The Mad Clown

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Nogylop Portrait
by Kiana and Martin

Nogylop

Nogylop Recreation
by Robert and Seung-woo

Nogylop

Description
by Martin and Kiana

Our Nogylop is like a skinny man. His name is The Mad Clown. His head is a horizontal rectangle that is orange, and he has a triangle on top of his head that is yellow. The long side is flat on the Nogylop’s orange head. There is a purple vertical rectangle coming out of the yellow triangle. It’s coming out of the tip of the triangle. On the top of the purple rectangle is a red rectangle that is small and it is horizontal, and there are two blue rectangles that go horizontal. They stick out of the red rectangle. Sticking out of the blue rectangles are two green trapezoids with the long part sticking out. There are three black straight lines that are coming out of the green trapezoids. There are also primrose Ls sticking out of the yellow triangle. One of them is facing the right way, and the other one is backwards. On each side of the orange head there is an emerald thing that looks like a mountain range. It is sticking out of the Nogylop’s orange head. They come out on both sides of the Nogylop. His nose is a triangle. The long part of the triangle is facing the top of the paper. His nose is red. He has a V on his forehead and it is a plum color. He also has scratches on his cheeks that look like 7s. One of them is going the regular way and the other one is going the backwards way. The color of his scratches is red. His mouth is rectangular and goes horizontally and with a line splitting the middle of the mouth. His mouth is yellow. His eyes are triangles with a rectangle sticking out of the bottoms. The color of his eyes is teal. He has square eyeballs. His eyeballs are golden yellow. He has three straight black lines that are above his eyes.

His neck is an azure rectangle that goes horizontally , A green vertical rectangle comes out the bottom of his azure part. Both rectangles together look like a T. His body is like a house, but instead of the top being pointy, it is flat so it can attach to his neck. The body it is blue. He has triangle buttons that are azure color. The long part of the triangles are facing the bottom of the paper. His arms are golden yellow and they are an L shape. His hands are a primrose color. They are shaped like diamonds. They also have diamonds inside that get smaller and smaller until you can’t make any more.

The first part of his legs are rectangles that go vertically and they are an emerald color. He has triangle knees and the point is sticking out to the side of the paper. His knees are a plum color. The bottom part of his legs are the same as the top part of his knees but the color is not emerald, it is a coral reef color. His shoes are orange and the shape of them is a pentagon. The shoes have yellow squares with black lines that are sticking out of the yellow squares. They are shoelaces.

Remember to outline the Nogylop with black. We hope you can make The Mad Clown.

Analysis
by Kiana and Martin

Dear Robert and Seung-woo,

You did lots of things well. The head, the hair, the face, the arms, the hands, the body, and the neck had all of the right shapes and colors. When our teacher held up your version of our Nogylop, The Mad Clown, we knew it was our Nogylop. We knew it was your version because it had the right shapes and the right colors. Your version of The Mad Clown almost looked like our Mad Clown.

Here are some things that we could have done better for you so it wouldn’t have been so hard. One of the things we could have done to make it less confusing would be to make it shorter. It might not have been so hard and it could have been easier. We should have made it clearer to understand.

Robert and Seung-woo you guys did really well on trying to make The Mad Clown. There are some things you guys forgot, but that is okay; you tried your best. Good job Robert and Seung-woo.

From The Makers of The Mad Clown
Kiana and Martin

Ms. Surber’s Nogylops | Nogylops & Neilas index.

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Page launched November 10, 2002. Page completed February 20, 2003.
Copyright © 2002-2003 Lucinda Surber. All Rights Reserved.

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