Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Clothespin Debke Dancers Tutorial

Today's Ramadan craft consists of making these adorable Debke dancers wearing Keffiyeh and painted in red, green, black and white. We had started making just one, but he looked super lonely, and since Debke is a line dance, we realized he really needed a partner.  Now that we have found them so easy to make, we might make a whole troupe!

Clothespin Debke Dancers Tutorial
Dabke is an Arab folk dance native to the Levant. It is popular in Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia. A line dance, it is widely performed at weddings and joyous occasions. The line forms from right to left. The leader of the dabke heads the line, alternating between facing the audience and the other dancers.


Supplies
Wood glue
Sharpie fine point tip pen
Box cutters
2 wood clothes pins for each dancer
Paintbrush
Red, black, green, and white acrylic paint


On the first clothespin, use the box cutters to chop off the bottom 1/2 inch.  This clothespin will be your main figure that will stand, so try to make your cut even, or use a little sandpaper to help. 

On the second clothespin, cut 1 1/2 inches off the bottom.  These bottom pieces will be your arms and you can discard the rest of this clothespin after you make the cut.

Take the arms you just cut off and glue them to the first clothespin right under the head area.  Leave it along for a few minutes to dry.

Once your clothespoin is dry: start painting!  We painted the pants green, the shirt red and the shoes black.  We also painted a Keffiyeh that was super easy.  Just paint a white triangle around the dancers neck and put a few black spots on it randomly.  Remember, the Keffiyeh shouldn't look like it's laying on a desk, but worn, so try to make it a little uneven.


This is what your finished painted little Debke dancer should look like.  We initially gave him a beard, but decided the second dancer would be clean shaven for variety.  We used the Sharpie fine point tip for the beard, hair, and eyes.

Close up of the two Debke dancers together.  We added a little bit of glue to their hands so they could stand a little more stable. Plus, Debke dancers do hold hands, so this worked out!

And this is what they look like from the back.

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