envelope for jen
wacko shapes
le rouge et le vert (un)
le rouge et le vert (deux)
big tooth, big shark
the fatal book opened!
tacky overlaps with creepy
ten thousand things
"the birds": polka-dot bikini version
our allies need eggs
stars 'n' stripes 'n' vaguely menacing melons
no laughing matter
mr. bones at myth and legends bingo night
it takes balance
they're watching us
an american in cincinnati
government redaction
the cobbler's dream
adventures in pet walking
background: william morris
multicolor box
mussel women
all art is quite useless
abstract of abstracts
celebration of u.s. postal service
a fabulous friendship-fueled fascination with fish
out in the hills
animalian grotesque
the boy can see the man's true shadow, but the man…
overwhelmed by klee (an homage)
kandinsky loves color
queen of wasps: lost episode
esemplastic
home stomping ground
dancing for dionysus
gulf coast landscape
eight nipples
splatter pop
fab
a bird outside the window
opposite side of "I had a dream of fire"
I had a dream of fire
nénu and oscar, our beloved orientals (2014-2017)
a trumpet and the music it's making
angel on the prowl
See also...
Global Art Gallery | Galerie d'art Mondiale | Galería de Arte Mundial
Global Art Gallery | Galerie d'art Mondiale | Galería de Arte Mundial
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contained chaotic curves


Cut-paper collage postcard created for the Kollage Kit theme: "Unusual Tools for Making Collage Art"
Except for the background, all images snipped from postcards of the fabric collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum.
Tools used: brush-tip and chisel-tip markers. The images are thick, from postcard stock. When you work w/ thick elements, the recipient of your postcard can see the white insides of the cardboard pieces. So I hit on the idea, a few years ago, of using markers to color those white edges, before I glue them down. That way the images do a better job of "melting" into the collage. For the blue-&-white Morris pieces in the middle, I used an indigo blue marker. For all the others, I used a black marker. Usually I also color the outside edge of my collage postcard, but it doesn't seem necessary for that light background. (The black marks you see in the brown areas surrounding the women, etc., are part of the fabric pattern.)
You can see how especially on the blue-&-white pieces, the marker bled a little bit, giving them outlines of blue, more obvious in some places than in others. I don't consider that a problem. =smile=
Tip: When you're coloring the edges, hold the collage piece so that the white or other color of the opposite side is facing you. Why? Because if the marker slips a bit while you're moving it along the edge, it will tend to slip toward you, onto the back side of the image. That way, you don't accidentally make a stray mark on the image itself.
Except for the background, all images snipped from postcards of the fabric collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum.
Tools used: brush-tip and chisel-tip markers. The images are thick, from postcard stock. When you work w/ thick elements, the recipient of your postcard can see the white insides of the cardboard pieces. So I hit on the idea, a few years ago, of using markers to color those white edges, before I glue them down. That way the images do a better job of "melting" into the collage. For the blue-&-white Morris pieces in the middle, I used an indigo blue marker. For all the others, I used a black marker. Usually I also color the outside edge of my collage postcard, but it doesn't seem necessary for that light background. (The black marks you see in the brown areas surrounding the women, etc., are part of the fabric pattern.)
You can see how especially on the blue-&-white pieces, the marker bled a little bit, giving them outlines of blue, more obvious in some places than in others. I don't consider that a problem. =smile=
Tip: When you're coloring the edges, hold the collage piece so that the white or other color of the opposite side is facing you. Why? Because if the marker slips a bit while you're moving it along the edge, it will tend to slip toward you, onto the back side of the image. That way, you don't accidentally make a stray mark on the image itself.
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