Monday, March 25, 2019
BLOOMING WHERE PLANTED and FANTASIA 9" x 12" Stencils
The reductive (also called subtractive) technique works this way: First, with acrylic paint, I paint a layer of new color in a limited area -- then, while this layer is still wet, I place a stencil over it. Holding the stencil in place with one hand, I use a paper towel or soft cloth to rub off still-wet paint in the areas that are exposed thru the openings of the stencil. (What I mean by "new color" is that the substrate has already been coated with other acrylics, as in the examples below; and those early layers of paint have been given time to dry.)
In the above and the below detail close-ups, I used the subtractive/reductive approach with parts of my 9" x 12" stencil
Blooming Where Planted
.
To create the print below, I used a sponge brayer loaded with heavy-body acrylic paint and rolled it over a substrate that had already painted with several layers of acrylic paint.
Above: Loading a sponge brayer with heavy-body acrylic paint.
Below is an updated version of a stretched canvas that I had previously started. After finishing the painted areas, I added stained stencils as collage elements. Some of these were cut from the stencil
Blooming Where Planted
;
others were cut from my 9" x 12" stencil
Fantasia
.
Above: You can click on the image above to enlarge it and better see detail.
The stencils themselves look like this --
Fantasia
Blooming Where Planted
Thanks for your visit here today! To scroll thru the pages of my StencilGirl stencils, please start
here
.
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