Are you ready for another
Art on a Shoe String?
A couple weeks ago I posted the above piece of
art that I made using a watercolor resist pen
with watercolor paints.
Not everyone has access to a watercolor resist
pen, or to frisket, but most everyone has access to
crayons. Yes. Crayons.
So let's see if we can make a successful
watercolor resist using a white crayon.
Keeping with the theme of
Art on a Shoe String -
I headed to Walmart and went straight to
the school aisle.
That box of 24 crayons was just 47¢.
(The 16 crayon box cost 57¢.
Go figure.)
I used a scrap piece of mixed media paper -
you could try cardstock if you wish.
(The real question is: why does autocorrect keep
changing my word 'cardstock' to 'yardstick?'
Because it's a real pain.
So I just won't use that word again in this post.)
I used the white crayon to draw a tangle on the
mixed media paper.
Next time I won't use a pattern that needs
precision, but this is a learning curve.
I used a paintbrush to cover my paper in water.
You can already see that the crayon is resisting
the water, so the watercolor should work as well.
Then I started adding color.
I used an inexpensive child's watercolor
pan set from the school row. You've seen
it in these posts before.
And I kept adding color and more water as needed.
The precision in that tangle is totally lost.
I think if I had used a light tan crayon
or a light yellow crayon
I would have been able to make the tangle better.
Sorry to all you serious tanglers.
Do better than I did.
Of course, according to the
Hendon School of Color
one can never have too much color!
I did blot up a bit of that liquid,
cause you can have too much water.
Hahahaha!
While that piece sat to dry,
I started another.
This time I drew a string line with the white
crayon and that works much better!
Pink, purple and teal are my go-to colors.
My mantra.
Cause I love them so much.
Then I sat this aside to dry.
OK.
Time to evaluate.
Can you successfully make marks that watercolors
will resist with a common, every day crayon?
Yes. You definitely can!
Even in the one I messed the tangle up on -
it worked.
And I learned something.
Which is what this is all about anyway.
I learned 2 things actually:
* don't try precision tangles, unless I
* press down to make solid, substantial lines.
I like the way the first one worked,
the way the resist definitely worked,
I just wish I had made stronger lines to start with.
what a fun post! I'm normally on my phone when I look at your blog , so I'm recommending to anyone that reads this comment that you click on 'view web version' instead of the mobile version when you visit. You'll see why... trust me. ;-)
ReplyDeletehaha! I would not have thought about that. thanks for pointing it out <3
DeleteA great post as always. I just wish I had the time to try all your ideas.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing. This would make a great project for kids.