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Like the title says: I did an image transfer using Golden Open acrylics. After doing a laser print of this landscape photo of mine, I painted Golden Open acrylic paints directly onto the printer paper (yeah, it buckled pretty fast), then laid it face down onto Arches watercolor paper. Let it dry overnight, then wetted the back of the copy paper and peeled it off to reveal the transfer.
Kind of dark. I used Azo Gold over the sky area, and India Yellow hue over the foreground and a little blended in the mid section. Even using a slow-drying acrylic like Golden Open, I had to move fast because the copy paper absorbs the paint very quickly, and if it dries the image won't transfer.
The usual areas of tiny spots and holes and other unpredictable stuff, but overall it transferred just fine.
My main irritant was the difficulty in photographing. Once I got off the bulk of the white copy paper, I applied a gloss varnish over it. Supposedly a gloss finish is the best to make the remnants of white paper disappear, and help the image pop. But it's also so reflective it creates these milky areas in the photo, especially in the lower foreground and some general appearance of haze. Grrr. I do have some matte varnish so I think I'll give that a try in the future and compare.
Thanks for looking!
Kind of dark. I used Azo Gold over the sky area, and India Yellow hue over the foreground and a little blended in the mid section. Even using a slow-drying acrylic like Golden Open, I had to move fast because the copy paper absorbs the paint very quickly, and if it dries the image won't transfer.
The usual areas of tiny spots and holes and other unpredictable stuff, but overall it transferred just fine.
My main irritant was the difficulty in photographing. Once I got off the bulk of the white copy paper, I applied a gloss varnish over it. Supposedly a gloss finish is the best to make the remnants of white paper disappear, and help the image pop. But it's also so reflective it creates these milky areas in the photo, especially in the lower foreground and some general appearance of haze. Grrr. I do have some matte varnish so I think I'll give that a try in the future and compare.
Thanks for looking!