So your design portfolio is full of brilliant pencil drawings
and now you now want to inject a bit of colour to your illustrations
using paint. So how to start? Traditionally, a drawing would be created
on tracing paper before being retraced onto the desired painting
surface, using carbon/transfer paper. This could take between two and
six hours, just to be ready to paint.
Nowadays, with a scanner and
printer, you can print on almost any surface and be ready to paint in
just a few minutes. I use Epson's 4880 Ultrachrome archival printer.
These prints can be submerged in water and no bleeding occurs.
If
you're limited to a regular inkjet printer, seal the print Crystal Clear
before wet-stretching the print. When it is stretched and dry, it's
ready for paint. If you're using oil, seal it with Clear Gesso or Matte
Medium.
01. Select the appropriate paper
Start by experimenting with different papers to find out what you preferFirst
of all, you should experiment with many papers to find out what you
prefer. I use acrylic, oil and coloured pencils in one painting, so
accordingly my surface needs to work well with each medium. I
wet-stretch the printed sketch, because I begin each painting by
layering in loose washes of acrylic. If the print is not wet-stretched,
the surface will warp and buckle: not good.
02. Submerge the print in water
Get the water to room-temperature to avoid degrading the paperHot
water can degrade the paper. So instead use room-temperature water,
along with a tray, sink or bathtub. The thicker the paper, the longer it
needs to soak. For 121 lb paper give it five minutes, but up to 15
minutes for 300 lb of paper. Remove the print, let the excess water drip
off the bottom, and place it on a flat piece of drywall/wood/masonite
panel.
03. Staple the print to a board
Staple your print to a board and let it dry outDrywall
works well. That's because it's cheap, easy to cut to any size and
standard staples easily pierce through it. Wrap duct tape around the
cut, powdery edges to avoid getting it on your clothes. For masonite or
wood panels, you'll need a staple gun. Use it to staple one inch in from
the outside of the print and every two inches around the perimeter.
Then let it dry flat.
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