you finish, talk about what they give people.

Sheep are descendants of wild rams once tamed by humans. The lamb mother is called a lamb. And a male lamb is called a ram. From distant ancestors he got twisted horns. Sheep babies are lambs.

Sheep give people wool from which they knit socks, mittens, sweaters and make warm fabrics. Fur coats are sewn from sheep skins. Sheep give milk - though not as much as cows - from which feta cheese and cheese are made. And, of course, meat. Sheep don't like to graze alone. Usually they are grazed in large herds - flocks. The sheep themselves can no longer do without human help. They are looked after by a shepherd-shepherd. He drives them to new pastures, protects them from wolves.

Each flock has a leader - all the sheep always obey him and repeat everything after him. For example, if you put a stick in the way of the sheep, the first sheep will jump over it, and everyone else will jump after it. And they will jump in the same place, even if the stick is removed - this is such a herd instinct!

Do you know where the saying "Looks like a ram at a new gate" came from? Usually domestic animals, cows, for example, know their yard very well and return to it from the pasture. The lambs do not remember the way home well, and if the owner painted or changed the fence and gates, they do not dare to enter the courtyard for a long time.

Well, now let's move on to sculpting. If you have forgotten how to sculpt balls, sausages, cones, etc. from plasticine, read the article.

To work you need:

  • Plasticine white, gray and black
  • Modeling board, stack
  • Four matches
  • Ballpoint pen or fine cocktail stick

First we blind the lamb. Take half a standard white plasticine stick. Divide it into two parts - a small one for the head and neck (about 1/3 of a piece), and a large one for the body.

Roll up an oblong ellipsoid ball from a large piece. This is the body of a lamb.

Divide the remaining piece of plasticine approximately in half, and roll a short and thick cylinder sausage from one half. This is the neck of a lamb.

We will apply the neck and torso to each other.

Roll an ellipsoid head from the remaining piece of plasticine.

Let's make the sheep's wool curly. To do this, take a ballpoint pen or a thin cocktail stick and apply embossed prints on the lamb's body and neck.

Roll a ball from a small piece of white or black plasticine, flatten it into a cake and stick it to the back of the body. This is a sheep's tail.

Roll up two identical plump sausages from black plasticine and flatten them into oval pancakes. These are sheep ears. Let's stick them to the head. Let's roll up two tiny balls-eyes and stick them on the muzzle too.

Now the sheep need legs. We will make them from matches. Break off four matches by about a third.

Let's stick the matches-legs into the body of the lamb. Now everything is ready!

Surely, your child has a favorite wool item, such as a sweater, hat or socks. Be sure to tell him what kind of pet people have these benefits. In turn, we suggest you mold a little plasticine lamb to have fun and use it. The main advantage of these pets is fluffy wool, so you need to try to show this difference using plasticine.

1. Use beige plasticine to sculpt the lamb's body. Pinch off a little and roll up the oval head.

2. Stick two eyes, add a pink nose and make a distinctive stack cut.

3. Blind another similar piece, but twice the size. It will be used on the torso. If it turns out that the plasticine of the desired color is not enough, use another piece or even spoiled material, because later the body will be covered with a layer of thick wool.

4. To create a sheep's coat, use yellow or any other plasticine. Knead it in your hands, then begin to pinch off small portions and roll the balls with your fingers.

5. Cover the body of the lamb with yellow lumps, placing them close to each other.

6. Connect the head and fluffy torso. If in doubt about the reliability of the fastening, use a match.

7. To sculpt four legs, take four servings of beige plasticine and form small tubes.

8. Attach the limbs to the torso for stability with matches.

9. Continue the fur coat on top of the head to complete the fluffy lamb look. Also, don't forget about the small ears.

10. And the last spicy detail - a miniature ponytail.

That's all. The plasticine sheep is ready. Now you can send the product to the refrigerator to strengthen the plasticine. This trick will allow your child to play with the new toy for much longer.

The final view of the craft.

Plasticine sculpting is the most popular type of children's creativity. Such an activity is not only exciting, but also very useful for the full development of the baby. All the skills learned in the sculpting process will undoubtedly come in handy for your child in elementary school. Today we have prepared an interesting and simple master class on modeling a lamb from plasticine. Before the kid begins to independently work with the mass, you need to study the technique of this lesson and show the creation of a figure by your own example.

So, we use the following materials and tools for sculpting a lamb:

  • blocks of white, pink, brown and black plasticine;
  • stacks;
  • toothpick;
  • ball pen.
  • How to make a ram from plasticine

    Step 1. We begin the sculpting process by creating the base of the craft - the torso and head. To do this, thoroughly knead one white block of plasticine mass in our palms. We roll it into a short roller.

    Then we bend the figure as follows.

    The top of the workpiece is the head, and the bottom is the torso. The lamb base is ready.

    Step 2. We also need to mold four legs. We pinch off four pieces from the second bar of white plasticine and turn them into balls.

    Then we roll them into sausages and attach them to the body.

    Step 3. From the pink shade of the mass we blind a couple of ears. First, we form bulky droplets from pieces of plasticine, and then flatten them and squeeze the sharp tip. We attach them to the head of the animal.

    Step 4. Now we start sculpting the wool of the lamb. Cut off miniature pieces from the white bar, and then create balls from them.

    We glue small parts to the body. We arrange them as tightly as possible.

    Then we give the curls an interesting texture, pushing them with the tip of a ballpoint pen.

    Step 5. We mold the horns from brown plasticine. Let's prepare two thin sausages, flatten them and draw a texture in the form of stripes on both sides with a stack.

    We fix the blanks of the horns on the lamb's head and give them a beautiful curved shape.

    Step 6. We complement the face with eyeballs and an oblong nose made of black plasticine. Draw the animal's mouth under the nose.