Just a quick note:
I am excited to show you a terrific altered, melted, distressed, torn up, colored on and painted canvas I made as one of my many back to school projects. Okay, so its not your normal “distressed” look but I can guarantee you these crayons were all up tight and pretentious looking, you know the type… perfect right out of the box. They NEEDED to find a way to be de-stressed, oh wait that was me. Hehe. Leave a comment below if Crafting helps you relax… atleast until you see the mess you made and have to clean up… LOL!
I have seen these projects all over Pinterest, so I decided to make one up for my Happy Helmar Home, it would be great for a home work/education station or even a classroom gift for a teacher, oh, Oh, OH even in the library at school! That is the PERFECT place for this project!
Hope you have a cup of coffee or tea with you right now and a snack. Stick with me for the long haul… it will be worth it. I had to give you fair warning.
If you know me I tried to do this as cheaply as possible. So let me break it down for you.
Knowing we are all in the need for great projects that cost very little in this Economic times I do my best to keep my cost down. “Decorating on a Dollar” as I like to call it.
Yard Sale find! See this golfing canvas? It is 2’x2′ and would cost me a pretty penny at craft and hobby stores for a blank one. However I found this one at a yard sale… for how much you ask? Not $15 markdown price … not $4.99 and not even the final yard sale price marked on it of $3… I bought this for $1.50! I am a haggler! Compare that to $30 – $40 for the new one.
The only thing I bought for this project (that was not in my craft room was the crayons. But I made sure I got those on sale. and this time of year there are plenty of great back to school prices on crayons. It took me three packs of them to complete this project once I took out the blacks, greys, whites and browns. I bought each of the 24 packs of crayons for $0.49 each totaling $1.47 cents.
This project cost me less then $3 to put together! Now that is frugal!
Here is how it was done.
Step #1: Clean and let the painting dry completely
Step #2: Brush a smooth layer of Gesso over the entire canvas. Because of the dark and light high contrast in this canvas print I decided to do two layers to make sure the image was completely covered. Let it dry between coats and again completely before moving to step #3.
Step #3: Remove pages from a old damaged children’s book and lay them out on the canvas to the desired pattern and placement. Then cover the canvas with Decoupage And Craft Paste by Helmar, and use it to adhere the book pages into place. Let dry completely before moving on to step #4.
TIP: I worked in sections and then added a couple of pages at a time to avoid the paste from drying prior to me applying the book pages. This also helps to give you time to work all the bubbles out.
Step #4: Water down some Gesso to create a white wash. Cover the entire canvas (now covered with book pages) with the white wash. This allows the book pages to fade into the background of this project. Again let dry completely.
Step #5: Print out and/or trace you phrase of choice onto the canvas in the placement you have chosen. Color in with Faber Castell‘s PIT Pen in black india ink. This pen works great on the dry gesso with crisp clean lines and color that wont fade when Decoupaged over at the end of this project.
OPTION:I f at this point you would rather use die-cut letters and glue them on that would be fine to. I would use Helmar‘s Decoupage to adhere them to this project.
Step #6: Using Core’Dinations Sand it Gadget to “cut” my excess book pages off the edges. Sanding from the front of the canvas towards the back at this angle gave it a slight distressed edge and thinned out the paper enough after a few swipes with this sander to pull the excess off the edges.
Step #7: COLOR TIME! WOO HOO! Take all your crayons out of the box and remove all unwanted colors. Now organize them into color families and arrange them so they “fade” from one color to the next. Being that this was for our family education center I wanted to use all the colors of the rainbow and I had to add pink since it’s my daughter’s favorite.
Step #8: Using Helmar 450 Quick Dry glue the crayons onto the canvas at the very top with the sharp tips of the crayons pointing down. I wanted to see the names of the colors so I placed them down to keep that portion of the crayon wrapper visible. I placed three glue beads down so the crayons would be adhered to at the top, middle and bottom of the wrappers.
- Hold the dryer at a 90 degree angle to the canvas. This will keep the “wind” from the blow dryer blowing splatters all over the canvas. As you can see in this photo… I tried to just wave it around and got several splatters at odd angles. (might be a cool affect fro a different project tough)
- Start melting the crayons at the tips not the middle. The tips at the bottom of the crayons need to be melted frist in order to allow the melted crayon in the middle of the wrapper to flow down the canvas. I melted the middles first on some then the tips and a volcano of color burst down the page almost uncontrollably once the tips was melted enough to “release” it.
- Slow and stead wins the control race. Took some time but was definitely fun as you move from color to color. Instant gratification for sure.
Thank you for taking the time to read this post and I hope you have been inspired to make something for your kid’s teachers or your home as well.
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