Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Collaged Paper


There are many different ways of doing collaged paper, and in this short tutorial it is my intention to show you this one particular easy method. These directions are for this particular type of collaged paper.


Supplies needed: Watercolor paper, Golden fluid acrylics, brushes, glue stick, a couple of geometrical rubber stamps, a small stamp roller, comb

This collage is limited to just 3 colors. Two warm colors and one cool, OR two cool colors and one
warm. The sample shown uses 2 warm colors: yellow and a clear red; and one cool color: green.

Use the the single color...whether you have chosen this to be cool or warm....as the accent color,
which means using it in the smallest proportion. In my sample, this is green.

Place your 3 paint choices on a paper plate....Use them straight, no mixing.
Paint three sheets of watercolor paper in the three colors.

Choose one of these to be your background paper. While the other two are still wet, stamp them randomly with uninked rubber stamps to give the paper some texture. I also like to draw a comb through wet paint for texture. When dry....acrylics dry quickly....tear them into strips of varying width.

Place these strips on the background piece in a way which pleases you. Then glue them down.
Run your stamp roller through one of the paint colors and roll it across your collage.
Repeat with another color if so desired.

With a few tries, you will learn to work fast so you can roll wet on almost, but not quite wet
paint. That's when you will see the beautiful color variations as two colors mix.

Keep your leftover torn painted strips for more collaged papers. The possibilities are endless!

5 comments:

Kim said...

wow Chaska , these are gorgeous papers! and my oh my what a lot of blogs you have lol.
Really do love your papers - and Merry Christmas!

TheWhimsicalPeacock said...

Thank you for sharing! A wonderful way to create papers. I can't stop and no two are ever the same. Thanks again!

MiniBear said...

Inspirational!!
Thank you for sharing your instructions...I see a New Year project!And I might pass the link to my son's key worker as I think some of the students where he is resident might like to try this.
Thanks!

Nancilyn (Fiberdabbler) said...

Your example is beautiful and vibrant. Can't wait to experiment on my own.

Unknown said...

Thanks for sharing these techniques!! Love your blog.