Friday 19 August 2016

Painted Panda Canvas

Mom and Daughter Art Project

Boo and I were inspired by some canvas art for sale at our local Homesense (similar to Homegoods in the US).
Boo's favourite animals are Giant Panda, so we had to use our local Zoo's panda cubs. We used an image of 9 month old Jia PanPan and Jia YueYue.  Their names translate to Canadian Hope and Canadian Joy.

Here is our tutorial:

In Photoshop I removed the background from the origianl Panda cub image.  The image is from an online media website.

Below is our first printed attempt.  The image wasn't large enough on 3 sheets so I cropped them into 6 sheets of legal size paper instead. 
Printing Instructions:
I inserted the image into MS Word choosing "legal" paper size in the Page Layout tab and landscape orientation. I re-sized and cropped the image allowing for some image overlap and saved it into 6 files.  Then printed each segment onto legal paper on a black and white laser printer.
Using scissors we trimmed the printed panda sheets, matched up the segments then taped it together on the back side using minimal amounts of masking tape.  

3 sheets of patterned scrapbook paper fit perfectly across the canvas allowing for a bit of overlap.  

To prevent the scrapbook paper colour accidnetly bleeding through the panda image once glued, we traced then cut out the panda outline on the scrapbook paper before gluing it onto the canvas.  We used Mod Podge adhesive (Tip: less paper curling happens if the Mod Podge is added to the canvas not the paper - once dry the bubbles will recess.)
We did not add Mod Podge overtop of the glued and dried Panda image as per the Mod Podge instructions.  Instead we painted a layer of Liquitex Clear Gesso to seal and add structural integrity to the laser printed paper.  

We also added some additional scrapbook remnants to make the cubs look as if they are leaning over the painted Magnta banner.
Start painting in layers working from the outside of the body inward.  The paint stroke direction is the opposite, from the body outward. 

Feather Stroke: lighten up on the brush pressure in an outward motion, the paint stroke will strart thicker and 

Let each layer dry before moving on the next layer or colour in the gradiation. Overlap each layer slightly using a feathering stroke (lighten up on the brush pressure in an outward motion).
Panda Close Up
The bamboo image is from The Craft Chop - tree frame that I cropped in Sure Cuts A Lot.

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