Sienna loves painting this “bug” at our local discovery museum. I, on the other hand, love watching the cranky old man giving out the “booties” try to interact with the kids waiting to paint.
Fairy Forest Mural Paint Colors
I’ve had several emails asking what the paint colors were for my fairy forest mural, so here they are:
Images from Disney
For the pixie dust, I also used Rustoleum Glow-in-the-dark paint.
For the chalkboard, you can find the materials used at my Magnetic Chalkboard & Growth Chart post.
Also, the Disney website has some cute templates you can download here.
You can download the TV frame here.
Here is my cup that you can thrown change into 
Making your own mural border template (and I added the large butterfly!)
I talked with a woman a few days ago about painting mural in her son’s room. She basically wanted the exact “waves” border shown in this photo on the Pottery Barn website:
Photo from www.potterybarnkids.com
Then she said the magic words “I just wish I could do it myself but I can’t figure out how.” Even though painting murals is a passion of mine, I love when people want to try it themselves, especially when it is a “doable” project like a simple border (which she had already received a bid of around $600 from someone else). I drew up a quick waves sketch and uploaded it to my favorite photo altering website to rasterize it into a “printable” template.
So here are the steps for making a border:
First I drew the waves using the Pottery Barn Kids photo as a guide. I draw in Powerpoint, which would make most people cringe (I got this weird habit from my days writing bond offering memorandums). You can just draw by hand and scan to your computer just as easily.
Then I placed two of the sketches side by side to make sure it looked okay as a continuous border.
Then I uploaded it to the Homokaasu website and selected what size I wanted it to print out.
Note: Make sure to select “letter size” paper if you are printing at your home computer. It will print it out on 8.5″ x 11″ paper and you can piece it together like a puzzle.
Just in case anyone needs a wave stencil, you are in luck……below are the two I did for the woman that called for the mural. The small one prints out on 7 pages of paper, the larger one on 18 pages of paper.
This “rasterizing” process is the same I used for the butterfly chalkboard template in the fairy forest mural I painted a few months back!

I only had to do half the butterfly and then I flipped it over to trace the other side.
I went ahead and uploaded that one for you too. This one prints out on 20 pages of paper. Again you would piece it together like a puzzle and use packing tape for all the seams. I use a sharpie to draw around the border and then cut my template out. Email me if you have any questions!
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