I used a plastic bag to make the texture. First, i used the plastic bag and did texture all over, then I did my deliberate strokes on certain areas to make it look painted…and finally did another plastic bag texture.
Wow that must have taken forever, but it looks so nice! If I got this right, most often when a painting was finished and completely set up, dry and the oils have cured, the artist would varnish the entire canvas. In the old days they would use lacquer and over time it would begin to give the painting a warm hue. The varnish protected the actual painting from soot, smoke, oils, dust and what have you, as back before electric lights home were often filled with soot, grease and smoke on just about everything from the lanterns, candles, and coal fires. All that most often can be removed with care cleaning without having to remove the lacquer. But in some case the lacquer is removed as well and then revarnished. I'm considering ordering some old artists works on printed on canvas. So most likely if I want them to look like they're paintings I may be doing what you've done lol!
Cool. How did you get the paper to not wrinkle when you glued? All of my tester paper is wrinkling... What material did you glue the poster to? I was thinking about using a foam board. What paper thickness was the poster? Lastly, was the clear coat sticking to the glossy paper? I tested both matte and glossy and the modge podge I used was not sticking well to the glossy... in fact, after it dried, I could peel the modge podge right off the glossy, but the it stayed in place with the matte finish. Thanks
That was awesome I think sir. 👍 worked out well with a little patience. Now it looks like you have an actual painting. Or at least a gicleē Where did you get your prints?
Does everyone know how flucky different and weird artists really are! I'm talking about myself and other artist friends I've had throughout the years... I've seen this quality with all these videos created by artists.‼️O:-)
I used a plastic bag to make the texture. First, i used the plastic bag and did texture all over, then I did my deliberate strokes on certain areas to make it look painted…and finally did another plastic bag texture.
Everything was good except I got "seasick" when the camera was swinging back and forth, back and forth. 🤣
This looks great! I’ve experimented with impasto gel - it exaggerates the texture and thickness of paint.
Wow that must have taken forever, but it looks so nice! If I got this right, most often when a painting was finished and completely set up, dry and the oils have cured, the artist would varnish the entire canvas. In the old days they would use lacquer and over time it would begin to give the painting a warm hue. The varnish protected the actual painting from soot, smoke, oils, dust and what have you, as back before electric lights home were often filled with soot, grease and smoke on just about everything from the lanterns, candles, and coal fires. All that most often can be removed with care cleaning without having to remove the lacquer. But in some case the lacquer is removed as well and then revarnished.
I'm considering ordering some old artists works on printed on canvas. So most likely if I want them to look like they're paintings I may be doing what you've done lol!
Thank you so much! Was a lot of work but was very happy with the result. Best of luck to you with your project!
I wonder if I could take a faded print and add color back to it first by hand... Let it dry then do this?
Very nice effect! You mentioned that you would put the instructions in the description box. I'm not seeing it.
My question is, what will you use to stop it from flaking off later and t protect it. Maybe mod podge as a final coat.🤔
I will try this but using a textured roller instead. Wish me luck!
Cool. How did you get the paper to not wrinkle when you glued? All of my tester paper is wrinkling... What material did you glue the poster to? I was thinking about using a foam board. What paper thickness was the poster? Lastly, was the clear coat sticking to the glossy paper? I tested both matte and glossy and the modge podge I used was not sticking well to the glossy... in fact, after it dried, I could peel the modge podge right off the glossy, but the it stayed in place with the matte finish. Thanks
If you sprayed it again with a matching finish to the gel, maybe it would lessen the white spots.
That was awesome I think sir. 👍 worked out well with a little patience. Now it looks like you have an actual painting. Or at least a gicleē Where did you get your prints?
Where can I find a frame like that
How important is it to mount your print onto a textured canvas? Thanks
Does everyone know how flucky different and weird artists really are! I'm talking about myself and other artist friends I've had throughout the years... I've seen this quality with all these videos created by artists.‼️O:-)
I have 1 poster fixed/glued to a frame, do you think this process will still work? I worry that the paper gets dettached from the frame
How's the weather up there?
hi
can i try this on printed canvas ?
Stop waving the camera around, very distracting, had to leave.
Very useful but... the nonstop moving of the cam irritated at least me a bit too much.
Could have been shorter.
People actually pay for enhanced prints. Maybe you found your calling☺️
your method is interesting and helpful, however your videography made me sea sick!