I like to paint standing up at an easel. I also like to paint to the edge of my surface. When working on a small canvas or actually any painting, my hand runs into the bottom of the easel and have difficulty painting the edge. Most easels have a board on top which makes a shadow on the top of the painting. I tape my board, canvas, paper to a larger board or piece of foam core and work from there. This method of taping keeps tape off the corners of your work, too.
This makes it easy to paint to the edge of the surface. For framing oils or acrylics this is important. I frame my pastels against the glass, usually, so again it is nice to paint to the edge.
Here is the short video showing how I tape my surface to a board for painting on the easel.
I am an artist that paints in pastels, with some oils, and acrylics. I sketch in pen and ink. As an artist my original paintings are influenced from living in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Bolivia, Peru and Chile, and travels throughout much of Canada and all our fifty States. This is my spot for posting paintings and sketches, to muse mostly about art, life and a little about UT Baseball.
Website Jo Castillo Art
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
About Me
- Jo Castillo
- Bastrop, Texas, United States
- I Grew up in a small town , Magdalena, New Mexico. I enjoy art and the pleasure other people get from my work. I always donate some of my sales and art to charities, especially for children. That started in Bolivia with Para los NiƱos. "I cannot pretend to feel impartial about colors. I rejoice with the brilliant ones and am genuinely sorry for the poor browns." -- Winston Churchill
Labels
#inktober
(49)
#inktober2019
(27)
#inktober2023
(20)
#inktober2024
(2)
#inktober21
(11)
abstract
(1)
Acrylic Paintings
(75)
Arizona
(3)
Art House Project
(14)
artist
(88)
artist blogger
(360)
artist bloggerinstruction
(3)
artist blogger instruction
(20)
artist blogger instruction
(17)
artist blogger instruction
(41)
artist friend
(7)
at
(1)
Balloons
(1)
Baseball
(210)
Bastrop Sketchers
(11)
Bastrop TX
(34)
Bolivia
(5)
Calendar
(1)
Canada
(3)
Challenge
(6)
Charity Events
(75)
chile
(4)
classes
(3)
coaster sketch
(9)
coffee
(1)
colored pencil
(59)
computer art
(5)
crayon sketches
(3)
DailyPaintworks Auction
(3)
demo video
(4)
Digital Painting
(14)
doodle
(1)
dphotos
(1)
exhibit
(156)
Figure
(4)
Fine Art Friends
(3)
Floweb browsing
(1)
Flowers
(33)
food
(10)
Footwork
(1)
fused glass
(3)
Gallery
(3)
gluten free
(5)
Golden Open paints
(2)
Golf
(12)
House Concert
(1)
iMac Sketch
(1)
Inktense
(2)
inktober2024
(2)
inst
(1)
instruction
(78)
iPad Sketch
(91)
iPad sketches
(112)
iph
(1)
iPhone painting
(3)
iPhone sketch
(27)
jo
(1)
Jo's Notion
(9)
Jo's Thoughts
(306)
Joanna
(2)
Joodles
(2)
Landscapes
(137)
Marines
(30)
marketing
(3)
meme
(6)
memorial
(1)
Music
(69)
New Mexico
(130)
Nonsense
(2)
Oil Painting
(72)
Oil Pastel
(1)
painting buddies
(1)
PanPastel works
(3)
Pastel
(29)
Pastel Demo
(60)
Pastel Paintings
(413)
pastel sketch
(142)
Pastels
(12)
pears
(3)
Peru
(1)
Photo
(83)
photography
(2)
Photos
(1001)
Plein air painting
(56)
podcast
(1)
poll
(1)
pottery
(2)
Powwow
(3)
Recipe
(6)
restaurants
(6)
scenery
(17)
Sculptor
(7)
sculpture
(4)
seascape
(2)
sketch
(4)
Sketches
(1864)
snow
(2)
Still Life
(36)
Stu
(1)
Studio
(26)
Texas
(70)
Trees
(36)
tribute
(5)
under painting
(1)
Unsorted
(7)
videos
(4)
watercolor
(180)
watercolors
(27)
web browsing
(262)
web page
(11)
wetcanvas
(1)
WIP work in progress
(15)
workshop
(8)
World Blog Hop
(2)
Yesterfest
(2)
zentangle
(3)
6 comments:
Jo, I was just wondering about that exact issue myself...but I did not have any clever ideas like yours.
Thank you so much for this video - I definitely will try this out this week at my next painting session.
Cheers!
I learned it from one of the plein air painters for pastels. You can tape another piece of foam core and make it like a folder. I wrote about it in this post. That gave me the idea to use the taped on surface anytime. Susan Carlin does this, too.
Glad to help someone!
Jo: Interesting post on your mounting of your media.
I love to hear how others solve little art problems. Two points for ingenuity! :-)
What a helpful tip! Thanks for sharing, Jo.
fishing guy, thanks. Maybe this would work for your lures, ha!
Teresa, maybe we should have a hint blog. :)
Thanks, Jan.
Post a Comment