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Painted Canvas: iPad Sleeve + Giveaway

Painted Canvas: iPad Sleeve + Giveaway


How exciting—I get to give something away! Several people liked the Market Bag that I posted last time (thanks so much for the love, lovers!), so I thought it would be really fun to make something to giveaway this time. The palette—Sirus IFRC—that provided the inspiration for this project comes from napkin guy and I loved working with this combination of colors. The pattern comes from Sew4Home and was designed by Alicia Thommas (edited by Liz Johnson). With the exception of omitting swivel hooks (instead I used center-release buckles), using a concealed magnetic clasp instead of a nickel one (and, of course, using my own painted canvas and a coordinating fleece), I made the project just as it was presented.

Sirus_IFRC

It’s really a lot of fun to make projects from canvas that you have painted and made your own mark on. The person who first got me excited about painting layers on canvas with this approach is Roxanne Padgett. I took her Luscious Layered Canvas class last spring and have been having a grand ole time ever since. I continue to experiment and try new things and new ways of making each piece uniquely my own. You’ll be seeing more projects from me where I take this path using a palette, so I thought you might like to see briefly, how I go about painting the canvas. And if you don’t want know all that, just skip to the bottom and leave a comment if you’d like to try and win this bag. I’ll never know the difference.

For what I do, I buy unprimed cotton duck in a medium weight and I typically buy it in one big folded piece (72” x 6 yards [1.83m x 5.49m]) because it’s most economical that way. If I just want to paint canvas, without a particular project in mind yet, I like to work on pieces that are about 18” x 24” (46cm x 61cm) and I usually just tear it. Sometimes—as with the project I’m showing you here—I will read the pattern to see what sizes I’m supposed to end up with and then I tear the duck to individual pieces that are about three inches bigger than I need to allow for shrinkage (when the canvas gets wet).

Before starting to paint, I like to get an entire piece of canvas wet first and I just do this in the sink. Getting it wet allows the paint to spread faster and easier. Start with one color and just make several random strokes. Then use a foam roller and work it over the entire surface to spread the color. Irregularity is good—don’t get hung up thinking you need to end up with a consistent, solid fill here. You’re just getting started!

 

Take a second color and just squirt some in several places. Pretend you are Jackson Pollock and just have fun flinging it on there. Work this in a bit with the roller too, but leave it more concentrated in some places and less so in others. Now you have a decent background and it’s all assorted layering techniques from here. I’ll share a few of my favorites here with you, but keep in mind, you are the artist and whatever way you do it is the right way.

Okay, so one thing I like to create are washes/gradients of color. Be sure the canvas is still wet when you do this. (Or don’t—see last sentence, previous paragraph.) Wet your brush, load it with some paint and start working it onto the canvas. Lightly dip your brush in water and keep stroking, working out in one direction from where you started. Dip it in water again and continue working in one direction as the pigment starts to fade until your brush is more or less clean. I think it looks nifty to then rotate the canvas 90 degrees and repeat with a new color.

Let’s see . . .what else? What’s really fun is to make a watery mix of paint and then just pour it onto your canvas. I then like to lift one edge of the canvas while the paint is still pooled and hasn’t fully soaked in yet, and let it run and drip. Another thing to do with a watery mix of paint is to draw with is using a palette knife.

And then the last thing I’ll share today is that one thing I love to use are stencils! Stencil application works best with a dry roller, working on dry canvas and with paint that isn’t too thin/watery. Fluid acrylics are fine—just don’t add any water to them. Squirt some paint onto your palette or a paper plate and load your roller by evenly getting paint around it. Then, just roll it over the stencil onto the canvas. Sometimes you have to work it in a couple directions to get good coverage. Hold the stencil in place firmly as you do this. (Side note: You know who has cool stencils? Mary Beth Shaw. I was inspired to use her stencils when I worked on her book, Flavor for Mixed Media, and I have used a couple of her stencils in this project.)

Repeat all of these techniques multiple times in multiple layers for the most depth and biggest impact. What happens when you make mark you don’t like? You guessed it—paint over it. No pressure. Nothing but fun here. In lieu of overpainting, another thing that I’ve found is fun to do when you don’t like something (and this only works when the paint is still wet) is to take the canvas to the sink and run it under the water to soak it, wring it out and presto! You have a whole new piece of canvas with a cool stained look over the whole thing. See? Life is full of surprises and that’s where the fun comes in.

If you want some more ideas for painting with layers, I highly recommend Flavor for Mixed Media. (Not to mention there’s some great recipes for food in this book, too!)


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iPad Sleeve (shown) Giveaway

So . . .enough of me talking already! Would like a shot at winning this iPad Sleeve (which can also be used as a small shoulder bag in case you don't have an iPad)?

I'd like to get to know you and your crafty interests.... so which books from the Create Mixed Media Shop are you most interested in seeing projects or techniques from?

To Enter, leave a comment by Friday, August 19th:

  1. 1.) Link to one (or more) books from the Create Mixed Media Shop
  2. 2.) Why you chose the book(s)

One winner will be selected randomly and will be notified via Love Notes (make sure your notification settings are set to receive these via your email). Contest officially ends Friday, August 19th, 2011 by midnight USA PST.



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44 Comments
Showing 1 - 30 of 44 Comments

napkin guy

Thanks so much. I am glad Sirus palette inspired you!!

nighthawk327

Wow this looks interesting. And congrats to napkin guy :)

moonhubris

http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/printmaking--a-contemporary-perspective-9781906155438/

I'm always looking for inspiration for my printmaking, and a book like this can be the perfect source.

Shelliecake

What type of paint do you recommend for this do you fabric paint or regular old acrylic?
Thanks so much!

terriann

http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/drawn-to-stitch--line--drawing--and-mark-making-in-textile-art-9781596682337/

I've recently gotten back into sewing and as a crafty person I don't tend to mix my mediums, a book like that would probably jumps start some great idea! Gonna have to put that on my wishlist!

ToniaDavenport

Shelliecake wrote:
What type of paint do you recommend for this do you fabric paint or regular old acrylic?
Thanks so much!

I knew I forgot to include something, Shelliecake! I often use fabric paints as well as dyes, but I also use inexpensive acrylic craft paints, and that is exactly what I used here.
Team

mollybermea

I am SO inspired by this post! I must make one!

synthetic innocence

http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/experimental-painting-z7921/

I chose Experimental Painting. I have a hard time integrating my illustration/mixed media work with my classically trained fine art/painting and I have always wanted to find a way to combine these two sides of my expressive personality. I hope I can find a way to reconcile these two very different sides and perhaps create something of the two of them that is better than each on their own.

understandblue

Wow - the sleeve is beautiful.

Thanks for the link to those books - enabler!! :)

It was tough for me to pick because I teach encaustic classes, but I think that this book: http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/altered-surfaces--using-acrylic-paints-with-gels--mediums--grounds-and-pastes-for-paper--canvas--board-and-plastic-9781574216363/ is a must have - I'm a paper artist and run a paper arts community and I love working with altered surfaces for rubber stamping!

Thanks for the link & the chance to win!

Katyurban

http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/mixed-and-stitched-z8073/mixed-media-products
Thank you so much for sharing your artwork with us! It really makes me want to try this myself….I am curious where you picked up the canvas and what you used for the straps.
I choose MIxed and Stitched because I am curious about dying my own fabric.

The sleeve looks amazing and my iPad would love to live in it!

nighthawk327

@understandblue - Nice recommend... weird that today I was looking for encaustics books on Amazon out of the blue! Always admired the works I've seen done with that medium, someday I'll learn too!

understandblue wrote:
Wow - the sleeve is beautiful.

Thanks for the link to those books - enabler!! :)

It was tough for me to pick because I teach encaustic classes, but I think that this book: http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/altered-surfaces--using-acrylic-paints-with-gels--mediums--grounds-and-pastes-for-paper--canvas--board-and-plastic-9781574216363/ is a must have - I'm a paper artist and run a paper arts community and I love working with altered surfaces for rubber stamping!

Thanks for the link & the chance to win!

eppiepeppercorn

I like Creating Textures in Colored Pencil
http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/creating-textures-in-colored-pencil

I do a lot of pencil sketches and illustrations, but have limited experience with color combinations and colored shading. I've never drawn textures with colored pencil, even though I have been drawing for over 12 years. I would love to learn new techniques.

As an educator, I think Raw Art Journaling would be a great technique for classroom use, and might be useful for conquering fears and reinforcing concepts in the arts, and even other subjects.
http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/raw-art-journaling-z9238/

ToniaDavenport

Katyurban wrote:
http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/mixed-and-stitched-z8073/mixed-media-products
Thank you so much for sharing your artwork with us! It really makes me want to try this myself….I am curious where you picked up the canvas and what you used for the straps.
I choose MIxed and Stitched because I am curious about dying my own fabric.

The sleeve looks amazing and my iPad would love to live in it!


I usually get my canvas from Jerry's Artarama. They have a brick and mortar store not too far from me. For the strap I used 1" black nylon webbing from JoAnn's Fabric.

summerteaparty

http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/the-elemental-journal/
I love the whole idea of this book. I've a few scraps of papers and fabric lying around here and there around my house and never really know what to do with it. Incorporating it into an art journal project would be really fun :D

ckamin

Just love this product and process! I'm going to take a closer look at this book.
Team

mollybermea

A great online resource for artist materials is DickBlick.com, but for this I think JoAnn.com will be suitable. It comes in many different colors too! If you're needing fabric craft paint, JoAnn's is also good for that too. :) There is a medium you can add to regular craft paint to make it fabric-friendly too.

cotton duck cloth at JoAnn.com

Katyurban wrote:
http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/mixed-and-stitched-z8073/mixed-media-products
Thank you so much for sharing your artwork with us! It really makes me want to try this myself….I am curious where you picked up the canvas and what you used for the straps.
I choose MIxed and Stitched because I am curious about dying my own fabric.

The sleeve looks amazing and my iPad would love to live in it!

Amusante

Oh my goodness. I'm having a serious attack of color lust. My stacks and stacks of bead containers are giving darting jealous glances toward my fabric drawers, knowing they might get some action soon. But then, I can invite the beads to play, too, right? Right!

Thanks so much for the great photographs and the making-it-super-easy-and-fun tone.

ToniaDavenport

Amusante wrote:
Oh my goodness. I'm having a serious attack of color lust. My stacks and stacks of bead containers are giving darting jealous glances toward my fabric drawers, knowing they might get some action soon. But then, I can invite the beads to play, too, right? Right!

Thanks so much for the great photographs and the making-it-super-easy-and-fun tone.

Ooooo, definitely invite the beads to play! I've stitched beads onto the canvas several times after I have the project pieces cut to size, before of after sewing. They love participating!

escapepea

I tend to swing from one form of "making" to another quite quickly, and most of my making is on the computer at the moment (saves storage space). It's a good couple of years since I swung through jewellery, but the kinds of things within http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/amulets-and-talismans/ are things I'd like to have made. I'd like to go back into jewellery soon, but I've no idea where I stashed my stuff, nor what to do with the completed items. Making items that would be special to people I knew, rather than generic and for anyone, would be good, I think.

ZodiacArts

Great post! Love the idea of sharing techniques with these photo demonstrations. There are two books that I would appreciate seeing projects documented:

http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/altered-surfaces--using-acrylic-paints-with-gels--mediums--grounds-and-pastes-for-paper--canvas--board-and-plastic-9781574216363/ i

and

http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/experimental-painting-z7921

Plus, I's love to win the iPad sleeve. It's delicious.

kellyport

The Surface Designer's Handbook: Dyeing, Printing, Painting, and Creating Resists on Fabric

I picked this one, because I've always wanted to get into this type of thing and basic techniques would be super helpful. I loved this blog post, and am trying to figure out where I could do this type of work (live in a small, carpeted apartment). My goal is to make my own prints and then sew up projects with them, so I'm simultaneously learning to sew!

chloemichelle

Raw Art Journaling

I think that this is would be super helpful for me. I am such a perfectionist so it is hard for me to just let go and mess around with things. Especially things that I am not familiar with. I am hoping that this will help me step out of my comfort zone and actually pursue art in college like I have always wanted to.

japplega

http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/sew-wild--creating-with-stitch-and-mixed-media-9781596683501/

I have been waiting for this book to come out. I keep checking when it is going to be available. Her first book Canvas Re-mixed is awesome. Both your article and Alissa's books are just up my alley, I'm just waiting to take the dive in.

dkibbee

OMG, the colors are wonderful, I would love it for my ipad and I am going to get the book to learn how to do that and the other techniques, I've been afraid to just jump in, but this weekend is open and I have to try it
debi

ToniaDavenport

kellyport wrote:
The Surface Designer's Handbook: Dyeing, Printing, Painting, and Creating Resists on Fabric

I picked this one, because I've always wanted to get into this type of thing and basic techniques would be super helpful. I loved this blog post, and am trying to figure out where I could do this type of work (live in a small, carpeted apartment). My goal is to make my own prints and then sew up projects with them, so I'm simultaneously learning to sew!

I live in a very small place, too. What I do is cover my tiny "kitchen" table (which actually sits in a room that is my office, studio and living room all in one!) with a big cheap plastic tarp I bought at Home Depot. The tarp is some very absorbent type of paper--almost like a heavy paper towel--that is fused to a plastic (waterproof) backing. It holds up really well and I have been using the same one for months. You could put one of these down on your floor as well. They dry quickly so you can just fold them up and stash them away until next time. (Which for me mean on top of my bookcase.)

kellyport

ToniaDavenport wrote:
kellyport wrote:
The Surface Designer's Handbook: Dyeing, Printing, Painting, and Creating Resists on Fabric

I picked this one, because I've always wanted to get into this type of thing and basic techniques would be super helpful. I loved this blog post, and am trying to figure out where I could do this type of work (live in a small, carpeted apartment). My goal is to make my own prints and then sew up projects with them, so I'm simultaneously learning to sew!

I live in a very small place, too. What I do is cover my tiny "kitchen" table (which actually sits in a room that is my office, studio and living room all in one!) with a big cheap plastic tarp I bought at Home Depot. The tarp is some very absorbent type of paper--almost like a heavy paper towel--that is fused to a plastic (waterproof) backing. It holds up really well and I have been using the same one for months. You could put one of these down on your floor as well. They dry quickly so you can just fold them up and stash them away until next time. (Which for me mean on top of my bookcase.)


Thanks for the tip! I might just have to try that out! :)
Team

mollybermea

now THAT book looks like a lot of fun!!

ifollowtherabbit wrote:
Stencil 101 Decor: Customize Walls, Floors, and Furniture with Oversized Stencil Art
I would like to use stencils for my next home improvement project =)

syndhu

http://www.shopmixedmedia.com/product/string-of-expression

A string of expression seems really interesting to me as I make jewelry for my personal use and for gifting purposes.
I was particularly intrigued after reading, "Each project will offer a new jewelry technique that could be applied to many jewelry projects. Pieces created out of an authentic mindset will hold the truest meaning to you, and June Roman shows you how to develop meaning and create the jewelry."

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