Since Trevor was still feeling ill today, Nathan and I did school on our own. He is a really great writer. He is currently working on a persuasive essay which he entitled Electrify the Street. It is about his stance of increasing the number of electric cars in use and decrease gas powered cars. That took us a couple hours to get through, but it looks great for his first draft! Math, Nathan's least favorite subject, has nothing interesting to report.
This one is mine. |
Step 1: Sketch a picture on watercolor paper.
Step 2: "Paint" the masking fluid on the areas of your picture that you want to keep white (you can paint these areas later if you wish).
Step 3: Let the fluid dry completely. I directed a fan at ours until they were dry. It took a couple hours.
Step 4: Paint your picture using watercolors. You can paint right over the masking fluid. I did it here. You can see the beading. It will come off in step 6.
Step 5: Let the paint dry completely. This was much faster. It took about 30-45 minutes with a fan.
Step 6: Use a WHITE eraser (the pink eraser will leave color on the paper) and gently rub off the rubber cement. See below: (excuse the sideways picture, blogger does not like my rotated one for some reason).
Nathan's is the one with rolling hills. |
Step 7: (YET TO BE COMPLETED) Paint the white area and let dry!
We had a great time doing this. Nathan and I chose a sunrise because it is a simple way to experiment with the masking technique. If you are interested, search on you tube. There are much more advanced uses to see there.
Yoda's Corner
Do or do not.
There is no try.
- I still have not had any sugar! Today is day 4! Slight ice cream craving successfully avoided.
- I went to karate class last night, and survived!
- I got on the treadmill today, even when I REALLY did not want to do it.
- I practiced Chon-Ji Kata with Nathan. He really loves it when we do karate together.
May the force be with you.
What a neat project! I'm SO not artistic, but my daughter is, so I'll take all the inspiration I can get in that subject. Please post pictures of the finished products, because I'd love to see them :)
ReplyDeleteI will Sarah! The hardest part was waiting for the rubber cement to dry. Honestly, even after a couple of hours, it was still slightly tacky. Thanks for commenting!
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