About Me

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I LOVE to design and to paint whimsical items that will put a smile on your face. Each day I share my simple life with you as I try to encourage, to inspire and sometimes JUST to make you smile as I recount my life growing up on a dairy farm! I've never had many material items in my life, BUT I have been blessed beyond words with love and encouragement from WONDERFUL Parents who instilled in me WHAT was important. I have had EVERYTHING that I needed and WAY too much of what I wanted. I am slowly learning to be a better person each day through my interactions with my friends on Facebook. Some day I hope to be as good as people seem to THINK I am! I am BLESSED! Welcome to my little corner of the world...Please stop by and visit often!
Showing posts with label decorative painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label decorative painting. Show all posts

Friday, October 13, 2017

Make a Wish

I thought it would be fun to share
 how I created a dandelion.

I  always think of my friend, Cheryl!


All of the products are by Decoart.

I based a 4 inch wooden canvas
 Lamp Black


I used my favorite dry wall 
tape as a stencil.


I added Indian Turquoise, Antique White, and Foliage Green. 

I didn't clean my stencil brush out between colors. 
It helped create other colors. 
Turn the tape different directions.

This is NOT an OCD-friendly project.🙄😕



Oh, lookie, a friend came to help me decorate for Halloween! 😁😂🤣


I then added circles with punchinello to add more interest.


I was using a small stencil brush, and look what I discovered.

It made a flower!

I  taped it off so you could see it.


How fun is this! 



I added squiggly lines of Lemonade, Foliage Green, and Plantation pine.

I drew a circle to show you where my dandelion would be.


I lightly stippled the circle with 
Titanium White.


I added lines of Foliage Green and Plantation Pine.

Public service Announcement: buy a good 18/0 liner! It makes all the difference in the quality of your linework! Even with quick and simple projects!

Small dots of Lamp Black were added to the center with a stylus.


Next Marigold dots were added--just a few.

Titanium White Dots were added with a large stylus, keeping them various sizes, and, yes, randomly placed.

Finish with just a few tiny Lamp Black Dots.


How easy was that?!


I added the word WISH with a Decoart Americana Stencil.


I shaded around the edges with my favorite Payne's Grey.







Of course, I had to make a domino, too...


AND a 3 inch canvas, too!


My goodness, this was really fun.

I KNOW you can do this.

Please share if you do.

Let's go out and paint wishes! 😚😊🙄

I am simply blessed to create~charlotte♡




Thursday, June 9, 2016

Tutorial Thursday



You all will be happy to know that I am feeding the mosquitoes very well…heavy sigh…



I have spent over an hour going to every spot in the back yard and in the living room looking for a place to get a good picture…good grief!  Some days it is so easy, and then there are those days that all you do is struggle…today has been the struggle, but it is ok.  I learn by doing, and I should be brilliant by now, but sadly~~not so much!  teehheheeee




Karalee was looking for the pattern I am sharing today, and I told her that I would be more than happy to share how I made this.



OF COURSE, I used my favorite DecoArt Products. 




Honestly, that is all I use if they are available.  I cleaned out every other brand and gave them to Goodwill.  I hope some person was able to grab them and use them to create…






SO, I gathered:

Americana Decou-page Satin

Americana Acrylics:  Black, Foliage Green, Avocado, Raw Sienna, and White

Scissors

Very Old Hymnal—I always make copies.  I just can’t make myself use real music.

A brush---about ½ or #12

A good liner brush.

Magnet or Wire—I made these into magnets

Word Processing Program~~Brandly Hand, or font of your choice.  The font size I used was 36.

Tracing Paper





A friend had asked me to make something using this song to give to her Sunday School Class for Christmas of 2014.  After Several tries, this is what we agreed to do.  I love how it turned out!



I purchase the wood in packages of 6 from Joann’s.  This is the only place I have ever found these.






Paint the wood with two coats of Foliage Green.



Take the piece of music and fold it in half (the half mark should be above the word TUNE).  Do not make a heavy crease, just hold it in half.  Cut in the shape of a heart.






Apply one coat of Decou-page to the wooden surface and place the heart as you want it to be.  I applied mine to be off-center.  Apply another coat of Decou-page on top of the heart, getting out as many air bubbles as you can.  I didn’t have problems with air bubbles on this project.




Clean your brush with soap and water.



Allow the piece to dry.  Of course, impatient me, used a hair dryer to speed things along!



I drug the corner of my brush through Raw Sienna and applied it to inside of the heart.  When I finished, I wiped my brush on the green part of the wood to “clean out my brush”.






I then drug the corner through Avocado and applied this to the outside of the heart and around the edges.  Again, I wiped my brush on the green part of the wood to “clean out my brush”.



I applied a little bit of White in a few spots, but not much.



After I finished, I decided the heart was too light, so I thinned Raw Sienna and painted it over the heart to “antique” it.



I traced the writing onto the piece and outlined it with thinned Lamp Black.



When all was completely dry, I painted over the entire piece with one more coat of Decou-page to seal the piece…






That is it!!  Put a magnet on the back and give it away to someone special!



I love these simple projects and hope you will, too!  Let me see if you create something using this idea!!



Every once in a while, we all need a fine tuning! 
When my heart starts to wander, I am thankful that I need only ASK to have God bind it to His heart, so that I can focus on the things that matter...



I am simply blessed to create…~charlotte♡



Thursday, June 2, 2016

Tutorial Thursday

Summer seems to have arrived in Middle Tennessee.





As you know, I spend a lot of time sitting on my back porch as Charcoal sniffs all that needs to be sniffed.



There are sticks to be moved!


Most of the time I spend is in darkness, since I seem to keep my days/nights confused.





The other night I noticed that the Lightening Bugs~~yep, that is what we call them in this little corner of the world~~were starting to get plentiful.




WHO hasn’t found a jar to gather lightening bugs on a hot summer night!




I remember that My Uncle Cecil told me that the smallest thing that God created was the switch to the generator on a lightening bug’s tail!  =)





To honor this passage into summer, I thought I would share an easy way to paint lightening bugs…this would be a fun thing to do with the children/grandchildren.


I love grammar!!


There is no wrong or right in art, when you get right down to it, so kick off those shoes, and WHY is someone wearing shoes in the summer, grab some paints, brushes and a surface and let’s paint some FIREFLIES!  (ha…bet you thought I was going to say Lightening Bugs, didn’t you! Orange you glad I didn’t.)





Wouldn’t it be fun to buy a Mixed Media notebook to keep of things you and your children/grandchildren painted this summer?  What a keepsake it would be!  Think how you might encourage them (and you) to CREATE!!





To start, I grabbed, what else, but My DecoArt Products.

I am proud to be a Helping Artist with DecoArt. 

I have bought most of the products at a discount from DecoArt, and a few of the paints have been given to me to create with; however, I have used DecoArt products for over 20 years, and find them to be the best!





The first piece I did with the DecoArt Media Fluid Acrylics

This is what I used: Cobalt Teal Hue, Primary Cyan, Cerulean Blue, Cobalt Blue Hue, Titanium White, Primary Yellow, Green Gold, Carbon Black, Payne’s Grey, Cadmium Orange Hue, White Gesso

Fudeball pen, Chalkboard Pen, Punchinella , 10/0 liner brush, #2 Flat, 1 inch Glaze Wash





I grabbed some blues and got started.



I covered the page (I have a book that I bought on etsy made of watercolor paper) with white Gesso.  I try to leave the brush strokes showing.  When this was dried, I used the punchinella as a stencil and added some random places of more gesso and used my hair dryer to dry…



TEXTURE is important in Mixed Media…at least that is what I think!  =)



I start with a lighter color in the middle, so I used Cobolt Teal Hue.  I worked in some Primary Cyan, Cerulean Blue and Cobalt  Blue.  There is no right or wrong…it is just doing what you like.  My Goal was to have the edges darker and I wanted a LIGHT SOURCE in the top left corner, so I didn’t put any of the blues there.  I kept layering the colors until they were blended.






For that lighter area in the corner, I added Titanium White and then some Primary Yellow and more white and then worked some blue into the white…again, the goal was to NOT leave any distinction of my colors…I wanted the colors to blend flawlessly together.



For the jar, I used thinned Titanium White to paint the jar.  Don’t worry about the shape, because jars come in all shapes and sizes.




To make the lightening bugs, I started out by dry brushing Titanium White in several spots. 



Dry Brushing means that you use a dry brush and VERY little paint and gently scrub it onto the surface. 



When this dried, I dry brushed Green Gold. 

The bugs were painted with Carbon Black and a liner. 

Make a dot for the head, two antennae, two wings, and the body and lines on the body. 

Paint the area inside the wings with Cadmium Orange Hue and the body with Green Gold. 

You might need to go over the lines again if your paint wasn’t thin enough. 

Add a dot of Primary Yellow to the tails.




Thin Cobalt Teal Hue and brush it over the jar.



For the lettering, I used a chalk pen (they are made to write on chalkboards) to free hand the lettering.  I went over it with my liner brush and Titanium White.  When the lettering was completely dry (be careful), take a wet brush to remove the chalk lines and dab it with a lent-free cloth.



To make the bigger stars, I added a drop of water, and touched a blob of Titanium White into the drop of water…leave it alone and it will spread out a bit to look like stars that have a halo around them.



With a toothbrush, I splattered Titanium White to make it look like stars.



With a fude ball pen (my first time using it), I outlined the jar and smeared it for shadows~~fun stuff.



I dry brushed Payne’s Grey around the edges



HOW COOL is THIS!!







And lest I forget those TRADITIONAL Painters, I made another sign using DecoArt Americana Acrylics…This is HOME to me!



Use whatever colors you wish, but I grabbed these colors:

Grape Juice, Deep Midnight Blue, Lamp Black, Titanium White, Citron Green, Tangerine, Turquoise Blue



Base the surface with one coat of Grape Juice and let it dry.

Place two small puddles of Grape Juice and Deep Midnight Blue on the Pallet.

Pick up some of each color and slip-slap it onto the surface.  To do this, I make an X with the paint until I have the surface colored.  Do not over work your paint, or you will get just ONE color.  You want some of each color showing.




With the chalkboard pen, write your saying.  Using this as a guide, go over this with your liner brush and Titanium White.  Add dots to the end of each letter~~this is what makes your piece whimsical.  I have seen too many pieces that could have been cuter, if ONLY dots had been added to lettering! It is those tiny details that will set your work apart.




Do the same to paint a jar…I left all the lines to show you what a mess we ALL can make…LOL

Outline the jar with the liner brush and Titanium White.

NOTE:  You may use a toothpick to do line work if you don’t have a liner brush.  This is sometimes easier for children.




When the letters and dots are completely dry, use a wet brush and a lint-free cloth to remove the chalk…BE VERY careful with those dots.  They take longer to dry than you think!



Thin Titanium White and paint the jar.



With Titanium White, dry brush Titanium White where you want lightening Bugs.





When dry, go over these with Citron Green…it is fine to go past the white dots.




With the liner and Lamp Black, add a dot for the head, a longer line for the body and 2 antennae.

The wings are Tangerine added with the liner brush.  Load the brush and simply set it down on the body for the wings.

Add a dot of Sunny Day to the end of each bug.

That little bug is the jar is what the bugs look like without their wings



IF you know how to float, then float Lamp Black around the jar.  If you don’t know how to float, take a brush and add water around the jar…not too much…just until it is shiny.  Take a flat brush if you have it (you can use a round brush if you don’t have a flat brush) and run one corner through your Lamp Black Paint ~~not too much paint.  Keep that edge next to the jar.  The water will make the paint bleed out a little, making a shadow.



Thin Turquoise Blue and paint it over your jar to make it blue.

Add just a few messy streaks with Titanium White to make it look like a reflection…The shading and the highlights are what gives your painting dimension.




To finish, use a stiff toothbrush and add flecks of Titanium White to look like stars…






I hope you all with add a touch of WHIMSY to your paintings with a lightening bug!!  If you do, share it with me!





TAKE time to rediscover the child in you…DON’T let being an Adult steal your JOY…I am simply blessed to create~~charlotte♡