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Vintage papers, vintage images, acrylic paint, ink, charcoal and water soluable pastel on heavy watercolor paper.
This is a horrible picture, but it was the best I could get with the recent dreary rainy weather. It is currently hanging with some of my other work in Strange Brew Coffee Shop in Greenwood, Indiana.
Image transfer on vintage ledger paper embellished with thread and text from a vintage book. The piece is mounted on a 6"x8" piece of 140 lb. watercolor paper.
Based on Jonathan Talbot's Collage: A New Approach. See posting about techniques at www.collageorama.com/2008/06/30/best-image-transfer-techn...
8x8, Beeswax, damar resin, photograph, encaustic oil paint, oil bar, mineral pigments, thai mango paper
Samples from my image transfer workshop which included demonstrations using gesso, paint, tar gel, fabric sheets, tape, and golden's digital ground transfer. Lots of fun!!
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soak the fabric for a couple of minutes and gently rub the paper off the image. Use your finger and move in circles, so not rub hard.
Pastel, acrylic, color pencil, and image transfer from color laser prints on Mohawk Matte Paper.
5"x5"
Created this piece for Carmen Torbus' class Spill It. I got way behind with the class but have finally finished my canvases!! I'm calling this on "The Bride" She just evolved. Painted it all with my fingers and painted over the image transfer.
A page from my Image Transfer Art Journal - an image printed on textured fabric treated with digital grounds using an inkjet printer. www.linda-matthews.com/tag/image-transfer-art-journal/
My first two page spread... Ha ha. In my new 5.5 X 5.5 Hand*book. Not sure I'm digging the smaller size. Also my first packing tape image transfer. My camera must suck, or I don't know how to use it, because this page is a nice, warm, bright yellow and it doesn't show that.... The scan looked worse, so...
plated magazine strips that were gel medium transferred onto cotton fabric and embroidered on.
"nothing that can happen to you know will be as bad as what you have just missed."
text taken from a 1950's book about "bedtime etiquette". 18" x 28"