Entries tagged as ‘paste papers’
This week we start the Artist’s Journal online class with Cathy (Kate) Johnson. I will be using a small book about 7″ by 6″ with BFK Rives paper inside. Some of the pages have been prepped with washes of acrylic, mostly in ochres but some blues and greens.
The cover is paste paper that I made myself. It has a lot of gold in it, which doesn’t show up in the scan, but in real life it glistens.
The inside pages are of marbled paper, and I made and decorated an envelope to collect collage bits.

Categories: book art · decorated papers · journal · paste papers
Tagged: decorated papers, journal, paste papers
This is what we did on Sunday. I had an arrangement made a very long time ago to teach some friends how to make paste paper. We wanted a fine day, because we needed to dry the papers on the clothesline out in my courtyard so that we do could do more layers.
The weather was against us. First we put them on the line, but then we had to go out in the rain & quickly bring them in. So we had newspaper all over the floor of the lounge, the heater on, and papers pegged to the clothes-horse in front of that and all
over the floor as well. We also had the heater on in the kitchen where we were working, and were drying off the driest ones there.
We started off with some paste I’d cooked made from wheaten cornflour. When that was used up we used Matisse Print Paste, and it worked very well diluted a little.
These are some of the ones I made. I only wish that they’d scan as beautiful as they are. The top one is Matisse Indigo with the gold. There’s a little cerulean blue in under there too. That’s my favourite.
This green one is Matisse Emerald over paper that had had blobs of paint put on it, pressed together and then pulled apart. It has a sort of batik look in under there.The orange one is Permament Orange over Cobalt Teal.
I made 10-11 pieces, which wasn’t bad under the circumstances. We started at 10am and it was getting dark when we finished.
Categories: Matisse Derivan · acrylics · paste papers
Tagged: paste papers, acrylic paint, acrylic mediums, decorated papers, Matisse Derivan
Hi everyone,
Last week I was very lucky indeed. I was allowed to join a class at an art school I left three years ago. They were having a visiting tutor for two days – someone I’d wanted to learn from for a long time. He’s a printmaker and book/mixed media artist from North Queensland, Glen Skien. I had no idea what we were going to do, but we had to bring 10 signatures for a book, lots of decorative papers and various other things such as ruler, cutting mat, an awl, thread.
I was only able to join the class on the Thursday, because I work on a Friday now. My lucky day! We made a BOX! I’ve never made a box before. My printmaker friends can all make boxes. Sometimes they get an assignment to make a series of prints, with a box to go with them. I did up to 2nd year printmaking, but I did a book, not a box. On the Friday they did ‘case binding’ which I’ve done before. The tutor was great! Not precious about it at all – made it seem simple, and it was.
The sample box was a small upright box to hold postcards. I really liked that idea, because I recently participated in a postcard swap with Anita. This page will show you Anita’s postcard to me, and you can see mine here. Most of the students opted for that size box. The size was beautifully proportioned, and better still, useful! It was EASY to make. I was surprised – I thought you’d have to be mega-accurate – but no, not when you collage over the cracks.
I had all sorts of paper, but Glen’s advice was just to start and see where it takes you. So my box is a mixture of credit card paper (see Kelsey’s blog for the recipe), paste papers, itajime papers, (see Gail’s blog for that), some lacy Japanese papers, and a black tiger-skin lino print on bright orange paper. Garish, huh? That’s where the shellac comes in – I’m putting on many coats of shellac, and it’s toned down to a beautiful golden glow.
At the weekend I made another one the same, but this time I used joss papers and Chinese ephemera, including the wrapper from my precious bottle of Yu Yee Oil. Some of the papers are of pitiful quality, but I’d noticed with some of the delicate papers I used on the first box, that with glue underneath & shellac on top, they were quite stable.
Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: boxes, collage, credit card papers, itajime, paste papers