Profile portrait of Emma smiling on the front step of Smudge Artspace

Emma Dunlop

Founder - Smudge Artspace

A Creative Life, Not Just a Creative Moment

Sep 19, 2025

Why process over product matters in kids’ art

Green Fern

What if the best part of art isn’t the thing you hang on the fridge, but the bit before it? The mixing that turns muddy then suddenly gorgeous, the quiet focus, the surprised “oh!” when paint runs where it shouldn’t. That’s the good stuff. That’s where learning lives.

At Smudge, the making matters most. Process art is play with purpose: try something, notice what happens, try again. No performance. No “right way.” Just curiosity that builds confidence, flexibility, and voice. When kids work like this, they do not copy a result; they discover their own.

Art as play, not performance

Little makers arrive ready to explore. They press, swirl, tap, pour. They are testing ideas with their hands. A very wet brush meets blue and becomes a new kind of sky; a leaf pressed into clay leaves a story behind. This is learning you can see and feel!


When “right” gets in the way

Many of us were taught to follow steps and match an example. Useful sometimes, sure; but it can also freeze brave choices. Process art flips the goal. There is no single picture to chase, which means there is space for surprise. And surprise leads to ownership.


What it looks like here

A session at Smudge might be one child mixing colour for almost the whole time. Another builds a mural with friends that grows and grows. Someone else discovers the perfect print by accident, then tries to repeat it and can’t, so they invent something new. The artwork goes home, but the learning stays.


Try it at home

You don't need a studio. You need a corner, a few materials, and courage to experiment!

  • Offer variety. Alongside pencils and markers, add sponges, cotton buds, cardboard offcuts, forks, sticks. New tools invite new ideas.

  • Talk about the doing. Try “Tell me about this part,” “What changed when you added water,” or “What do you want to try next.”

  • Let them lead. Resist “fixing.” Purple sky today? Wonderful.

  • Make peace with mess. A drop cloth, a damp cloth, and a clear table work wonders.

  • Celebrate experiments. Hang in-progress work, keep a folder of “beautiful scraps,” and name the discoveries you notice.


Why it matters

Process art teaches something bigger than how to paint or print. It says your choices count. It says mistakes are information. It says you can start again and again, and that trying is the point. That feeling walks off the art table and into everything else.

We are not chasing perfect projects here. We are building a creative life; one curious mark, one brave try, one joyful mess at a time!