As a fine artist I am always trying to find ways to add texture to
my art and usually practice on one of the many old pieces of art that
are laying around the studio. I love the grunge line quality I got and
the results even surprised me.
SUPPLIES
Creative Paperclay®
Acrylic paint
Wax paper
Brayer
Painted Panel (old)
Matte medium
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVIPPyitKRW0Tmjc2nf_NJIvZqLgBW4o8aw_otieHRNh73N6UeN2gsdI1jj3gjCqybeaCEUvj7MVbO35U-0RBG0WtSwB7VFOWMaupmNM-agjw-_84E_Eh4at67peyDJRWEZxmfgp52XwY/s1600/coloredslurry.jpg)
I started by mixing a navy blue acrylic paint into a slurry of Creative
Paperclay® with my palette knife until it was well mixed. Since my
surface was mainly orange and brown I decided to make my slurry color a
cool color.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDUL28Tmr-3MgczUDsLGafOclgUuwg-d54lmHS6r8sOYnC6j0weeuXoL3Nnp4eCl8yiRDZkxB8dpheqrPdFnNOaqzymsAjc7V-JDKPLy-llrQ7LJ-FJUXJJf0HM59FLW8ZuSF2lpBgwNo/s1600/brayered.jpg)
I roughly spread the colored slurry onto an old painting (on a panel)
then laid wax paper over it and brayered it flat. I left the wax paper
on until the slurry was almost dry then I made lines by scraping with my
finger nail (because I am lazy). Finished it with a coat of matte
medium. I will definitely be using this technique in a painting soon.
Darlene Olivia McElroy
No comments:
Post a Comment