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I'm fascinated too - I haven't tried it, but Amber Hight has been posting her pics on Instagram and it's intriguing! I'd love to find someone here who's tried it!
I have done several pours. About a 50% success rate. Can I post some here? I would like to do some on yupo or heavy (300lb) watercolor paper for backgrounds
I'd love to see them Lori! I disappeared down a total acrylic pour rabbit hole on YouTube a couple of weeks back but managed to convince myself (for now at least!) that I really don't need another addiction!
There is a lot if waste. But l I make make own window cleaner, I use dryer balls instead of softener, pack my lunch and all that savings should go into retirement but it goes into craft supplies! I use craft paint. I use floetrol from the hardware store instead of pouring medium so there are ways to make it less expensive. It is messy fun. When the sun goes down I will post some pics.
here are a few from my pinterest board. these are on canvas but i would like to try on 300 pound water color so i can stamp, if the design lends itself to that.
__________________ lori b. my gallery
"if you judge people, you have no time to love them."
This does look like fun! I think people use cheap acrylic craft paint. I think I would cut heavy cardstock to A2 size or slightly smaller so I could use the pours for card backgrounds as I have no use for wall art. My friend did some recently so I hope to try it out at her house soon. Love how the colors swirl together!
I wonder if there is a way to use something for a release on a stamp so you can stamp into the paint like you can with heated embossing powder?
If you use Archival ink maybe you can stamp on it. Maybe stamp a sentiment or image onto a piece of velum or acetate that you wrap around the the piece and adhere to the back so your pour still shows through.
__________________ Arlene, The Snorkeler
Last edited by arlenevita; 07-16-2017 at 05:35 PM..
Those are looking great Lori, I especially love the long, slim, bronze-toned one! There's something fabulously organic about the look, isn't there?
I wonder whether it would work to do a bigger piece on heavy card or watercolour paper and cut it up? I'm thinking that starting out with a small piece might not allow the patterns to develop as well.
Let us know how you get on if you try something for card making!
I thought about the larger sheet and then cut it up for that very reason but I wonder if the paint load would even make 300lb warpy. I guess there is only one way to find out.
I love watching pouring video's but but it is WAY too messy for me to actually try. I can feel my heart racing and my BP sky rocketing just thinking about it. At least watching those makes gel printing seem tame on the mess meter in comparison.
So post away with those pics and video's and I'll live vicariously through y'all.
I thought about the larger sheet and then cut it up for that very reason but I wonder if the paint load would even make 300lb warpy. I guess there is only one way to find out.
I guess you could try the same trick as you would do for a watercolor piece - tape all four sides to a solid surface with painter's tape and see if that helps minimize warping. You'll get a narrow border where the tape was but if you're going to trim out in any case then that shouldn't matter too much.
Yupo could be interesting since it doesn't absorb moisture so I guess that should mean it doesn't warp even with a load of paint dumped on it.
yupo takes a while to dry, but you have to be super careful when you torch it. and it is harder to tilt to move paint.
the messy is the part i love. i love stamping, but not messy stamping. that makes my heart race, getting a smudge or not a good impression, especially when you have already put a lot of work into a card and then into the trash it goes. if a pour looks awful and 50% of the time it does, a handful of paper towel (ok two or three handfuls) and you can wipe a canvas clean.
__________________ lori b. my gallery
"if you judge people, you have no time to love them."
I am anxious to try this technique as well and got some of the stuff to try it and looked at info and postings about it online. But since it would be my first time, I am fearful to actually do it myself! As you have done it, can you share some tips and advice as well as pics? It looks like so much fun....thanx
Mary
Quote:
Originally Posted by lori92760
I have done several pours. About a 50% success rate. Can I post some here? I would like to do some on yupo or heavy (300lb) watercolor paper for backgrounds
I just watched a youtube video of someone doing ATC pours! And she managed to spill her cup of mixed-colors paint but carried on after some cursing. LOL It does look fun!
Lori, which silicone do you get?
It seems like it would be fun to stamp on it and/or add die-cuts or sentiments stamped on CS. I was in a few short mixed media journal page workshops at an LSS and once we used acrylic paint and then stamped on top of it. Do you think this would be different due to the silicone?
you do need to remove the silicone to put a finish on the canvas. so far i blotted gently with alcohol and it worked. my silicone comes in a yellow bottle. drops not spray.
__________________ lori b. my gallery
"if you judge people, you have no time to love them."
It's always interesting to me to see how differently we crafters/artist react to various techniques. The muse either can't wait and is chanting in our head "lets do it" or she she runs away screaming "no, no, no!"
it makes me feel like an artist and that does not happen often. it really is just a crap shoot if it turns out, it is more science than art, but i love it.
__________________ lori b. my gallery
"if you judge people, you have no time to love them."
I do it in the basement. I cover my table with dollar store shower curtain. i have goodwill tray thingy that i cover in tinfoil. i should wear gloves but i do not. the shower curtain i just leave and reuse and the tinfoil i just ball up and throw away. it really is not so bad. i do wear an old apron because i tend to wipe my hands on myself.
__________________ lori b. my gallery
"if you judge people, you have no time to love them."
That�s really interesting. The effect produced looks a bit like paper marbling - where you float the colours on a tray of water and lay the paper down on top. And end up with more pieces of decorated paper than you know what to do with ( well I did anyway ).
I have done quite a bit of acrylic pours. The ones on canvas stretched on frames have ended up as wall art for me or others. I did a couple for Christmas gifts and added greens, berries etc. and provided a stand so they could be displayed on a table without hanging on a wall. The ones that were on canvas boards I have used for backgrounds on cards---either in full or part. I haven't tried stamping on them yet, but I think I might try to do some pours on canvas sheets. The best ones, in my opinion and the ones that don't use too many colors. Here's one I sent my sister a couple Christmases ago. She loved the colors!