Hi there! It’s Marsha here. Today I’m sharing my experiments with watercolour on the new Jane Davenport 8”x10” gel printing plate!
The amount of water needed to activate watercolours causes the ink to bead up on the slick surface of the gel printing plate. You can still pull awesome textured prints with it, but sometimes the distressed, beaded look isn’t what you are looking for.
In last month’s video, I applied liquid inks to the plate with a cosmetic sponge. This method works well for a watercolour that is already liquid, but, although it isn’t impossible, it is harder to achieve with watercolours that come in a small pan.
The solution is to apply a barrier on the plate to combat the slickness, or to alter the watercolour to change the water tension.
In an earlier video (link: https://gelliartsblog.com/2017/05/gelli-printing-with-watercolor.html), I applied dish soap to the surface of the plate. The soap created both a barrier, and it altered the viscosity of the watercolour. It created fun prints, but the results still didn’t look like a watercolour.
So this time, I thought I would try layering different mediums to see if I could come up with a way to create a more predictable result.
Watch the video to see how I got on, creating a mixed media gel print using watercolour pans!
In the video, I’m using a Jane Davenport watercolour pan set.
Before you start, you need to soften the watercolour cakes. I spray the pans with water, and I let them sit for a while. You can also use a dropper or load your brush with water and add a drop of water onto each watercolour cake.
Use an old watercolour or soft hybrid brushes to work with. The gesso can be rough on the bristles, and you don’t want it to damage your best brushes!
Try to keep your brush damp.
It needs to be moist enough to release the pigment from the watercolour pan and at the same time dry enough not to create a puddle on the plate. Remember that the gel printing plate and the acrylic mediums layered on top do not soak up any of the moisture as watercolour paper does.
I can’t wait to see the gel prints you create! Please share your work with us on Instagram using #gelliarts.
Happy watercolour printing!
-Marsha
Materials:
Gelli Arts® + Jane Davenport Printing Set
4” roller
Other:
Jane Davenport Glitz Sea Watercolour Set
Jane Davenport Mermaid Tail Swatch Stamp & Die
Acrylic Paint
Paper
Scissors
Clear gesso
Matte medium
Old (watercolour) brushes
Spray bottle with water
(Paper) towel
Die-cut machine
Transparency
Sharpie
Stencil
Tissue paper
Watercolour paper (9.5” x 12”)
Paint marker
EXTRA // I WILL TRY
Magnifique !!!