Showing posts with label marbling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marbling. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2015

New Etsy Store for Art's the Answer!


I am excited!


Art't the Answer now has an etsy shop where you can purchase hand marbled book marks....


and marbled river rocks that can be used in many creative ways...


They can be stacked under a bonsai tree or in a zen garden...


Used decoratively in a shelf vignette...


Or even in a photo shoot for detail shots. I will be adding other creative items as time goes on.


So please check out my etsy shop and remember...



All proceeds go towards more art supplies and food for our two cats! 

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Flea Finds-Pandora's Box


After a recent road trip to repair a mural, I treated myself to a stop at one of my favorite antique shops-Pandora's Box.


With just the right ratio of cats to clients, Pandora's Box (located in Frankston, Texas) offers a quirky mix of vintage, salvage and reproduction which keeps me digging for hours.


This shop has everything from vintage hardware to old paint brushes...


antiqued mirror panels....



...to fabulous upholstered chairs.


Need a dress made of paper? No problem!


 Look at this driftwood mirror! 



This collection of small marbled vases caught my eye. They are done in a naive style where the paint is  simply swirled to make the design. Technical patterns are not able to be achieved with this method but, it still produces an interesting design.


Somebody needed to rescue these little vases!



I rescued three of them to store chop sticks and other art tools in(for marbling of course!) I hope your weekend was sunny and you enjoyed a road trip as well!



Friday, January 15, 2010

The Art of Ebru....



Ebru, turkish for cloud, is a word linked to the ancient beginnings of marbling. The process of floating ink on water and manipulating to form intricate patterns is the definition of marbling.




For twenty years I have been a marbler and have collected marbled books and other related ephemera for the same amount of time.




I have personally marbled textiles ,wood, leather and paper used for lampshades and bookbinding.




Marbled books are predominant on my bookshelves. Most of the leather bound marbled books are from England or Italy where the art is still very popular.




This small chest was created by the Italian marblers of Il Papiro in Florence where the ancient art still thrives.




After purchasing these lithographs in Paris, I marbled paper to add to the matting before framing.





Here, I am demonstrating the process, using acrylic paints floating on a bath of carrageenan (Irish sea moss)which thickens the water and allows the paint colors to float separately without blending.



The circles of paint are coaxed with chopsticks and feathers into intricate patterns with names such as Icarus wings, Spanish moire, get-gel and nonpareil.




I love the way the pattern wraps around dimensional objects. Wooden eggs, spheres, apples and pears take on kaleidoscope designs when immersed in the marbling vat.




When transferring to paper, the process becomes a monoprint. Offset paper is often used after a layer of alum is applied with a sea sponge to prevent bleeding of colors.





When my husband gave me this wonderful murano glass bowl, I filled it with spheres I made marbled in a nonpareil pattern.



It is rare to find books with marbled pages as well as the covers. They were much harder to produce, getting the pattern to print on just the edges without ruining the print inside.



Small collections look fabulous set on marbled books. This is a cloisonne collection I have set on a pattern of Spanish moire.




Old ledger boxes covered in stone patterns make me giddy! I think the art of marbling adds a nice touch of history and artistic design to any home.  Does anyone else share my passion with the art of marbling? Do you own any forms of this ancient art?
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