The International Society of Assemblage and Collage Artists
Brushes, Hammers, Paste and Nails
4 x 5.5 inches
watercolor, watercolor scanned/printed, transfer on watercolor paper
Tags:
Albums: lost in the stacks
Comment
Diane,
I glue the tissue to a regular piece of printer paper. About an inch or so down from the top using one of those glue roller things with non-permananet glue. This way, the printer is tricked into thinking it's getting regular paper. Using the glue a couple of places along the sides is a good idea. Usually the tissue stays in place although once-in-a-while it gets wrinkled as it goes through the printer. I do the same thing with the heavier watercolor paper which jams if I don't trick the printer into thinking it's getting regular paper. Then it's just a matter of adjusting the image on the page so that it prints only on the tissue and not at the top where it's only regular paper.
I like the darkness on 8, i've tried printing on tissue with the printer and it always gets stuck. Did you use a priter with the tissue paper?
Sure. First, I did the watercolor. Then I scanned it before anything else was done to it. Next it's printed on watercolor paper. That print was cut up and glued onto the original. I guess I could just do a larger painting to begin with and trim off portions to glue back on. But scanning and printing gives me other options like with this piece I added the white lines via the computer (although at the time I did not know how I was going to use them). In other cases, I print on tissue. It's a different effect because of the translucency of the tissue. Tissue, printed with the image of it's "parent" watercolor, is used at the bottom of Lost In The Stacks #2 and #8. On #8 it turned out pretty dark.
Does this make sense?
Ken, scanned and printed can you explain.
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