Showing posts with label EAB32. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EAB32. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 October 2024

2024 Topic 9 : Alison Bomber Fan {by Keren Baker}


Hi everyone, Keren Baker here with you today.

I'm always on the search for an unusual substrate to create with and whilst on holiday this summer I came across a fan in a charity shop. It was a bit broken at one end and they only wanted £1.50 for it. When this Alison Bomber topic came up, it felt like the perfect pairing. Something with meaning and elegance to accompany Alison's beautiful artistry.




We're in the throes of everything autumnal. I'm a sucker for a pumpkin spice latte and choc chip pumpkin loaf. So my thoughts naturally went to more autumnal colours that also tied in with the stamp sets that I chose.



This original fan had script on one side and a tree with blossom on the other. I was intrigued what the words meant. 'and make a morning' was a far as I could discover. The torn edges meant I felt ok to take it apart. If only I knew what a challenge this would be!


I had a some rice paper left over from some gel plate printing. Its partial translucency and delicacy felt like exactly the right substrate to use for the fan. I started by tracing the outline of the fan so I could create the right shape. You need to spread it out and press gently to get the correct shape.


Just like the fan, I wanted to 'fan' the floral images out around the shape. I used Stazon as I was going to use slightly watered down Fresco Finish paint and so wouldn't have an issue with ink running. I used two Alison Bomber sets; EAB31 and EAB32.



Using the smaller floral images with the bigger ones meant I could get enough variety in the stamping.

Now I needed to add colour and substance to give enough weight to the basis for the fan.
 


Knowing that one layer of rice paper would be too flimsy, I wanted to add a second layer. I also wanted to play with its transparent qualities so adding some text (which should have been alternate but I wasn't concentrating!) and little splodges of colour. The colours I used were Lawn, Slimed, Butternut and Wisteria.


Here's where a little organisation comes into it's own. What I should have done was to measure the gaps between the spokes before I removed the original paper- or traced the gaps or done some maths. Instead I winged it which did work but not as precisely as I'd have liked. It's really important that you find a way of securing the spoke's position before removing from the base. I found that sticky tape worked perfectly.


Now you need to adhere them together. I used PVA with a sponge applicator although I'll come to explaining why next time I'd choose differently, later.


Lots of our creative hobbies have tools, and this seam roller that I use in sewing came in handy here to help spread the glue well on each spoke. It also helped get a little pressure between the spokes to attach the two rice paper shapes together. However, it did show a little unevenly once dried and I would recommend that if you have a spray adhesive, this would give a more even and less obvious result.


The fan seemed to need more. I came up with the idea of partially adding colour to the spokes- and hoping that the opening and closing wouldn't rub it off. I marked where to stop painting along each spoke using washi tape.


Now came another tricky part- closing it up and getting the folds into place. If you watch the reel on Instagram, you can see how I did it, but once you've got it folded together, you do need to make the folds a little crisper by pinching them with your thumb and forefinger so the end result looks better.

It did look like a proper fan!



You can paint the spokes. Interestingly, they were supposed to be covered with Slimed so I started with a white base, but it reacted with the finish or wood and not matter how many layers of paint I added, the maroon dye came through, so I just went with the pink.

I would have liked to have added an outer stripe. I thought about folded over washi tape but wondered if it would make the folds too bulky. Some lighter paper would be fab that was less transparent but not too thick. It would make the glue showing through less of an issue too.

I would have liked to make a different fan - one that remained folded out, adding windows and actual dimensional elements. It would make a really interesting home decor piece. I wanted to add some stamped linen buttons and a tassel but it seemed complete as it was, so I left it.

This would make a fun project to do with friends and maybe we should bring back the art of understanding each other's feelings by how people were holding or moving their fans! 

Keren x

Thursday, 18 May 2023

2023 Topic 5 : Tinged Blue {by Alison Bomber} with Alison Bomber stamps



Hello all, Alison here from Words and Pictures.  I loved the idea of mixing up some paint variations on Surf's Up - so much so that I ended up doing it with two different colours!  The plan was to work with Antarctic and create some tinges of blue that would suit the tiny flowers on my EAB32 Rosemary Edition stems.  

But I really wanted some greens for the needles too, so rather than just adding a green paint, I decided to mix that green paint with Surf's Up too.  And the results have made me very happy.  See what you think...


I love that all the colours are related to each other via Surf's Up - it gives the whole piece a really soothing harmonious feeling.  And I'm thrilled with my little apothecary bottles full of distilled rosemary tincture (!) - one of PaperArtsy's brilliant glazes gave them just the right twist.  Read on to find out more.


So, with my three colours - Fresco Chalk Acrylic Surf's Up, FF146, Antarctic FF67 and Magic Moss FF130  - the first step was to see what kinds of tinges of blue I would get with my Surf's Up + Antarctic or Surf's Up + Magic Moss (my chosen green) combinations.  

And then, just out of curiosity really - but also because I thought I might want some paler greens for highlighting - I added in an Antarctic + Magic Moss column (far left).  Lots of lovely icy blues and smoky, silvery blue-greens...heaven!


Rosemary as a plant does have silvery, soft colour tones, so I knew I was on to a good thing with this colour palette to play with in combination with my EAB32 Rosemary Edition stamps.


In any case, it's always such fun seeing the colours shift as you add just a few drops more of one paint or the other!


I really wanted to see how the rosemary looked with these gorgeous muted greens and blues, so I stamped the large stems using my stamping platform (so that I would be able to stamp again to retrieve any detail lost in the painting stage), and got to work with my water brush and my three paint colours.


I like working with my Fresco paints in washes, so I generally put a dot or puddle of the paint directly onto the craft mat and then give it a spritz of water.  And I use a water brush just because that's what works for me.  When I'm painting something like the rosemary needles, I use the finest one in my set of three, and it's useful how the moisture helps it keep its point for this detailed work.  It also makes it really easy to mix the paints, using the mat as my palette.


I realised as I was painting that the flowers are really only a small part of the image... with all those needles, the main colour tinges were definitely mostly green by the time I'd finished.  Since my original brief was to work with the Surf's Up/Antarctic combination (and since I really loved those colour mixes), I decided to deploy them to create some labels to go alongside the rosemary sprigs.  I painted four simple blocks of colour (straight Antarctic at the top, straight Surf's Up at the bottom, and two mixes in between) ready to create my labels later on.


The idea for those labels changed my thinking about where the project was headed.  For the over-arching Texture theme this quarter, I'd decided to use a wonderful birch bark panel as my substrate, and originally I'd thought the whole thing would be very organic and natural.  

But with those labels underway, I started to take a turn towards something with a touch of the apothecary about it.  After all, my botanical sets are heavily influenced by the medicinal powers and properties of the plants I sketch - with all the details provided by Culpeper's Herbal (1653).  So that's what led me to the next part of the creation.
 

Obviously the rosemary sprigs are the main focal point of the piece, but the labels added this new apothecary dimension, so I decided they needed something to balance and back them up in that idea.  What better than a couple of little apothecary jars?  

These were bought at a cheapy shop (they were full of glitter or glass crystals or something - six for a pound), and I decided to give them a little makeover with some of the PaperArtsy Frosting Glaze FF111.  I dabbed it on with a sponge, aiming for some more texture for the theme...


Unfortunately, the Frosting Glaze was way too clever for me, and it dried to this beautiful smooth frosted finish.  It looks so good that I forgave it for stealing my texture!  I've put one of the unglazed jars on the left so you can see the difference. It gives the glass a beautifully aged, antique look.


And then I had a brainwave about labelling the bottles.  My botanical stamp sets are full of little words... the Latin name of the plant attached to the large sketch; Culpeper's name for the plant attached to the small sketch; and of course the four different botanical collector words that are also next to the large sketches in these latest sets.  So I used all those, stamped, trimmed and stuck on, to create my apothecary jar labels.

Inside is a weak solution of blue ink and water - and apologies that you can still see the glue drying around the cork lids. I thought it would be safest to glue them to prevent leaks, but I was so excited about the look that I couldn't wait to let it dry before photographing them!  Again, the unaltered jar is there for comparison.


Then it was on to the labels... I had a similar plan to use the individual words from the stamp set... the four botanist's words, one for each label.  And then I handwrote in some details from my "botanist's studies" of their subject, and doodled simple lines around the edge to frame them.


The labels and the jars together really gave me that element of the apothecary or botanist's experiments that I wanted, and balanced with the organic textured birch bark behind, I thought I was pretty much there.


I wanted to add some more organic elements, so the sprigs of dried baby's breath and the sisal fibres were waiting in the wings to play their part.  That meant I needed to layer up the rosemary to give all that real plant material space in between my painted stems.  So the rosemary is mounted on padded tape to create those dimensional layers.  


I found to my delight that it was possible to cut the two main stems apart with only one needle getting chopped off completely... so the two separated stems are glued direct to the bark substrate, while the two that are still joined together are mounted on padded tape with the natural materials in between.  And then the smaller sprig is mounted over the top of some rusty wire wrapped round the bark (with more padded tape to support it hidden away). 


I had planned to let the labels speak for themselves, but there's a reason I'm known as "Words and Pictures", and I was craving some extra words.  Luckily, the stamp set has a quote ready and waiting (well, it's not luck, it's because that's the way I chose to design the sets!), so I stamped and trimmed that to add to the dimensional collage.


It's partially obscured by the baby's breath (which also makes it really hard to get the camera to focus on the thing you want!), but I really don't mind that.  They are the beautiful words Ophelia speaks in Hamlet as she is grieving for her father, but I think they can also have a lovely romantic slant to them if you prefer.


The stamping is mostly done in Ranger Watering Can Archival ink so that it doesn't steal focus from the delicate Surf's Up blues and greens of the rosemary stems. 

The fibres and the baby's breath give everything a real sense of movement and organic randomness, but I can never resist just a touch of random splatter to finish things off.  I find it gives a kind of life and energy to a creation.  And I really adore how the tiny speckles of Fresco Snowflake (the perfect white spatter paint, with a touch of water added, of course) look on my apothecary jars. The glue is dry now, you'll notice, and completely invisible. 


And the layering of the textured substrate and the natural embellishments with the Surf's Up tinged rosemary stems works just as I had imagined it.


I can even cope with the presence of my own handwriting on my ombre botanist's labels!


The combination of the original organic idea with the expansion into the world of the apothecary, not to mention the last-minute addition of some unplanned words, all adds up to a dimensional collage panel which makes me really happy.  Who knew what paint mixing could lead to?!



It was so interesting to set out on this journey with colour as the starting point.  That's not really how I usually start off.  Maybe that's why there were so many unexpected twists and turns for me in this project - although, having said that, I rarely know exactly where things are going when I'm creating!  But my original idea of a rosemary growing against a tree now has so much more detail and interest with the added botanist's labels and apothecary jars.  And I think the rosemary flowers and needles look beautiful in their Surf's Up tinges.  

It's really worth using paint mixing to create a harmonious look.  If each colour you use in a project has just a little of one central colour mixed into it, they will all blend and work together, helping to create that calm, soothing atmosphere.  And you'll feel so calm and happy that you'll be ready to follow wherever the artistic muse takes you!

Thanks, as always, for your company on this creative journey.
Happy crafting, all! 
Alison x




Instagram: @w0rdsandp1ctures