I have no idea what they actually use to do this, but I would try wallpaper paste, it goes on thick and stays tacky for a good amount of time and you can use a brush to apply it.
You should have used gilding adhesive. It is transparent and becomes more tacky after 30 minutes. I’m sure it would work beautifully with a light powder.
I was just screaming at the top of my lungs ITS WET JAZZA IT AINT GONNA STICK ITS LIKE TRYING TO GUESS THE COLOR BLIND FOLDER HOW THE HECK YOU GONNA DO IT
I can't help but think "CORNSTARCH!" You can color it AND it's nontoxic! Hope it goes better next try and thanks for showing us the stuff that doesn't work out.
Baking soda would probably work well too. I think I have also seen powdered tempera paint at school supply stores. Should be less toxic than chalk line chalk.
@@GordieGii Carcinogenic is the buzzword they don't equate it to toxic otherwise they would have to label toast and other roasted baked/toasted foods toxic
@@jmpiv4 And smoked. Bacon, sausages, ham. Also maraschino cherries and sassafras. But he's a magician, not a chef or a teacher. As an adult he can look into the toxicity/carcinogenicity of the tempera paint and decide whether it's better or worse than chalk-line chalk.
The use of coloured (and really dried) baking sofa is what most use with this technique. Combined with an adhesive with an extremely long open time, surprise, but it’s NOT adhesive, but gel medium mixed with extender which allows the time and adhesion needed. Looking forward to seeing this been more successful! Gentle Hugs
Where would one purchase baking sofa -- especially a type that is really dried? But the idea of using baking SODA with gel medium mixed with extender, is an excellent idea, Stacey. Kudos to you, and your inspired comment. ❤
@@zurgishsweet4895 baking soda is from the grocery store, used in baking. It comes dry, but is white. So you would have to color it if you didn't want white, then make sure that's dry
I love that Jazza isn't the type of creator who doesn't upload something just because it doesn't go amazing or perfect. I love the honest approach where he shows exactly what happened, what a hero!
Note that none of the artists actually "threw" the powder "at" the painting. They threw the fine powder mix (two different types of powders to help it remain separated) up and it fell over the painting. The affected surface needs to remain wet. I don't think it's true glue at all. I think it's either Mod Podge and pouring medium or silicone. Silicone dries very slowly and is extremely tacky.
I Made a blood painting Hey ! I’ve made a painting of DEXTER with my OWN BLOOD, and one with Sand…. Please do watch it on my TH-cam channel and share it if you like it. Thank you ❤️
One thing I like about this channel is that you aren't afraid to show when things don't go quite the way you wanted. A lot of creators will only show off their successes, but you show us your struggles and challenges and I find that inspiring.
Combining some of the other comments I’ve seen: Cornstarch- You can dye, then dry it. it and it’s non-toxic Baking soda- dyed and dried Suggested adhesives: Gel medium mixed with an extender. Or any adhesive with a very long working time. Perhaps wallpaper paste. There were also a few that noted the particle launching technique. None of them seem to be thrown directly at the canvas, but rather thrown up and the settled over the canvas. I’ve seen some people load up a big sheet with the powder (like in the rice throwing videos were people use a ton of different clips next to each other to make an image) it’s the same kind of throwing/launching motion
@@honeybunch5765 Beach sand is also just very different from say.... middle of the desert sand, and I think that's what he needed. Beach sand is mostly water ground shells and such, while most desert sand is eroded rock.
@@ArcNeoMasato they also have the craft store sands for doing bottled sand art (a craft for kids usually but sometimes a Trent online and can be a career), which is a light weight sand that's usually a whole variety of colors.
Honeybunch any garden store has sand for building and construction, it doesn’t sit inside an office though, so obviously it gets rained on, but wet sand isn’t bad for mortar or conc
I love that you still posted this video, even though it was a failure. That takes guts. I don't think most artists would have posted this. They don't want to be seen as untalented. But honestly I think it was super refreshing. It's awesome to see you do things terribly. Because I do all kinds of things terribly. It makes you more human. Thank you Jazza 💖
Something that stays wet/sticky for a long time is key here. Also need *veryyyyy* fine particles to throw. I think that's why chalk seemed to work best because it's so fine. Edited to add: it's probably a good idea to seal the paper/canvas first with matte/glossy mod podge so it's not absorbing the glue as you "paint" with it.
Hey Jazza! I used to do something similar to this all the time with Mod Podge glue. I used glitter, which could be fun and eye-catching in a video, but I bet your other mediums would work with it too! Also, it’s meant to be used with a paint brush, which is a plus since there’s no need to thin it out.
i'd definitely avoid throwing glitter unless you have eye protection, theres a lot of stories of people getting glitter in their eyes, and it causing serious pain/injury
Haven't tried this, but my first thought is: as some people have already commented, using a less absorbant canvas, which does not absorb too much of the glue. As for an adhesive, my mind went to glue for metal leafing. It doesn't dry very fast and is tacky for a while, just a thought from a fellow dabbler.
I’m always impressed when you bring something new to the art realm. But I’m equally impressed when you do something and you show the fails. This is what all artists struggle with. We want it to go right the first time. Thankfully you will come back and show us again, and probably succeed!
You used sand that yes was too heavy from the moisture it had. Not sure how much better dry sand would work since salt is similiar in texture. But this was interesting to watch. I've never seen techniques like this.
Dry sand in a low temperature oven overnight?? It's cold enough at the moment to warm the house and not overheat the house. Leave the oven door open slightly to allow the air to circulate.
@@MizusSparkles I don't know what the weather is like where Jazza is in Australia but we are in Winter at the moment. So might not be possible now but an excellent idea for Summer.
The chalk „splatters“ you didn’t quite like on the black background actually looked like a ton of STARS! :) You should have tried a planet (universe scene) and little stars with chalk on the black background!!
I Made a blood painting Hey ! I’ve made a painting of DEXTER with my OWN BLOOD, and one with Sand…. Please do watch it on my TH-cam channel and share it if you like it. Thank you ❤️
Hi jazza! I work in the paint department of the film industry. First off, love you last few vids. I am determined to use some of these techniques in the near future. If you ever want to revisit this concept, you might find some success with wallpaper paste. It has a slower drying time then most of your adhesive mediums. Its not super sticky, so I'm guessing it would work better with the lighter powders, but it might work with sand if you put it on thick enough
Don’t throw the chalk or powder at it. You want the dust plume the air to stick. If you rewatch the videos.. it looks like they throw the powder up ⬆️ into the air in front of the paper and the glue catches the falling cloud. Like 🦄 magic. Good try! I believe you can do it! Give it another go sometime. 😊👍
Spray tack is not the same as standard spray adhesive. Spray adhesive dries fairly quickly, tack stays... well, tacky. And as many others said, that sand was wayyyy too wet.
The adhesives are fine! You're throwing rocks at the paper, sir. You need finer (and dryer) sand/powder. Flour, baking soda, talcum... (and yes, less absorbent canvas)
I love this video because it shows not everybody (even famous artist) knows everything and sometimes you need a help from others...thanks Jazza for reminding this to me
Jazza!! kuretake's Zig 2 Way glue, while its biggest size is not a big enough glue pen for the massive end project, is a glue that goes down blue but dries clear and *sticky*. it's a double sided tape you can paint. i use it a lot for glitter applications. you should definitely give this another go with that!! Aileen's Tack It Over And Over (NOT aileen's tacky glue, that one's just really thick PVA) dries similarly and comes in larger bottles too. I don't like it as much as the Zig 2 Way glues for my art, but I'd imagine i'd work well for this medium.
@@ovoanaestheticovo3740 It would make the painting easier and once dried down to clear, you would still get a good reveal from throwing chalk at that point
@@ovoanaestheticovo3740 what crosita said: you could allow it to dry fully, but it would give you some ability to see what you are doing while actually working, which is something jazza consistently complained about in this video
I love how we don't only see you succeed but also getting a look at you trying and failing, inovating and coming up with other ways to get ot your goal. Absolutely love this video, I'm sure you'll find something that works!
Hey jazza there's this TH-cam channel called pal tiya that has this awesome sculpting clay that hardens like concrete I think you should give it a try on your Channel
I'd recommend tacky glue, like mont Marte's clear tacky glue. Stays "liquid" longer and has the bonus of being more tacky than regular crafty glues. Or Gloo tacky glue which has a slow drying time
I love how jazza shows his failures as well as his successes. It makes him more relateable and its nice to know that even he has trouble with art and is not perfect
I love that you posted this despite not feeling it was the best thing you could have done. It shows that art doesnt just come overnight with ease. It's messy experimentation. its a journey. a discovery.
@@blindopossum7913 I have now and I'm crying 😢 may Technoblade rest in peace, still making people happy even when he is not with us Technoblade will forever be with us and I'm eternally great full for how many smiles he has put on so many faces. Technoblade may now rest in peace in heaven R.I.P Technoblade💓
As your daughter would say, "It could use a tornado." Besides that, one technique I've never seen anyone use, but might work to some degree would be to use your laser cutter to draw the pointilist version of your art. Then, you can more quickly extrude (or paint on the back side) with your adhesive, leaving many little sticky dots on the happy side of the soon-to-be art. One more idea: Wet paint is sticky. What if you painted black on black and then threw the dust? Maybe?
Jazza, I can't wait to see you attack this again. As rarely as it happens, and as much as it always sucks to fail or see someone fail; it's in a way refreshing and burden lifting to see that you in fact are human, and that EVERYONE makes mistakes. You're more inspirational than you realize, I believe.
I actually really liked the final poster attempt. I think you should attempt a complete picture smearing chalk after administering it thrown into glue. Follow up with a flat edge to mold into an image.
I am loving all the recent content! Really trying out so many new and creative things between this, different ways to use crayons, painting with super soakers, painting with bleach and everything in between. Keep it up!
I am loving these style videos of you trying new stuff. I started watching during the 10 min vs 1 min vs 10 sec drawing trends and to see something with much more emotion attached is awesome. Cool pieces too
When I saw this I thought about my experience with embossing powders and gilding flakes in card crafting. Embossing powders require an embossing medium that stays tacky long enough so you can pour embossing powders on it to stick to the paper before you heat to melt/set the embossing powders. There is a wide array of embossing mediums on the market but the dry time is fairly quick. For gilding flakes, there is a product by Creative Expressions - Cosmic Shimmer Acrylic Glue that stays tacky for a longer time. There is slight color tint as you work with it but dries clear. I've only used it with gliding flake but I know it's advertised to adhere glitter and other finer particles. You should give these products a go on this idea or with other art projects. Good luck! Love your work.
The gorilla contact adhesive uses Isopropyl alcohol as the solvent, so you could try using that to dilute it more efficiently than denatured ethanol aka acetone.
I remember doing something similar as a kid whenever my family went to the state fair but instead of glue, it was a peel sticker picture sheet where you peel a part of the picture, choose a color sand you want to use and pour on top it. I had a blast doing those as a kid.
a bit different, but actually, salt on watercolor is an actual cool technique but yeah, as someone else said, canvas absorbing glue is bad, and finer powders work better
Did similar to this back in the 80s in primary school, but as the school was cheap, we only have PVA glue and we did things in stages. Speaking of, something I haven't done since primary school either, is wax crayon etching... used to love doing that!!
I love the neon alien landscape I'm seeing as if through a fog of dreams... Or maybe my mind just loves making fantastical landscapes from the void lol
13:31 jazza: ~doing the heavy commentary~throws a bowl of chalk~still doing the heavy talk~ Me: thinking it will fill the glue door Jazza:~completely misses the door and “the results speak for themselves”~Proud face~
Hi Jazda, how are you? Recently I have become pretty much addicted to your videos, haha. they are so positive and inspiring, really. I love your adventurous and exploratory approach to new ways of making art and new mediums. however, what happened to be my most favourite videos are those where your overpaint the thrift store paintings. those are amazing. IT would be awesome if you could make more of those. thanks and keep doing the great work.
Well, at least I'll always have your older, original stuff to still watch. It's been one Hell of a ride, Jazza but this is where I get off. Never forget who are and enjoy the rest. It sucks you feel you had to go this route but I hope it brings you happiness. -Eamon O'Connor
@@SmileThatExplodes I implore you to watch whatever makes you happy. My personal opinions shouldn't dissuade you from enjoying whatever it is that you like. Don't listen to me, I'm just some stupid asshole.
For a smaller project you could try to use epoxy resin instead of glue as it stays wet and tacky much longer. And also I think you need finer and lighter powders especially if you wanna do the throw method. Chalk in a blender/coffee grinder would probably do the trick. Or you can just buy powdered sugar instead of granulated one. Anyway I enjoyed watching your experiments with it, a really cool video! And it's nice and comforting to see that even big artists don't get fantastic result on their first attempts at a new medium sometimes. Reminds you that learning is a process and mistakes and fails in the beginning helps you learn better and faster. Thanks for being so true and open, Jazza.
@jazza I have an idea for you to try, that I think youd love. Ferrofluid (a type of liquid that when you use a magnet, it creates the "spikes" and cool effects. But it also works as the smoothest pen/sharpie or whatever if you use it on paper. Id imagine you could do some cool stuff with it!) Also has a really cool thing where if you put the ferrofluid on a magnet, it gets so slippery that it barely has any friction.
We once had to do something similar in Art class... We had to do a portrait in black and white on a wooden plate, we used normal wood glue and colored crafting sand for that and it worked extremely well, we had enough time to paint to areas and put the sand on it but it also was fast enough to not take ages to dry. And the sand it still holding on, even after 6-7 years now
Hey Jazza, you can use polyester or epoxy resin without catalyst and part B respectively as glue, both will remain sticky for very very long time and even can get thinned as needed. Hope it helps.
After you have created your glorious artwork, I think a light coat of hair spray goes a long way to preserve the piece so the chalk doesn't slowly degrade over time, or at least it will make it more slow but I think it reduces the pigment or something. I am only speaking with the experience of doing something similar in year 6.
I used to do this craft in primary school, where i dusted coloured sad on wet paint, and it actually used to work! I don't remember what paint it was but u could try it out with different paints!
I am sure someone has said this in the 1900 comments but they do make a glue that goes on white and dries clear and tacky that you use for gold and foil leaf, as well as fine glitter. It sticks to just about anything after it is dry. I never thought about throwing chalk at it!
Some of the examples people made actually seem to use a cloth instead of paper, something with fine fur that will help repel or hide extra dust but will hold the sticking substance better for capturing the right dust
I use to do this when I was a kid. My favorite was white craft glue and colored chalk. I would layer my artwork and let the layers dry before doing the next.
Colored cornstarch like used in those "color run" races, and use gold leaf adhesive that stays tacky for up to a half hour+ and has good detail control
[Giving out ideas: ] Paint a tree something cool or abstract Paint a paper plate Make an awesome paper plane [ just ideas, they’re quite basic because I have a dumb brain but you always come with ideas so I can count on you and you can’t count on me for making good videos. I love watching them. ]
There's traditional sand painting. I saw artists working (and had a sand painting made for me) on Gore Island in Senegal. I'd recommend you check then out. The artist used a glue that they painted on and then sprinkled layers of sand on top of it. The material the painting was done on was plywood.
This was a fun watch. Very funny the large one was very funny, the editing made it seem like it was going to be sooooo epic and the end result made me nearly spit out my drink xD
I have no idea what they actually use to do this, but I would try wallpaper paste, it goes on thick and stays tacky for a good amount of time and you can use a brush to apply it.
My favorite dog likes my favorite art channel?? Life=Completed
It's good boy K'eyush!
Heyy, didn't expect you here! Love your videos, especially those with Sherpa!
Some Wallpaper pastes can be pink coloured when applied and dry clear so at least you could see what you are painting
K’ey your genius!
Jazza: “I’m gonna use sand”
Me: ~envisions fine, dry sand~
Jazza: ~throws the wettest, clumpiest sand he can find~
right? It looks like it came right our of a goddamn beach.
it looks like he put gallons of water in it
That's what I yelled at my screen!!😂
Oh my gosh I choked reading this and almost wet myself this is exactly what I was thinking 🤣😭
It's like he literally bought sand and then added water to it like what?
You should have used gilding adhesive. It is transparent and becomes more tacky after 30 minutes. I’m sure it would work beautifully with a light powder.
I was surprised Jazza did not try it. Or using something like 5 minute or 30 minute epoxy glue. They are tacky for more than workable time.
i am you
Exactly what I was thinking!
Yeah and it dries clear
And also throw chark powder
The particles are very small so it sticks easily and can be very detailed
The ammount of times I have yelled "IT IS WET" at my screen when Jazza tries to throw wet sand and it doesn't stick
I was just screaming at the top of my lungs ITS WET JAZZA IT AINT GONNA STICK ITS LIKE TRYING TO GUESS THE COLOR BLIND FOLDER HOW THE HECK YOU GONNA DO IT
😂😂😂
So it wasn't just me who noticed the wet sand 😂
I can't help but think "CORNSTARCH!" You can color it AND it's nontoxic! Hope it goes better next try and thanks for showing us the stuff that doesn't work out.
Baking soda would probably work well too. I think I have also seen powdered tempera paint at school supply stores. Should be less toxic than chalk line chalk.
@Yiran That would be a problem if you want to make a picture. You want it to only stick in certain places.
Good idea
Let's make slime too
@@GordieGii Carcinogenic is the buzzword they don't equate it to toxic otherwise they would have to label toast and other roasted baked/toasted foods toxic
@@jmpiv4 And smoked. Bacon, sausages, ham. Also maraschino cherries and sassafras.
But he's a magician, not a chef or a teacher. As an adult he can look into the toxicity/carcinogenicity of the tempera paint and decide whether it's better or worse than chalk-line chalk.
The use of coloured (and really dried) baking sofa is what most use with this technique. Combined with an adhesive with an extremely long open time, surprise, but it’s NOT adhesive, but gel medium mixed with extender which allows the time and adhesion needed. Looking forward to seeing this been more successful! Gentle Hugs
Where would one purchase baking sofa -- especially a type that is really dried? But the idea of using baking SODA with gel medium mixed with extender, is an excellent idea, Stacey. Kudos to you, and your inspired comment. ❤
@@zurgishsweet4895 baking soda is from the grocery store, used in baking. It comes dry, but is white. So you would have to color it if you didn't want white, then make sure that's dry
thinned rubber cement works well from my experience
@@recoveringsoul755 r/wooosh
@@recoveringsoul755 r/woooosh
I love that Jazza isn't the type of creator who doesn't upload something just because it doesn't go amazing or perfect. I love the honest approach where he shows exactly what happened, what a hero!
i was gonna say this same thing
Note that none of the artists actually "threw" the powder "at" the painting. They threw the fine powder mix (two different types of powders to help it remain separated) up and it fell over the painting.
The affected surface needs to remain wet. I don't think it's true glue at all. I think it's either Mod Podge and pouring medium or silicone. Silicone dries very slowly and is extremely tacky.
I Made a blood painting
Hey ! I’ve made a painting of DEXTER with my OWN BLOOD, and one with Sand…. Please do watch it on my TH-cam channel and share it if you like it.
Thank you ❤️
Mod Podge! Great idea!
Epoxy resin with a slower dry time might also be a good choice.
@@Adamant_Consternation Spread thin, even slow drying epoxy dries pretty fast while exposed to air. But it is a worth consideration..
I thought maybe some paint that matches the canvas color might also work pretty well too.
One thing I like about this channel is that you aren't afraid to show when things don't go quite the way you wanted. A lot of creators will only show off their successes, but you show us your struggles and challenges and I find that inspiring.
Combining some of the other comments I’ve seen:
Cornstarch- You can dye, then dry it. it and it’s non-toxic
Baking soda- dyed and dried
Suggested adhesives:
Gel medium mixed with an extender. Or any adhesive with a very long working time.
Perhaps wallpaper paste.
There were also a few that noted the particle launching technique. None of them seem to be thrown directly at the canvas, but rather thrown up and the settled over the canvas. I’ve seen some people load up a big sheet with the powder (like in the rice throwing videos were people use a ton of different clips next to each other to make an image) it’s the same kind of throwing/launching motion
Not me being allergic to cornstarch
I think the problem with the sand was that it was wet. Dry sand is much lighter and I think it wouldve stuck better
I agree dry it up and it would have been the winner I think
Where did he even find wet sand, at the beach? Did he just grabbed a bucket full and went home?😃
@@honeybunch5765 Beach sand is also just very different from say.... middle of the desert sand, and I think that's what he needed. Beach sand is mostly water ground shells and such, while most desert sand is eroded rock.
@@ArcNeoMasato they also have the craft store sands for doing bottled sand art (a craft for kids usually but sometimes a Trent online and can be a career), which is a light weight sand that's usually a whole variety of colors.
Honeybunch any garden store has sand for building and construction, it doesn’t sit inside an office though, so obviously it gets rained on, but wet sand isn’t bad for mortar or conc
I love that you still posted this video, even though it was a failure. That takes guts. I don't think most artists would have posted this. They don't want to be seen as untalented. But honestly I think it was super refreshing. It's awesome to see you do things terribly. Because I do all kinds of things terribly. It makes you more human. Thank you Jazza 💖
Ditto
Something that stays wet/sticky for a long time is key here. Also need *veryyyyy* fine particles to throw. I think that's why chalk seemed to work best because it's so fine.
Edited to add: it's probably a good idea to seal the paper/canvas first with matte/glossy mod podge so it's not absorbing the glue as you "paint" with it.
Hey Jazza! I used to do something similar to this all the time with Mod Podge glue. I used glitter, which could be fun and eye-catching in a video, but I bet your other mediums would work with it too! Also, it’s meant to be used with a paint brush, which is a plus since there’s no need to thin it out.
If you use glitter remember to use non plastic eco friendly glitter though. Regular glitter is horrible for the environment
i'd definitely avoid throwing glitter unless you have eye protection, theres a lot of stories of people getting glitter in their eyes, and it causing serious pain/injury
We need a part 2 with all suggestions from the comments ! you can do much better and greater results with the right products :)
we actually need a part 2 where Jazza does contact, at least, one of those guys and ask what the heck they used...
Haven't tried this, but my first thought is: as some people have already commented, using a less absorbant canvas, which does not absorb too much of the glue.
As for an adhesive, my mind went to glue for metal leafing. It doesn't dry very fast and is tacky for a while, just a thought from a fellow dabbler.
Gum ammoniac could work, that gets used for gilding. And you can breathe on it to reactivate it and make it tacky again.
Yeah that's a really tacky glue that stays sticky for a while
I’m always impressed when you bring something new to the art realm. But I’m equally impressed when you do something and you show the fails. This is what all artists struggle with. We want it to go right the first time. Thankfully you will come back and show us again, and probably succeed!
You used sand that yes was too heavy from the moisture it had. Not sure how much better dry sand would work since salt is similiar in texture.
But this was interesting to watch. I've never seen techniques like this.
Yeah sand is definitely too moist to stick to anything, he needs to dry it.
I was thinking the same thing. That sand looked wet 😬
Dry sand in a low temperature oven overnight?? It's cold enough at the moment to warm the house and not overheat the house. Leave the oven door open slightly to allow the air to circulate.
@@ctempleman1401 or in the sun on a big plastic tarp.
@@MizusSparkles I don't know what the weather is like where Jazza is in Australia but we are in Winter at the moment. So might not be possible now but an excellent idea for Summer.
The chalk „splatters“ you didn’t quite like on the black background actually looked like a ton of STARS! :) You should have tried a planet (universe scene) and little stars with chalk on the black background!!
I Made a blood painting
Hey ! I’ve made a painting of DEXTER with my OWN BLOOD, and one with Sand…. Please do watch it on my TH-cam channel and share it if you like it.
Thank you ❤️
Hi jazza! I work in the paint department of the film industry. First off, love you last few vids. I am determined to use some of these techniques in the near future. If you ever want to revisit this concept, you might find some success with wallpaper paste. It has a slower drying time then most of your adhesive mediums. Its not super sticky, so I'm guessing it would work better with the lighter powders, but it might work with sand if you put it on thick enough
Don’t throw the chalk or powder at it. You want the dust plume the air to stick. If you rewatch the videos.. it looks like they throw the powder up ⬆️ into the air in front of the paper and the glue catches the falling cloud. Like 🦄 magic.
Good try! I believe you can do it! Give it another go sometime. 😊👍
Also.. if this works.. please try a sparkly unicorn 🦄!! 🤩👍
Damn i want this comment to blow up because this makes a lot of sense and i want jazza to try this again..
Agreed, was looking for this comment. Jazza has to do a little practice on his sand throwing technique and then he’ll be gucci!
✨️
Spray tack is not the same as standard spray adhesive. Spray adhesive dries fairly quickly, tack stays... well, tacky.
And as many others said, that sand was wayyyy too wet.
Tacky glue should have been tried
The adhesives are fine! You're throwing rocks at the paper, sir. You need finer (and dryer) sand/powder. Flour, baking soda, talcum...
(and yes, less absorbent canvas)
paper beats Rock
Am I the only one who actually really loved the Rorschach-esque look of the first version of the old man? 😢
probably
Yes
I love this video because it shows not everybody (even famous artist) knows everything and sometimes you need a help from others...thanks Jazza for reminding this to me
Jazza!! kuretake's Zig 2 Way glue, while its biggest size is not a big enough glue pen for the massive end project, is a glue that goes down blue but dries clear and *sticky*. it's a double sided tape you can paint. i use it a lot for glitter applications. you should definitely give this another go with that!! Aileen's Tack It Over And Over (NOT aileen's tacky glue, that one's just really thick PVA) dries similarly and comes in larger bottles too. I don't like it as much as the Zig 2 Way glues for my art, but I'd imagine i'd work well for this medium.
wouldn't that go against the whole drawing-invisible-and-having-something-appear purpose, since you'd just see it before it dries?
@@ovoanaestheticovo3740 It would make the painting easier and once dried down to clear, you would still get a good reveal from throwing chalk at that point
@@ovoanaestheticovo3740 what crosita said: you could allow it to dry fully, but it would give you some ability to see what you are doing while actually working, which is something jazza consistently complained about in this video
I love how we don't only see you succeed but also getting a look at you trying and failing, inovating and coming up with other ways to get ot your goal. Absolutely love this video, I'm sure you'll find something that works!
Hey jazza there's this TH-cam channel called pal tiya that has this awesome sculpting clay that hardens like concrete I think you should give it a try on your Channel
@Don't read profile photo you are a bot and an attention seeker
@@deer563 lol 😂👌
@@justgabe_official hi gabriel
@@deer563 he actually is not a bot... maybe check it out before calling him out for something his is not.
@@bernadettevanderwalt862 oh... Ok
I love how involved Jazza's community is. There are so many comments proposing different methods and sharing experiences. Wonderful ❤️
I love that Jazza does what most people start off doing. No research other than watching people's final result and guessing how they do it. 😂
To me the ‘chalk’ looks more like powder-maybe talcum powder? Or you can also get coloured powder like the ones they throw at Holi festival?
That’s chalk powder and ‘powdered paint’ (also chalk)
Maybe mica powder
The powder st Holi festival is just plain cornstarch with dyes, so it might just work
I'd recommend tacky glue, like mont Marte's clear tacky glue. Stays "liquid" longer and has the bonus of being more tacky than regular crafty glues. Or Gloo tacky glue which has a slow drying time
Jazza’s VO while we watch him work with a gas mask: “Acetone has vapors that are toxic.”
Nail artists: 👁👄👁
I used to use acetone and lacquer thinner to rinse my copper printing plates... aaaand, I developed cancer at 43.
I love how jazza shows his failures as well as his successes. It makes him more relateable and its nice to know that even he has trouble with art and is not perfect
I love that you posted this despite not feeling it was the best thing you could have done. It shows that art doesnt just come overnight with ease. It's messy experimentation. its a journey. a discovery.
The creativity in these arts always keeps surprising me lmao
Rest In Peace Technoblade
Rest In peace technoblade? What happened to technoblade
@@miltonandersson6250 He passed away due to cancer. He has a video on his channel I would recommend watching, RIP technoblade
Rest in piss
@@blindopossum7913 I have now and I'm crying 😢 may Technoblade rest in peace, still making people happy even when he is not with us Technoblade will forever be with us and I'm eternally great full for how many smiles he has put on so many faces. Technoblade may now rest in peace in heaven R.I.P Technoblade💓
Rest in peace Technoblade
i remember doing art like this with Elmer's glue and glitter. that works just perfectly :)
Elmer's is a brand name pva glue
As your daughter would say, "It could use a tornado." Besides that, one technique I've never seen anyone use, but might work to some degree would be to use your laser cutter to draw the pointilist version of your art. Then, you can more quickly extrude (or paint on the back side) with your adhesive, leaving many little sticky dots on the happy side of the soon-to-be art.
One more idea: Wet paint is sticky. What if you painted black on black and then threw the dust? Maybe?
That pointillism idea is clever. I'd be keen to see that.
...or a tornado.
You tried and that's what counts. I appreciate the fact that you still put up the vid; it shows that even the most talented artists encounter trouble.
I'm glad jazza shows both the ones that work and don't. It helps reinforce that jazza is a human too and no one is perfect.
I love your style and enthusiasm……it’s people like you that make art fun xx
"I don't like sand, I thinck it's to heavy"
-Jazza Skywalker
Jazza, I can't wait to see you attack this again. As rarely as it happens, and as much as it always sucks to fail or see someone fail; it's in a way refreshing and burden lifting to see that you in fact are human, and that EVERYONE makes mistakes. You're more inspirational than you realize, I believe.
I actually really liked the final poster attempt. I think you should attempt a complete picture smearing chalk after administering it thrown into glue. Follow up with a flat edge to mold into an image.
I am loving all the recent content! Really trying out so many new and creative things between this, different ways to use crayons, painting with super soakers, painting with bleach and everything in between. Keep it up!
Jazza back at it again with the best quality art videos on TH-cam (in my opinion) Jazza continue to be the best!
This is a really cool and unique way to make art
My mind goes to simple syrup being the "glue" because you could cook it to just about any consistency, and it has a basically undefined open time.
I am loving these style videos of you trying new stuff. I started watching during the 10 min vs 1 min vs 10 sec drawing trends and to see something with much more emotion attached is awesome. Cool pieces too
When I saw this I thought about my experience with embossing powders and gilding flakes in card crafting. Embossing powders require an embossing medium that stays tacky long enough so you can pour embossing powders on it to stick to the paper before you heat to melt/set the embossing powders. There is a wide array of embossing mediums on the market but the dry time is fairly quick. For gilding flakes, there is a product by Creative Expressions - Cosmic Shimmer Acrylic Glue that stays tacky for a longer time. There is slight color tint as you work with it but dries clear. I've only used it with gliding flake but I know it's advertised to adhere glitter and other finer particles. You should give these products a go on this idea or with other art projects. Good luck! Love your work.
great vid, i think you did a better job than i could ahaha. Loving your recently videos of trying new techniques, would love to see more!
Would be neat to see this attempted with other edible materials. Ground coffee, cinnamon, flour, various spices, etc.
i used varnish and sparkles and it worked amazingly, the varnish takes like 15 min to dry so you have a lot of time to work and is super tacky
Missed these kinds of videos! So glad to have the old Jazza back
love seeing you TRY, that's what i've enjoyed about your exploration into other mediums the most. keep it up!
The gorilla contact adhesive uses Isopropyl alcohol as the solvent, so you could try using that to dilute it more efficiently than denatured ethanol aka acetone.
"it's my least favorite going down because it's white" - jazza 2022
your videos make people feel relaxed and entertained keep going your videos are beautiful 🍓♥️🥰❤️
I remember doing something similar as a kid whenever my family went to the state fair but instead of glue, it was a peel sticker picture sheet where you peel a part of the picture, choose a color sand you want to use and pour on top it. I had a blast doing those as a kid.
Your videos make me really happy on days when im sick or just feeling down.
a bit different, but actually, salt on watercolor is an actual cool technique
but yeah, as someone else said, canvas absorbing glue is bad, and finer powders work better
Firstttt
Dang
sad my computer slow
Did similar to this back in the 80s in primary school, but as the school was cheap, we only have PVA glue and we did things in stages.
Speaking of, something I haven't done since primary school either, is wax crayon etching... used to love doing that!!
high gloss varnish + baby powder/pigment powder on glass works like a charm. Draw with the varnish , gently brush the powder from top to bottom.
I love the neon alien landscape I'm seeing as if through a fog of dreams... Or maybe my mind just loves making fantastical landscapes from the void lol
13:31 jazza: ~doing the heavy commentary~throws a bowl of chalk~still doing the heavy talk~
Me: thinking it will fill the glue door
Jazza:~completely misses the door and “the results speak for themselves”~Proud face~
Hi Jazda, how are you? Recently I have become pretty much addicted to your videos, haha. they are so positive and inspiring, really. I love your adventurous and exploratory approach to new ways of making art and new mediums. however, what happened to be my most favourite videos are those where your overpaint the thrift store paintings. those are amazing. IT would be awesome if you could make more of those. thanks and keep doing the great work.
Really enjoying the you doing you having fun videos. Making content because it’s whatever you want to do is the way to go. Loving it.
Well, at least I'll always have your older, original stuff to still watch. It's been one Hell of a ride, Jazza but this is where I get off. Never forget who are and enjoy the rest. It sucks you feel you had to go this route but I hope it brings you happiness.
-Eamon O'Connor
@@SmileThatExplodes I implore you to watch whatever makes you happy. My personal opinions shouldn't dissuade you from enjoying whatever it is that you like. Don't listen to me, I'm just some stupid asshole.
Jazza you are so funny!!😂😂😂😂 (the ending😂) And of course an inspiration! I had so much fun and learned a lot watching this……You The Man😎
Gareth is the best thing that happened to this channel in a long time
For a smaller project you could try to use epoxy resin instead of glue as it stays wet and tacky much longer. And also I think you need finer and lighter powders especially if you wanna do the throw method. Chalk in a blender/coffee grinder would probably do the trick. Or you can just buy powdered sugar instead of granulated one.
Anyway I enjoyed watching your experiments with it, a really cool video! And it's nice and comforting to see that even big artists don't get fantastic result on their first attempts at a new medium sometimes. Reminds you that learning is a process and mistakes and fails in the beginning helps you learn better and faster. Thanks for being so true and open, Jazza.
Gareth always cracks me up
2:31 😂
@jazza I have an idea for you to try, that I think youd love. Ferrofluid (a type of liquid that when you use a magnet, it creates the "spikes" and cool effects. But it also works as the smoothest pen/sharpie or whatever if you use it on paper. Id imagine you could do some cool stuff with it!) Also has a really cool thing where if you put the ferrofluid on a magnet, it gets so slippery that it barely has any friction.
My sister has used baby powder or talc and corn starch and karo or honey as an adhesive. Can't wait to see the next attempt. Good luck.
I feel like making a big old Konshu drawing with this method would look amazing!
You make my day better I must say, never laughed so much. Love your attempts, and am so grateful you share them. Never stop, promise me.🤣😂👍
We once had to do something similar in Art class...
We had to do a portrait in black and white on a wooden plate, we used normal wood glue and colored crafting sand for that and it worked extremely well, we had enough time to paint to areas and put the sand on it but it also was fast enough to not take ages to dry.
And the sand it still holding on, even after 6-7 years now
Wow your art is so cool and for the 7 to 8 years I've been watching you I'm glad to say you inspired me a lot for my TH-cam channel your awesome 😎
You were the first artist TH-camr I got into watching so thank you for making me want to draw You're amazing
Hey Jazza, you can use polyester or epoxy resin without catalyst and part B respectively as glue, both will remain sticky for very very long time and even can get thinned as needed. Hope it helps.
After you have created your glorious artwork, I think a light coat of hair spray goes a long way to preserve the piece so the chalk doesn't slowly degrade over time, or at least it will make it more slow but I think it reduces the pigment or something. I am only speaking with the experience of doing something similar in year 6.
I used to do this craft in primary school, where i dusted coloured sad on wet paint, and it actually used to work! I don't remember what paint it was but u could try it out with different paints!
Idk about the artwork, I enjoyed it very much 😌 jazza didn't stop entertaining us 😂💖
I am sure someone has said this in the 1900 comments but they do make a glue that goes on white and dries clear and tacky that you use for gold and foil leaf, as well as fine glitter. It sticks to just about anything after it is dry. I never thought about throwing chalk at it!
love the honesty in this video
Some of the examples people made actually seem to use a cloth instead of paper, something with fine fur that will help repel or hide extra dust but will hold the sticking substance better for capturing the right dust
I use to do this when I was a kid. My favorite was white craft glue and colored chalk. I would layer my artwork and let the layers dry before doing the next.
Subscribing again 💕 you found your path, this format suits you 😊 feels like your older videos again but bigger and i love it
This is by far one of my favorite jazza videos! 😂
I am less than 30 seconds into the video and I am ALREADY leaving a like for that opening gag.
"I know what I wrote" 😂
I actually love the lesson learned at the end of this video!
Colored cornstarch like used in those "color run" races, and use gold leaf adhesive that stays tacky for up to a half hour+ and has good detail control
Only Jazza to have a win video about an absolute fail.
Keep it up ma boi, I'm sure you'll get there next time!
It's almost cool - sums up my Life pretty accurately 😮. Loved to see your experience.
[Giving out ideas: ]
Paint a tree something cool or abstract
Paint a paper plate
Make an awesome paper plane
[ just ideas, they’re quite basic because I have a dumb brain but you always come with ideas so I can count on you and you can’t count on me for making good videos. I love watching them. ]
13:20 ……the immense artistic build up is magnificently transitioned to 13:53 😂😂😂😂😂😂
There's traditional sand painting. I saw artists working (and had a sand painting made for me) on Gore Island in Senegal. I'd recommend you check then out. The artist used a glue that they painted on and then sprinkled layers of sand on top of it. The material the painting was done on was plywood.
I would try baby powder/talcom powder. Very fine and should stick fairly easily on any wet medium you put down :) I love watching your videos
This was a fun watch. Very funny the large one was very funny, the editing made it seem like it was going to be sooooo epic and the end result made me nearly spit out my drink xD
I laughed so hard I got a headache. Thank you Jazza for your explorations in new art mediums. You are the best! 😂