
Colored foil sheets aren’t something you see in most art classrooms.
They’re bright, shiny, and completely different from standard supplies.
When students first see them, they’re curious.
When they start working with them, they’re hooked.
We use foil sheets for Gustav Klimt, the Austrian artist known for his gold-leaf paintings. His work is ornate, decorative, and shimmering. Foil sheets capture that quality better than metallic paint or gold crayons ever could.

The variety of colors surprises people. Most expect just gold and silver, but the sets include blues, greens, purples, and reds. Students can recreate Klimt’s famous patterns while adding their own color choices.
Working with foil teaches precision.
Students cut shapes, layer pieces, and arrange patterns carefully. It’s detail-oriented work that builds focus and fine motor skills. And because foil catches light differently than paper or paint, the finished pieces look striking when displayed.
The novelty factor matters too:
- Students remember the Klimt lesson because the materials were different from anything they’d used before. That memory sticks with them.
- Teachers appreciate that foil sheets are easy to manage. They don’t require water, they don’t stain, and they store flat without taking up much space.
If you want to add something genuinely different to your art program, foil sheets deliver an experience students won’t get anywhere else. They work for all grade levels and create results that stand out on any bulletin board.
See Klimt-inspired student work in our gallery.
Warm regards,
Meet the Masters
Inspire – Educate – Create
Dig Deeper:
