Thanks so much for sharing, what a good idea too! I put drops of paint on one paper, and put the paper on another paper, and get the most beautiful results. (Hope my english is to be understand)
Love your top❤ I live in Mérida Yucatan now so reminds me of local clothing.
Thanks so much! I love it too. Sounds like an amazing place to live full time.
I wonder if, after pulling your original print off the glass, you LIGHTLY misted your two drying plates with water and then pulled additional subsequent prints. There seems to be plenty of residual extra paint…. It might not be as crisp a design but could be just as pleasing in another way! (You’re going to apply water to it anyway when you clean it, so you might see if you can use those drying daubs of paint one last time…)
You can actually get a second print by applying more paint, and the print comes out very different than the first one. Water sometimes works, sometimes not. Worth an experiment. All a matter of how much water you add!
You have reminded me that I tried this a few years ago and it was a lot of fun with lovely results so I recommend that people give it a try,. Do be patient though because it can be quite difficult getting the amount of paint right.
Figuring out the "right" amount of paint is definitely the tricky part.
would this technique work using fabric to pick up the images?
Good question, and I don't know for sure, but my guess is that is would not work. However, the only way to know for sure is to give it a go. So please let me know if you try it!
I love the idea of experimenting with this technique! Watching you press on the glass made me anxious that it would crack so think I’ll try it with plexiglass first 😆 Is it me or did the paint appear to dry quicker on the plexiglass? We’re have a very dry winter here in Sydney so I might try adding something to my paint to slow up the drying process. As always -thanks for the inspiration Catherine ❤
I agree with the glass, much prefer the plexi - you can push harder to move around the paint. Yes the paint drys fast so need to place the paper on top of the design to pull the print as soon as you lift the plexi.
I might use my gelli plate to pull up those dots. Might that work? Lay a coating layer over the dry dots and press my g- plate on top?
The paint left on the glass after two pulls did not release onto paper or gelli plate even after spraying the glass with water or applying a fresh layer of paint. The glass needed a good spray of water and scrubbing to remove paint for a color change. I used two glass trivets for my pressing plates....worked well but the suction made separating them a challenge. FUN playing though.
@@kristinehulet1997 This happened to me to which is why I ordered a pack of plexiglass so that I could play without cleaning the plates in between print pulls. Plexi is also easier to pull the print, but harder to clean. You get much better prints when using a clean plate, rather than one that has half dried paint on it.
If you added retarder to your paints, would that help them not dry so fast so you could pull up more of the paint?
Good question, never tried it, and sounds like a good theory. If you do try it, please let me know!
I did get plexiglass but takes a bit to get it off when cleaning up.
Yes plexi is much harder to clean. However, if you place the plexi in water to soak as soon as you pull the print, clean up is MUCH easier.
Is the black paper archival? Thank you
@@catrains.artist Also, you list materials with links. 🙌 whoop 🙌 whoop 🙌
Very cool.. I have plexi, not glass. This looks like a fun process...How do you ever come up with all; these goodies!!!
Thanks Emily. I'm always touched that you try making the collage papers that I put out there!
I'm actually using plexiglass for most of this demo. Actually prefer it to glass.
Plexi works great, really as good as or better than glass. I'm using plexi in this demo.
Tried a quarter turn and lift with yupo paper? Very cool impressions!
ohhhh, that sounds beautiful! Great idea to use yupo instead.