Tuesday, July 21, 2020
More Art Created with New 6" x 6" Mask LOOKING UP THROUGH TREES SMALL -- ms793
I've had the pleasure of seeing lots of gorgeous layered art prints created with the Gelli Plate -- all of them by other artists! I'm just not as good at using the plate as others are.
I feel that, for me,
there's an advantage in the brayer-application approach. When I'm working on a large piece of watercolor paper, for instance, the brayer method lets me target specific areas with each application. It gives me enough control to gradually build a composition that I like.
One thing I've learned, in these happy years of working with my StencilGirl stencils and masks, is that there's one person I want to please with my final artworks.
Moi
!
All of my art samples for today were created with this sponge style of brayer, which, incidentally, can be found
here
as well as elsewhere.
Above: An example of a sponge brayer being loaded with heavy-body acrylic paint.
Above: An example of the way I use the loaded brayer to direct paint thru the stencil or mask openings. Here, I've used masking tape to hold the mask in place, but usually I don't bother with that.
The print directly below, done with acrylic paints on watercolor paper, is just the first step in what will become a multi-layered piece.
Above: A first-layer print, created with acrylic heavy-body paints and with my
6" x 6" mask
Looking Up Through Trees Small
.
Below is a series of prints, numbered in progression, all made with
my
6" x 6" mask
Looking Up Through Trees Small
.
Since acrylic paints dry rapidly, these layers were quick to build up:
Above: First layer of prints using
my
6" x 6" mask
Looking Up Through Trees Small
.
Above: Second layer with
my
6" x 6" mask
Looking Up Through Trees Small
The photo below shows the third layer; in this layer, I started to include the use of
my 9" x 12"
Looking Up Through Trees
:
Studying the above 3-part progression in hindsight, I came to the unhappy conclusion that the second layer is where I could have stopped!
But because I didn't stop back at that second layer, I now faced a challenge -- I needed to continue adding layers, hoping to see a final version that would satisfy me....
Many layers later, having repeatedly used both
my 9" x 12"
Looking Up Through Trees
and my brand-new
6" x 6" mask
Looking Up Through Trees Small
,
I came to another stopping point:
And at this point, I'm calling it done!
Below: Another first-layer print: Since it's in black and white, will more layers -- in color -- be added?
Above: Made with my 9" x 12"
Looking Up Through Trees
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.
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