Monday 22 April 2013

Gelli Print Flowers

I've made some gelli art print flowers- which flower is your favourite?:


















Here are some more of my blogs about my gelli art.

ETA:
Do you love creating gelli prints?  Want a place to discuss gelli printing?  To show off your work?  Share your ideas? Discuss the pros and cons of different paints/paper/plates/tools etc?  Get some great ideas on what to do with the thousands of prints you have created?

Then I would love you to join me at the Gelatin Printing Enthusiasts Facebook Group. This group is open to people who use a Gelli Arts Plate or who make their own gelatin plate.



Friday 19 April 2013

What To Do With Gelli Prints

Wondering what to do with your gelli prints?  I've been searching for ideas from other blogs and artists and Pinterest.

1.  Start by buying some frames and framing them, the mat around the print finishes it off cleanly.


2. Add some meaningful words:






3. Bookmarks and Tags:





Mine are sticking together which may be due to the humidity or the glossy paint so if anyone has any suggestions as how to get them not to stick I would love to hear from you.  Transparent gesso???

Love the dressform shape, top right, I even bought some lace to glue on.  :D

4. Collage - which was the original purpose that I bought the gelli plate for - so I could make my own papers to use in collage that weren't ones under copyright.

Make a heap of textured backgrounds:


a) Landscape scenes:

Ripped/Torn:


Scissors:


Abstract/strips:


Hundertwasser's Red Streets was the inspiration for these:




I love Hundertwasser's use of colour and houses - he would say my houses and streets are too straight...and where are your lollipop trees??? Stayed tuned.....

b) Cards:

I started to print directly onto the cards but I was getting paint on the inside of the card due to messy hands so with the two below I glued the background onto the card then added the shapes and a little more detail is going to be added with paint pens.


c) Altered Playing Cards

These are a lot of work - each card needs to be sanded and gessoed before being glued/collaged and I need to decide if I'm going to put in one hinge ring in the top right corner or two in book style.  Then I need to decide/know do I sell the whole deck at once for one price or break them down into suites.



Well, I've had a lot of fun this week preparing for the Bickley Harvest Festival on 4th and 5th May where I'll be selling my paintings, pendants and prints and tags and cards at Myattsfield Vineyard.  I'm still unsure of prices, even more so after a sales lady said I'd be lucky to get $2 for my prints as she has trouble getting people to pay $1.60 for scrapbooking paper! Confidence shattered after talking to her but she only saw pics from my iphone and I think she may have thought that I was asking her to sell them. After this experience I read an excellent blogpost by Leonie Dawson on How to work out pricing for what you sell.  I'm still unsure of prices even though I've checked out Etsy - not a lot of gelli prints for sale (some 6in squares for $45, I was thinking a lot less for mine), whilst they don't take long to create there is a lot of other time that has gone into making them such as research, education and making and buying tools.  If you have any idea of pricing then please let me know.

I think we are all caught up - I really should post after each arty session but I just haven't had time lately.  Thank you for reading, have a great weekend and stay safe. Love and hugs.

Here are some more of my blogs about my gelli art.

ETA:
Do you love creating gelli prints?  Want a place to discuss gelli printing?  To show off your work?  Share your ideas? Discuss the pros and cons of different paints/paper/plates/tools etc?  Get some great ideas on what to do with the thousands of prints you have created?

Then I would love you to join me at the Gelatin Printing Enthusiasts Facebook Group. This group is open to people who use a Gelli Arts Plate or who make their own gelatin plate.





Saturday 13 April 2013

Gelli Plate Art Addiction Pt3

On Friday I created some more shapes using the self adhesive contact paper and then I just had to try them out....













Now I have so many of these prints I really must 'finish' them off and get them to sell at the Myattsfield Vineyard for the Bickley Harvest Festival - several thousand people are expected come along for the wine tasting and scarecrow competition!!!

Here are some more of my blogs about my gelli art.

ETA:
Do you love creating gelli prints?  Want a place to discuss gelli printing?  To show off your work?  Share your ideas? Discuss the pros and cons of different paints/paper/plates/tools etc?  Get some great ideas on what to do with the thousands of prints you have created?

Then I would love you to join me at the Gelatin Printing Enthusiasts Facebook Group. This group is open to people who use a Gelli Arts Plate or who make their own gelatin plate.



Friday 12 April 2013

Stencils and Masks for Gelli Plate

I'm still addicted to my gelli plate - just love it and I've been on Pinterest looking to see what others are doing and getting some great ideas.  One of these was from Linda Germain, did you know she makes her own plate from gelatine?!  It was about using shapes from magazines as stencils and masks and she gives some great tips and hints in this post.

But I imagined that the paper would only last for one use, I did not even experiment to find out.  I cut out around the shape/person then covered both sides with self adhesive contact paper then used a craft/xacto knife to cut around the silhouettes. This has made them re-usable.

Here are some of the masks I made yesterday:


Here's the fun I had with them!!!


 This one needs a wine glass!!! It's very tricky to get the two layers to match up but I did a great job with these, you don't want to see some of the others I did -just one of the challenges I love about the gelli plate.


They will all look much better framed....


Above - Adele with shadow....


I cover the gelli plate with paint then add the mask, picture on left.  Once I've made a print I take off the mask and if I'm lucky then the paint sticks to the plate not the mask and I can make a great second print, picture on right.

I plan to make some stencils using the contact paper and have some more fun.

Here are some more of my blogs about my gelli art.

ETA:
Do you love creating gelli prints?  Want a place to discuss gelli printing?  To show off your work?  Share your ideas? Discuss the pros and cons of different paints/paper/plates/tools etc?  Get some great ideas on what to do with the thousands of prints you have created?

Then I would love you to join me at the Gelatin Printing Enthusiasts Facebook Group. This group is open to people who use a Gelli Arts Plate or who make their own gelatin plate.



Monday 1 April 2013

Gelli Plate Art Addiction

I'm addicted to the latest art toy - the Gelli Plate. It's great for making monoprints which can be used for collaging, art journalling, making cards and as the basis for a painting.

I have been on Pinterest collecting info for over a month now so take a look if you're into Gelli arts.

The following prints I could leave as they are or I could bling them up and add some detail and some gold paints - I'm still deciding.








I didn't have any large stencils so I made my own masks using cereal boxes - hearts, circles, leaves, face silouhettes.  I also used textured scrapbooking paper, corrugated craft card, cling wrap, bubble wrap, plastic lace to make some great textures.



I rarely made a worthwhile ghost print as there wasn't much paint left on the plate, this may be due to the warm weather today in Perth.

Butterfly prints....


I have lots of ideas and plans for working with the circles:



The leaf prints didn't turn out too well, as they are too hard to see so I will work on using different colour combinations, layering dark over light works better than the light over dark, see bottom left.


The first time using a new product is always a steep learning curve and experimenting until you can find a way to use it to suit you.  I'm interested in working more with the map paper.


The stencils I had were 6 inch squares and I did try placing them square on to the gelli plate, see pic above and then on the diagonal,see pic below, may use them to make prints for cards.  I also used a paper doilly, see below top left, and the paper got stuck to the gelli plate and was difficult to remove - too much paint or just the weather maybe.

The bottom left is just a background layer right now, as it is very dark I will use the circle masks with a white paint layer to make the layer below pop as I did with the circles, bottom right.



There are just so many different combinations and tools to use that the possibilities are endless and each person's work is unique, each print is a surprise and awesome fun to make.

I hope you've had a great weekend and managed to have some fun especially of the arty kind.

Here are some more of my blogs about my gelli art.



Much love to you all...


ETA:
Do you love creating gelli prints?  Want a place to discuss gelli printing?  To show off your work?  Share your ideas? Discuss the pros and cons of different paints/paper/plates/tools etc?  Get some great ideas on what to do with the thousands of prints you have created?

Then I would love you to join me at the Gelatin Printing Enthusiasts Facebook Group. This group is open to people who use a Gelli Arts Plate or who make their own gelatin plate.