Showing posts with label transfer_love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transfer_love. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

More Transfers- Fabric, Paint and Gesso






I got the horse image from some deteriorating fabric that was on a box spring that we had been using as a door for our greenhouse. It was sheer and fragile so I glued it to some canvas that I found in the garage of the house I had bought back in the 90's. I'm talking serious reuse here!
The wooden door-like image was made using a skin transfer technique that I learned in Caterina Giglio's online class (which is still going on if you would like to participate)








This is an ATC (Artist trading card- 2.5 " x 3.5") on gessoed canvas.
The image is a window from a photo I took in Havana.







Practicing some new techniques here.
I allowed a little of the reverse side of this vintage magazine image to remain.
You're looking at two pictures  from the same page against a vintage  physics book page. (the girl on the swing and part of a wicker basket)






This is what happens when your newly purchased special paint spills. You try to use it up on some of your paper that is nearby.
The image from a vintage Grey's Anatomy book also is showing both sides of one page. The text is from one side and the diagram is from the other....magic!
I had a stack of gessoed pages from an old ring bound cookbook. I sewed them together when I realized that the gesso curled the thin pages horribly.






From my trip to Angkor Wat.
 Against muslin with some sparkly paint to enhance.






I'm enjoying pairing this windmill pic that I took in Douglas, Arizona with other images.
The buddha photo was most likely taken on one of my Thailand trips.






This photo was taken in Burma and the piece here is the result of a failure that worked to my advantage. (which I guess isn't a failure after all!)




I've been making some great messes in the studio with my newly learned techniques.
It's always been a part of my process which is to do things in a hurry and go at  my projects with a fury which results in an explosive mess. Just ask my mother or my husband what the kitchen looks like when I'm in the food production zone! I'm fast though, really fast. I recall that being remarked upon when I took my printmaking class back in the nineties as well.


You can view more of my recent transfers here  at La Dolce Vita's blog. 

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Transfer Love~ A Big Win!







I was fortunate to have entered Caterina Giglio's giveaway at La Dolce Vita because she was giving away an invite to her "Transfer Love" class which is about image transfers not the transfer site which is in fact a worthwhile venture as well if you're a serious junker.

Image transfer quite simply put, is the lifting of images from one medium to affix to another.
As you can see on Caterina's blog she's made magic with the techniques with her artwork.

I had been wanting to take the class but was holding out for when I had a higher speed connection than my current dial-up. But since it was a giveaway I threw my fate to the wind and was announced the winner much to my surprise.

I shouldn't have mentioned throwing my fate to the wind however because the first try at an image transfer technique had me so impatient for the results. It was a vintage photo of a woman against a page of German calligraphic script. It seemed to be successful but I wanted to dry it out quickly on the deck in the sun which I soon forgot about. Later on our legendary Delta wind picked it up and scattered it to wilderness so I never did get to admire the finished product.

I have been able to view Caterina's videos and upload the instructions with a few visits to the local library.


A few of these pictures were taken from my husband's ancestors photo album which I had scanned previously. Why buy cabinet photos when there's a whole album of them in the next room? The rest of the photos are my own from various travels and scans.

One of the benefits of image transfer as opposed to straight up collage-ing of images is the transparency of the images allowing your background to peek through.


My main goal was to familiarize myself with the process and technique and produce a stack of usable pieces for other creations. I may only use parts of some of these pages to put with other images or designs.





From my husband's family archives









"She Was a Force of Nature"








My photo taken at Ayuttaya, Thailand and vintage Grey's Anatomy