Submitted by Our Mini Family

Puffy-paint-art-tutorial

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Puffy paint, among other things (like 4 canvases, stencil, pencil, painter's tape, a ruler AND A RULER), was the key to the success of how this experiment turned out.

Did I emphasis the ruler enough? Because it was super important!

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So this first two canvases were...interesting to say the least. I thought, for whatever reason, that putting the stencil down and THEN using the puffy paint on top would work. The funny discovery I made after it dried was that:

a) the puffy paint sat mostly on top of the stencil and not on the canvas!

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b) most of the paint that did make it onto the canvas ended up acting more like glue and made the stencil stick to the canvas!

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After coming to the discovery that this was not the best way to go about the remainder of this project, I decided to stencil the damask silhouette onto the canvas with a pencil! It really worked out 400% better, and if you decide to pursue this project: do NOT try it the first way I did it! (unless of course you want a stress headache!)

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I think it turned out rather fabulously!

Adam was laughing at me because I am a little bit mathematically challenged, and I was having difficulty calculating where to put nails in the wall to make my grid. In the end, about 15 minutes of grueling measurement later, my damask made it to the wall!

I paid about $10 for the canvas, and $3 for the puffy paint!

 

 

I thought it would be fun to add a few of my (Cassity’s) thoughts to this great art idea. First of all I love how adaptable this idea is! Don’t you agree? You could really do this with any image you liked… just print and trace onto canvas. I would love to see this in one of those modern paint my numbers of someone’s face. I also love how she kept it all white, but you could also paint it a solid color after that fact that matched your room…

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8 Comments

  1. February 25, 2012

    Could you use plaster over the stencil? I can't imagine doubling your work by penciling and then puff painting. What do you think? Maybe that isn't what you want. Just a thought.

    • March 8, 2012

      That was my first thought too. Why not use the stencil and drywall mud? And seal it well afterward. But it did turn out really pretty even with the "learning curve."

  2. February 25, 2012

    Did you paint the canvas afterwards to seal it all or put it on a primed canvas? I'm picturing gray canvas with white puffy paint and even using a color was on top and wiping it off to age it or washing with a brighter color (your room accent color) and wiping off - the wheels are turning. These are really pretty.

  3. February 26, 2012

    The damask canvas art is so gorgeous and so imaginative ! I will do this for my 16 year old daughters' bedroom. Someone blessed me with some Antique furniture for my daughter and it looks like "French Shabby Chic". We are French so, this look is very special to her and I . This will be so beautiful. Thank you for sharing your idea. Tami

  4. February 28, 2012

    This is a GREAT idea! thanks so much for sharing it. Anyone can do it and it looks awesome! I am definitely going to try it. :)

  5. March 1, 2012

    Shirley, you definitely can use joint compound to get a similar look. I am a professional decorative artist (15 years exp) and we do this all the time on canvas , walls and furniture. That being said, I think the puff paint has such a soft and elegant look. I would try both on a small sample and see which look you like the best. One recommendation with the joint compound, it will look better if it is lightly sanded and painted over with a higher sheen white paint.

    Cassity, , your canvas pieces are very pretty! I want to run out and get some puffy paint and try my hand at making some canvas pieces!

    Sheri Miller
    http://Www.thegirlwithpaintinherhair.blogspot.com
    http://Www.tprcolumbus.blogspot.com

  6. April 9, 2012

    thanks for the idea. Yours turned out wonderfully

    As soon as someone says something won't work... I go and do it anyway. As it turns out, it worked really well. I used a thin mylar type stencil, a credit card to spread the puff paint and lifted the stencil off immediately (just like I would if using pastes and a stencil).
    Puff paint is a little thinner than molding pastes, so if you don't want a little seepage under the stencil, spray the back with removable adhesive. I also taped down my surface I was applying the paint so it wouldn't move around or lift when I remove the stencil. Have a great day. PS I used it with a floral stencil which looks great when puffed and then sprayed with Distress sprays.

  7. April 14, 2012

    I love this where did u get the stencil from?

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