Did you use a transfer technique for the tree and the man with the child?If so I would be pleased to here which one you use.I use chartpak blender pens on photo copies and it works well.Let me know.Nice piece of work.
Thanks! Nick, this was made using paint thinner on a photocopy, a rather smelly and throat irritant way of transfer images, but the result is pretty cool!
Sounds like the same technique, the blender pens use xylene not very nice stuff and smelly but you can control the area that you want to transfer well, without soaking the piece your working on.I presume that you use cellulose thinners?
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roseindigo 2:19 pm on March 12, 2009 | #
Fun experiment. Love the rainbow bubbles in the background.
Nick Powell 2:59 pm on March 12, 2009 | #
Did you use a transfer technique for the tree and the man with the child?If so I would be pleased to here which one you use.I use chartpak blender pens on photo copies and it works well.Let me know.Nice piece of work.
lucio armenio 4:28 pm on March 12, 2009 | #
Thanks! Nick, this was made using paint thinner on a photocopy, a rather smelly and throat irritant way of transfer images, but the result is pretty cool!
Margie 7:55 pm on March 12, 2009 | #
Lucio… do you press the photocopy down – print side to the paper- and saturate it with thinner?
lucio armenio 10:52 pm on March 12, 2009 | #
just push it firmly with a tissue or cloth soaked in thinner, print side to the paper. Takes two or three shots to get the right pressure.
Nick Powell 11:33 am on March 13, 2009 | #
Sounds like the same technique, the blender pens use xylene not very nice stuff and smelly but you can control the area that you want to transfer well, without soaking the piece your working on.I presume that you use cellulose thinners?