Showing posts with label fun foam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fun foam. Show all posts

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Fun Foam Stencils

Someone on Facebook asked about how I did the Fun Foam Stencils I mentioned in the last post, so I thought I would do a little tutorial.  Honestly, it's pretty self-explanatory but maybe it's a new idea to some or maybe I have a tip that you didn't know about...so here we go:

Supplies:
  • Fun Foam (you can get this at craft stores or online, I'm pretty sure Walmart carries it as well.)
  • Scissors or a craft knife/Xacto
  • Self-healing mat or a surface you don't mind gouging (if you are using the craft knife) 
  • Sharpie or pen


Ooh...Supplies!  Fun foam, scissors or a craft knife and cutting mat, sharpie or pen

The first thing you do (if you so desire) is draw your pattern:
You can get all fancy and use a ruler or circle templates or whatever...or you can just wing it.  I'm a fan of winging it...

Next take your knife and cut out your design:
I would tell you to be careful with the knife because it's sharp, but you should know that and, besides, I'd feel like a hypocrite..."Cut away from yourself!"  You're not the boss of me logical thinking!  *she says as she cuts herself for the fifth time*

Don't throw away the pieces you cut out; they make great stamps!
This is me giving you permission to become a hoarder...
You can glue your foam stamps to things like cardboard or clear packaging (which is awesome because you can see exactly where you're putting your stamp) but you don't have to...as long as you don't mind getting your hands dirty...
You can see that I don't cut on my lines...mostly because I'm too impatient...I draw them in (quickly) to get an idea of placement and then I go back in with the knife and fix what wasn't working for me.  But that's just me...you do it how you like to do it!

You can use your stencil with sprays and paints, just like any other stencil:
Perhaps that was kind of a given...

With sprays:
With sprays, if you reverse the stencil, you can get a really good stamped image from your left-over ink...that's right, two toys in one!  I find that the spray ink stays put a little better on the fun foam than it does on store bought plastic stencils...so you get a cleaner image when you do the stencil flip technique thingie...

With paint:
I use a make up wedge and pounce in the acrylic...it gets the paint into the pointy bits pretty well.  You can also use a brush and go in to each space, but it's kind of a pain if there are a bunch of small places.

If you're not a fan of the craft knife, you can also just use scissors and cut out a design...I know you've done this a million times in your life:
The best part of this is you have a stencil AND a mask...plus you can stamp with both of them...so hooray for multi-taskers!

Here's what we have so far:
You can see the spray in purple from the picture above.  Then the blue acrylic diamonds...you can see your shapes aren't super exact with the acrylic pouncing (or else I'm just out of practice).  Also, if you use a make up wedge to pounce your paint in, don't forget that it has paint on it and will make a cool mark...that's what the marks lined up at the bottom of the picture are.  And you can also see, sprayed in pink, the heart stencil  (on the left) and mask (on the right).  A stencil lets you put color on the inside of the design (so the design is colored), a mask lets you put color everywhere except the inside (so that all around the design is colored and the design stays white).

And remember to try stamping with your left-overs:
For the stamps, you can use an ink pad.  I got a light imprint, even with black ink...I'm not 100% sure if that's because I need to re-ink my pad or because the fun foam just doesn't take the ink well...

Or use paint with a brayer (or just dump out a paint puddle and do it that way):
I should have used a different color so that you could see it a little better in the picture, but you can (possibly) see that I  got better prints with the paint than I did the ink pad...

And if you do use your brayer to 'ink' the stamp:
Don't forget that you will get some really neat images from your brayer!  The stamp takes off the paint only where it makes contact with the brayer...so you are left with another cool pattern on your brayer that you can use!

You can use all the 'left-overs' (the ink or paint left on your stencil/mask/stamp/brayer) and start another page...some people keep an extra journal just for that purpose.  It actually is pretty helpful if you are low on time to have that left-over catcher...because you will have a background ready to go next time you want to create and don't have the time to do the whole shebang.  Plus, you are not wasting any of your *PRECIOUS* supplies!  So, it's a time and money saver...Multi-tasking at it's best...


A word of warning...it's kind of addictive to do start cutting your own stencils...this isn't even the tip of the iceberg...

Just a few other thoughts:  

Thin lines are totally doable, if a little tedious.  I used a regular size Sharpie and cut on either side of the mark it made (instead of on the line), and that's about as thin as I could cut it with the craft knife without the foam tearing or me going crazy...ok, crazier...  Also, if you are cutting thin lines, don't pop out your left-over pieces till you are done; it helps the foam be more stable (learned that one the hard way...) and easier to cut. 
 
This stuff cuts pretty easily, but if you find a place that's still attached, cut it with your knife or scissors...don't be tempted to pull it...because it will tear and you will make the sad face... (learned that the hard way too...)  You can make curves for sure, but go a little slowly for the same reason...it will tear/you will sad face...

If you make something and don't like it, think about keeping it anyway.  I cut a feather that I didn't like but was pretty small, so I kept it and just went back to it later and made another design a little bigger around the original feather (so that the original just got cut away completely) and it ended up being pretty awesome.   And if you keep cutting bigger and bigger and just end up with a big empty square, look at it like you have a frame stencil!  You can also cut up ugly stencils and make good 'background noise' stamps.

Keep in mind that if you don't leave a border with the foam around your stenciled image (like the flower in the picture above), you will have a wobbly stencil...BUT it may be worth the wobbly to have an image that seamlessly flows into the background...  Full disclosure...I find it irritating because I have to keep adjusting the stencil to get the stem space on that flower.  I will be cutting another flower like the one above but with a foam border...that way I can have the best of both worlds...

If you don't have fun foam, you can always just use paper or cardboard or a million other things...the ideas are pretty much the same.  The fun foam is nice because it's a little more sturdy than paper, so your stencils will last longer.  BUT if you use paper, you can fold it up and do paper 'snowflake' type designs (I know you did that as a kid too!)...the fun foam will fold, but because it's thickier, you can't (or it would be extremely hard to) get those intricate designs...I found you could fold the foam twice (one horizontal, one vertical) and still cut it, but again, it's not easy to get detailed designs that way...BUT you could always cut the paper and use it as a template on your fun foam and get the detailed design that way...

So, ta-da!  Tutorial over...  I hope I had some helpful info and wasn't just being Captain Obvious...  I bet there are a million other ideas out there involving fun foam stencils or cutting your own stencils...or other uses for fun foam...so if you have anything to add, I'd love to hear your ideas!

Monday, March 3, 2014

A Piece of Work And A Work of Art

This week's prompt for Documented Life was "Make a list of the things that make you YOU." (You can read more about DL HERE.)

One of the things that make me ME is the fact that I am not a natural list maker.  Seriously.  It took me FOREVER to come up with my list of attributes.  But I finally ended up with some good ones:

"I am a piece of work and a work of art.".

Just for the record, that poor girl's face looks seriously wonky...but her head is supposed to be tilted.  So if you tilt your head to the left just a little, she's not quite as wonky looking...still a little wonky, but much less Quasimodo than she seems to be at first glance...see:

Not quite so deformed now, am I?

Also, as a personal pat on the back to myself, I would just like to say HOORAY for the nose on this girl. I think I made her look like somebody punched her in the face or something...that was an accident...I just wanted to try to use some different colors for the shadows...I think it works on the forehead area, but her eyes look a little bruised... So, as a whole, she's just ok, but I am super mega ultra happy with that nose.

Nasal perfection.

So anyway, back to the dreaded list... 

 Here's what I think makes me the person I am:
General hilarity (obviously... haha)
Gappy Teeth (one day I'll have to post a picture of them, but trust me, once you see them, you'll never be able to think of me without thinking of my glorious gappy teeth)
Insightful
Artist 
Randomness
Going Off On Tangents
Look For Motives
Practical Dreamer (that counts as one thing)
Questioner
Aware
Flux (The only thing that never changes is the fact that everything changes.)
Constant Learner
Music Connoisseur
Literary Genius (hahaha...that's in my dream world, but it still counts!)
Deep Digger (I like to know what's beyond the surface of things...)
Firm Believer in Practice (it doesn't make perfect, but it makes us better than we were before)
Awkward Segways (Not the scooter thingies...I mean the transition between topics thing...)
Foreteller of Trends (I swear this one is true...if I start liking something today, a few months from now, you will start seeing it EVERYWHERE...I need to figure out how to make money from this fact...)
Wordy (I know, you have a hard time believing this one...*eye roll*)
Understanding

Things that make me the person that I am...

One thing that really stood out to me as I was reading over my list of me things was how I don't think that I included any negative things.  This is a HUGE difference from the what I would have thought of myself in the past.  I know I'm not perfect, but I can actually see the good stuff in me now.  I've come a long way, baby!  


"I know who you are."

I just wanted to point out some art related coolness going on in this spread.  I've been cutting my own stencils out of Fun Foam.  I'm so excited by this technique it's not even funny!  In the picture above, the green square in the background are from a foam stencil I cut myself.  The blue squares are from stamping with the fat end of a makeup wedge and the pink lines are from the thin edge of the same wedge!  I also cut my signature Red Clover design from some foam; you can see it stenciled in white in the picture...it's BIG ..I love it!


Do we share any similar qualities?

The blue rectangles on this page are also a stencil I cut...it was supposed to be a brick pattern...I think I am going to make another one with thinner 'grout' lines...but I do like this one too...not what I intended it to be, but a happy accident nevertheless...  

The foam stencil cutting is making it's way toward becoming a little side obsession of mine...

What about you?  What are some of the things that make you YOU?  Do we share any qualities?  Or are we different (and complimentary) as night and day?  Do you have any new artistic obsessions of late?

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Experimentation The Second...Face 10 of 29


29 faces

Face 10 of 29...this is my second attempt with the fake linocut technique that was inspired by Coreopsis:

TA DA!

Experiment Face The Second has made me recall that I lack patience...  I was going to try to indent all the parts that I wanted to be white...but that was too time consuming.  Instead what I did was take some scissors and cut out the bigger pieces of the face I wanted to be white...I only left a few thin strips to connect everything together as you can see below. 

Faux linocut girl on the bottom right and some more prints surrounding her.  I think the bottom left print looks like a sugar skull...and look at the top left...that's what happened when I did a print from the back of the foam (the side that I didn't 'carve')

This lazy approach worked ok until the brayering paint part needed to happen...then her little bits wanted to slide around too much.  So I thought about it and realized I could probably spray her with my Dylusions inks instead of trying to roll paint on her.  It actually worked out pretty well!  I think I could probably mount her on some cardboard to stabilize the bits as well, but I haven't done it yet...  

Now I'm wondering where I put my Xacto knife (and this is why you should never clean your studio...I knew just where it was when the studio was a mess...now that it's clean...not a clue!) to see if I could scrape away foam and still have enough left underneath to keep everything all together...this foam is pretty thin so I'm not entirely sure...or maybe I could glue a couple pieces of foam together and then cut away the top foam and still have everything be secure and not floppy...it definitely sounds like some more experimentation is going to happen...  I'm really excited by the possibilities being discovered during 29 Faces...it's made me try things I've never thought to try, or things I've put off trying for a long time.  And that really is something to get excited about!  

Something else to get excited about is the giveaway that's happening right here on the 29th!  Just follow me and come back on the 29th to see what the surprise prize is and to leave a comment (again, on the 29th) letting me know that you'd like to be entered in the drawing.  Then, on the 30th, the winner will be announced!  Easy peasy and exciting too!  Woo hoo! 

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Experimentation...Face 8 of 29


29 faces


Face 8 of 29 was an experiment.  Here she is:


Hello!

I was inspired by the AMAZING linocuts from Coreopsis (who is also doing the 29 Faces challenge) which you can see HERE.  Coreopsis' work is just fantastic and so detailed.  I swoon over those gorgeous pieces!

I really wanted to try something similar myself, but I don't have any of the equipment (or skill) needed to do an ACTUAL linocut.  So I was looking around the studio (I still feel fancy when I call it 'the studio'...I'm such a dork!)  to see what I had that might work for creating a fake linocut.  

I saw that I had some foam sheets...ok, a lot of foam sheets...I've had them FOREVER and I don't know why I got them at all, other than maybe they were on clearance for really cheap and I thought I'd figure something out for them.  Well, that day finally came!

These plus pen equals fake linocuts.

I just used a ball point pen and drew directly onto the foam to make my girl.  Then I went back over it pressing down pretty hard to make sure there was an indent in the foam...it kind of wanted to pop back up if I didn't press hard enough.  When I was happy with the face, I took my brayer and rolled some acrylic paint onto the foam and then put a piece of cheap copy paper on top and brayered the top of the copy paper to make sure I got good contact with the painted foam.  Then just peeled the paper back to see how the print came out!  I realized I could get three prints before I had to reapply the paint to the foam, and if I spritzed the foam with water after the third print, I could get another print or two that were more inky looking.

Faux linocut girl on the left with some more prints of her in the background

The good thing about this fake linocut technique is that it's very easy!  The supplies are super cheap.  You can pick up several sheets of foam at the Dollar Tree and you've already got a pen at your house, I'm sure!  There's really not a learning curve either, because you're just drawing...you already know how to do that!  I'm kind of wondering if I could use my wood burning stuff and burn images into the foam instead of using the pen.  I kind of think I could get more precise lines that way...either that or burn the house down/die from toxic foam fumes.  Maybe we should research that a little first...

This was a fun experiment...one that I plan on working with some more.  I think this face is cute, but I would like to make one where the outlines are color and the inner spaces are white...that's going to be interesting to try. I really think you could make some cool things for backgrounds using the foam...that may be the direction I head with this technique.  I just don't know what I would do with a bunch of repeated faces...I'll have to think on it a little.

I know my face is no where near as interesting and artistic and amazing as the linocuts that Coreopsis is doing, but I want to say a BIG thank you for the inspiration and for getting me to try something new!  Big squish for you, my friend! <3