Do you way tag education resource
Make your own temporary marks
Use this step by step guide to help you create your own symbols which can relate to wayfinding or to what you love about your local area. Then get out there and spray, creating a temporary tag on the landscape.
MAKE YOUR WAY worked with schools in Carluke, Glassford, Lanark, Larkhall and Stonehouse over six months to find creative, engaging ways of walking and exploring the Clyde and Avon Valley. During work in Larkhall, the team led Way Tagging workshops. Pupils of Robert Smillie and Craigbank Primary Schools had the chance to come up with their own tag symbols related to the local area and use chalk spray paint to add a splash of colour to the walks by Morgan Glen.
Have a go yourself by following this simple guide. Print and download your own copy by clicking under 'Other Resources'.
Skills involved:
- Spraycan Art
- Design
- Direct Speech
WHAT IS TAGGING?*
*Information from http://www.visual-arts-cork.com/painting/graffiti-art.htm
Tagging is a term taken from the world of graffiti or spraycan art. Here are some more ideas and words linked to spraycan art:
TAGGING - The act of applying a tag or signature to a surface. These can be complex in content and appearance.
A ‘THROW UP’ - Larger than a tag and rapidly painted in just two or three colours.
A ‘PIECE’ - Elaborate and intricate work using a wider range of colours - can be wiped out very quickly by a rival artist with a simple ‘throw up’.
BLOCKBUSTER - a large block shaped work performed with a
paint-roller, done in order to protect an area from rival artists.
STENCIL GRAFFITI - Using cut outs for rapidly painting complex shapes. First used in the 1980s and more recently made famous by artists such as Banksy.
WILDSTYLE - More elaborate, with interlocking letters and
connected points. Sometimes creates an indecipherable tag.
LOOK AROUND FOR INSPIRATION
During Way Tagging activities with pupils , MAKE YOUR WAY encouaged pupils to look at the green spaces and outdoor areas around them, thinking about what they can SEE and DO, and how they EXPERIENCE the wonderful wooded areas, paths and rivers of the Clyde and Avon Valley.
Think about the area you want to tag: what can you do here, what can you see? How do you FEEL about this place?
Step 1. Design your symbol
Step 1. Design your symbol
Repeat the process - you can make a line along the path or mark tags at intervals to create waymarkers! Use different colours or mixes of colours and feel free to experiment. Bright, vibrant colours work best in the outdoors.
Step 2. Draw symbol on stencil film

Step 2. Draw symbol on stencil film
Get a permanent black marker and draw your symbol at a good size, leaving plenty of ‘gutter’ space around the symbol to catch the paint later during spraying - you don’t want all your tags to have a box around them.
Step 3. Cut out stencil
Step 3. Cut out stencil
Step 4. Find a place to spray
Step 4. Find a place to spray
Time to get on your protective gear: pop your mask then goggles over your head, and pull on your gloves. This can be messy work (although the chalk will wash off) so it is best to stay well covered.
Take a brush and clear the area you want to spray. Lay your stencil down flat and pin the corners down (the cans you are not using at that moment can be useful for this) to make sure the wind doesn’t blow the stencil away.
Step 5. Spray your way tag!

Step 5. Spray your way tag!
Repeat the process - you can make a line along the path or mark tags at intervals to create waymarkers! Use different colours or mixes of colours and feel free to experiment. Bright, vibrant colours work best in the outdoors.
Or! Try making some luggage tags instead
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Or! Try making some luggage tags instead
You can also make more simple tags about what you love in the green spaces, parks and woods nearby. Think about direct speech: what is your experience of playing in the woods, running around: what can you SEE, DO and FEEL? Here is an example from Robert Smillie Primary School, Larkhall.
STAY SOCIAL
Keep up to date with further projects and share your ideas online using #MakeYourWay
Facebook: www.facebook.com/ClydeandAvonValley/
Twitter: www.twitter.com/ClydeAvonValley
Instagram: www.instagram.com/clydeavonvalley/
Make Your Way is an arts, heritage and active travel campaign, focusing on the communities of Carluke, Glassford, Lanark, Larkhall and Stonehouse, in 2016 – 17. It was delivered by icecream architecture and SYSTRA, with support from Smarter Choices, Smarter Places grant and is part of the Heritage Lottery Fund supported Clyde and Avon Valley Landscape Partnership scheme.