Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Rainbows with Stencils or Masks
The "rainbow" technique can be done in at least two ways -- with a Gelli Plate, or with a sponge brayer loaded with heavy-body acrylic paint. Today's post features the latter. I think the colors may be more intense when using today's brayer method, since a sponge brayer will hold a heavier paint load than what's typically spread across a Gelli Plate.
Today's main tool is the mask/stencil
Garden Montage
(9" x 12".)
Above: on the left, a brayer and two colors of acrylic heavy-body paint, laid out side-by-side. On the right, the metallic-painted substrate and the stencil/mask.
The next two photos below show close-ups of the substrate, under the stencil/mask, as well as the brayer and the two colors of acrylic paint--
My next step was to load the brayer with with colors of paint --
-- and I followed this with running the brayer down the combination of the stencil/mask and the substrate. I held the stencil/mask in place with one hand and used the brayer with the other.....
After starting the left edge with this two-color paint, I flipped the brayer over to start the next downward roll of paint; see below:
This flipping-over (shown above) enabled me to have the two areas of blue together, moving downward. See below ....
Below is the finished product -- the stencil/mask has been lifted so that the gold metallic paper shows thru beneath the stripes of paint.
Below are more "rainbow" prints.
Above: Created with 6" x 6"
Trivet B
stencil.
Created with 9" x 12"
Garden Montage
Created with
Garden Montage
Created with
Longwood Florals Stencil
and the 9" x 12" stencil
Garden Montage
Created with
Garden Montage
Try using 3 colors of paint this way!
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