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What is the best way to get a splattered look on your card stock? SU! used to sell the Inkworks Air Art Tool, but I never bought one. Yes, I have confetti card stock, and yes, I know "Itty Bitty Backgrounds" has a splatter-look stamp, but it just doesn't quite look the same to me. So--what's the secret technique or tool I need? Thanks.
Some people achieve this look by running a finger over the bristles of an inked toothbrush . . . I haven't tried this yet. It is filed in my brain on my list of things to try!
__________________ Cathy ~ Member #1237 My Gallery
You can use the splatter wheel...I think it is still in the SUp catty. That would be easier than the bitty back grounds but still a very 'uniform-looking' splatter. I really like the airworks gun. That is a tool I use all the time ! Maybe you can do an ISO and see if someone is willing to sell theirs ?
With paints you can dip a toothbrush in a watered down color of paint and then use your fingernail to pull the bristles and send the paint flying onto the paper. I suppose that would work with a 'wash' of ink ? Have to be careful with this though because the ink does 'fly'.
Good luck and I hope you get some better help than mine !
Blessings, Lori-Belle
I saw someone from SU on DIY Scrapbooking the other day, what she did was take some classic ink from a reinker and put into a small container with water and dip a watercolor brush ( not and aqua painter) and then take the wet brush and just tap tap around the paper...
Something the artist Jackson Pollack was the master at!
There's a technique...I think it's called thumping. You ink up the aqua brush and it has to be a little more wet than usual. Then you tap the barrel against your finger so that the brush sprinkles onto the paper. It leaves a splatter similar to the air art tool. We did this at Regionals in San Antonio.
and yes, I know "Itty Bitty Backgrounds" has a splatter-look stamp, but it just doesn't quite look the same to me. So--what's the secret technique or tool I need? Thanks.
Sarah
Actually, I've found that Itty Bitty Bkgrounds' splatter image does it best for me! I dislike the messiness of using a wet brush technique and getting splatter everywhere, including myself (happens every time, sigh . . . )
This is my secret trick (IF you like using Itty Bitty Splatter image): Don't stamp it straight down onto your paper. Or project looks like it has chicken pox. :eek:
I actually rock it diagonally corner to corner, selecting precisely where I want the splatter, and I rotate the paper as I work so I can get a true random effect (or the illusion of that, if you will).
I use itty bitty splatter on prolly 80% of my creations and over the last 8 years, I'm beginning to wonder if I've worn the poor thing out! ;)
__________________ Julie Ebersole (JulieHRR once upon a time . . . )julieebersole.com"So shines a good deed in a weary world." -Willy Wonka
I use a toothbrush and a bamboo stick to pull across. I've also sprayed my paper when I was done I love that look. Put paper in a box so you don't splatter everything else.
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