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  • Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day 2013: The Results Are In

    April 28th was Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day 2013. I loaded up my MintyCam with 35mm film and my Zero Image with 120 film and headed out the door.

    Pinhole photography is difficult, despite the simplicity of the cameras. At least I struggle with it.

    My first attempt at pinhole photography was during a photo class at the Smithsonian. I used a Quaker Oats container and photo paper. The results weren't very good. And that's when I actually GOT results!

    I built a matchbox pinhole camera a few years ago and was thrilled to get ANY images on the film.

    WICA and the gum tree - From my homemade matchbox pinhole camera


    Not to be deterred, I came across the website of Chris Keeney. He's a great resource for all things pinhole, including the MintyCam, a pinhole camera made from an Altoids tin. 

    I bought a MintyCam from Chris and ran a roll through it for last year's Worldwide Pinhole Day. Success!

    Poplar Pond - The MintyCam worked!


    To see the entire roll from last year's Pinhole Day, check out my Flickr set WPPD 2012.

    The pressure was on for this year. I'm happy to say that both the Zero Image AND the MIntyCam came through with flying colors!

    Poplar Pond - Made with the Zero Image Pinhole 


    Bridge Over Four Mile Run - Made with the MintyCam


    All of the photos from Pinhole Day 2013 are in my Flickr set WPPD 2013. Take a peek and let me know what you think.

  • Back to the Wax Before the Year Runs Out

    Back to the Wax Before the Year Runs Out

    Ever since I came back from a brief trip to Alaska I've been wanting to do an encaustic piece or two. The light there is so different from the light here in Arlington, Virginia. I thought it would be fun to experiment with some of those muted Alaska-winter colors. Also, it's cold outside and working with encaustic helps warm me up!

    I found a couple of round wooden panels in my stash of encaustic supplies and taped off the edges. I'll go back and paint the edges of the two pieces when I'm finished. Usually I use acrylic gesso and then a couple layers of acrylic paint in a color that complements the encaustic paint.

    Because the two photographs I want to transfer are winter scenes, I applied two layers of Holy Grail encaustic gesso in warm gray. I recently bought a jar of Holy Grail from Evans Encaustics and this is the first time I've used it. It goes on very smoothly and dries quickly. It comes in all sorts of colors, too, so it's hard to choose!

    Next I applied three layers of clear encaustic medium, and between each layer I buffed the surfaces with an old undershirt. (My husband cleaned out his drawer after receiving new undershirts for Christmas so I have quite a few to use in the studio.)

    I added some encaustic paint in colors similar to what I see in the photographs I want to transfer. I also added some oil stick over the top of the wax, blended it with my fingers lightly dipped in linseed oil, and carefully fused the layer. A couple more layers of clear encaustic medium and this is what the pieces look like so far:

    Time for a quick peanut butter and jelly sandwich and a cup of tea. I think I'll transfer the photos a little later. It can be a fiddly process and I want to make sure I can concentrate! Stay tuned....

  • How To Do Parchment Paper Transfers on Encaustic

    I've had a few artists contact me with questions about parchment paper transfers on encaustic so I thought I'd write a post about how I do it.

    Parchment paper transfers use toner. Some people claim to be able to do parchment paper transfers using an inkjet printer, but I haven't had any luck with that at all. I use an inexpensive HP LaserJet color laser printer to do both parchment paper and water transfers

    I use plain old parchment paper from the grocery. Nothing fancy or particularly expensive. The beauty of parchment paper is that you can print multiple times on both sides.

    In my experience, fine lines are a bit more difficult to get with parchment paper transfers; I've had more success with water transfers. But parchment paper releases the toner onto the wax very quickly and easily, with little pressure, and it works well with both color and black and white images. Another great thing about this type of transfer is that you don't need any solvents or water.

    The parchment paper I use comes in a roll. I cut an 8.5 x 11-inch piece and put something heavy on it to flatten it. I usually let it sit overnight so it's nice and flat, otherwise it's difficult to get it to run through the laser printer. I've tried using a carrier sheet by taping the parchment paper to a plain piece of printer paper and running it through the printer, but it jams every time. Sticky tape residue on the rollers is a nightmare to get off.

    Once the parchment paper sheet is nice and flat, I load it into the printer's feed tray just like a regular sheet of paper. With my image prepared in Photoshop, I send it to the printer and keep my fingers crossed!

    Don't forget to flip your image in Photoshop before printing, otherwise your transfer will be facing the wrong way. This is especially important if you're including text in your transfer. I can't tell you how many times I've forgotten to flip the image before printing it.

    For this piece I'm using a 6 x 6-inch panel that I prepped with two coats of R&F encaustic gesso and at least four layers of clear encaustic medium. I try to make the surface as smooth as possible so the transfer will go on easily.

    I warm the surface slightly with a heat gun. You could also use a torch. It depends on which you prefer to use. The surface should look shiny and be a little sticky to the touch. You don't want it to be completely melted and liquified.

    Placing the image face down on the wax surface, I start by burnishing with my fingers. The toner will start to come off almost immediately, so you don't want to burnish until you've got your image placed.

    After burnishing with my fingers, I move on to using the edge of a metal spoon. You'll be able to see the toner coming off the parchment paper and sticking to the wax, which makes it easier to see areas that might need a bit more burnishing.  

    After thoroughly burnishing the entire image, I pull back the edge of the parchment paper carefully to see if there are any little specks of toner left on it. Don't pull it off completely! If there's toner left on the paper, put the paper down and burnish again. When all the toner has transferred, the parchment paper will be blank.

    If something transferred that you don't like or want, you can use a scraping tool to remove it. Just be sure to remove whatever you want before you seal the transfer with clear medium. I use a lineoleum cutting tool for cleaning up small areas. 

    The next step is critical. Before sealing with clear medium, I fuse the transfer VERY, VERY LIGHTLY, just enough to push the toner into the wax. I find parchment paper transfers to be extremely delicate. They're much quicker to slide around and separate than water transfers when heated. Heating the surface before sealing helps keep the transfer from smearing when the clear medium is applied.

    At this point I let the piece cool down before putting on the layer of clear medium so there's no danger of the wax being too soft and the image being dragged across the surface with the brush. Make sure your brush is hot and keep it moving over the transfer. I tend to do a fairly thin layer of medium.

    When you fuse this layer, be very careful. Too much heat will melt the wax under the transfer and the image will start to disintegrate and slide around. It just needs to be heated until it goes shiny. Sometimes there are still brushmarks in the wax around the transfer. I wait until the piece has cooled and then I'll gently fuse again.

    You can put more than one layer of clear medium over the transferred image if you like, but I usually stop here, leaving my transfer at the top of my encaustic piece.

    Here's the original photo for this piece:

    Let me know if you have any questions or comments. I'd love to hear about your experiences with parchment paper transfers on encaustic.

  • Where, Oh Where Has This Little Girl Gone?

    Where, Oh Where Has This Little Girl Gone?

    Today I'm back in the studio working on a couple of photoencaustic pieces. This one is on Ampersand Claybord and I have to let it cool down a bit before continuing. I figured it was the perfect time to snap a photo and put it up on the blog.

    The piece above started out looking like this:

     

    She was part of a small lot of old photos I bought late last year. Most of the photos were from Germany and this little girl showed up in two of the ones I bought. This particular photo had writing on the back. (I don't know any German, so I have no idea what it says. Any translators out there?)

    This is the other photo with the same little girl:

    I wonder where she is now?

  • Mum and Baby: A Photo Encaustic Commission; Photographs vs. Images

    Mum and Baby: A Photo Encaustic Commission; Photographs vs. Images

    Recently I completed three photo encaustic pieces for a client. She provided the old family photos and I turned them into encaustic works.

    I'm thrilled that she and her husband loved the three pieces enough to commission another one! Above is the original photograph after I scanned it. And here's the finished encaustic:

    Mum and Baby

    © 2012 Susan Stayer

    Encaustic, 8 x 6 inches

    Private Collection

    I really enjoy giving new life to old photos. I hate to see photos languish in a box somewhere, unlooked at and unloved. 

    All this got me thinking about the current state the the photo print. While I was visiting Ohio, I was talking with my family about how kids nowadays don't really have small prints of photos in an album or a box. My sister-in-law said she's got almost no physical prints of her two kids. They're all images on electronic devices, unless someone happened to give them prints. When my brother-in-law's smartphone died, he lost all the images on it.

    I think that's a real shame. There's something truly wonderful about holding a photograph in your hands or flipping through pages in a photo album. To me that's the difference between photographs and images.

  • Using Encaustic and Vintage Photographs To Create Something New

    Using Encaustic and Vintage Photographs To Create Something New

    A couple of weeks ago I was contacted by a woman who saw my work hanging in the Alcove space at Stifel & Capra during the month of April.

    The woman's husband liked my two photo-encaustic pieces "Mists of Time I" and "Mists of Time II," and wondered if I would do something similar with some of his old family photos. 

    He chose three vintage photographs to turn into encaustic works. 

    They've been a lot of fun to do. As I transfer the photos onto the wax, I love looking at the faces and the old car and imagining all the stories that go along with them. 

    I hope they enjoy the pieces as much as I enjoyed making them. It feels great when someone likes what you do enough to commission work based on something as personal as family photos.

    The three photo encaustics are heading to their new home in India soon. Bon voyage!

  • What's Old Is New Again

    What's Old Is New Again

    You probably already know that I LOVE finding film in an old camera. I've bought quite a few at thrift stores just so I can develop the film and see what's there. 

    Two of my encaustic pieces were created using found film: Mists of Time I and Mists of Time II.

    I can't resist old photographs either. The encaustic piece above, All Dressed Up, started out as an old photo I purchased as part of a small lot. Unfortunately there weren't any notes scribbled on the back of the photo. I'd love to know more about these people.

    Here's what the photo looked like after I scanned it:

    Through the magic of Photoshop, I removed the background and added a little bit of color. I printed the image on parchment paper with a laser printer, and transferred it to the prepared wax surface. Then I added a few additional touches of watercolor and oil pastel before sealing the whole thing with encaustic medium.

    It's fun to incorporate these images in my encaustic work and create new stories with them. Have you used old and found photographs in your work? 

  • Photo Transfers + Encaustic = Fun New Work!

    Photo Transfers + Encaustic = Fun New Work!

    I've been working on some new encaustics over the past two weeks. Inspired by the image transfer demonstration I saw at the encaustic conference back in June, I've been trying my hand at a few of these "water transfers."

    The process requires patience, which isn't really one of my strengths! It's worth it though when the paper is rubbed away and the image has transferred nicely into the surface of the wax.

    The piece above, Grant's Roosters, I, will be included in the Power of Color III show at Gallery West. The show opens on Wednesday, August 3, 2011, with an artists' reception on Saturday, August 13, from 5 to 8 pm.

  • When the Cow (Photo) Comes Home

    When the Cow (Photo) Comes Home

    Last June I spent a week in Illinois living with a farm family as part of The Fields Project artist residency.

    During the week I visited different farms and made lots of photographs, including pictures of the three-Cs: cows, chickens, and corn.

    One of my favorite photos from the residency was of a cow named Jazz. She was quite curious about me and what I was doing when I was photographing her. 

    A few months after I got home, I decided to use that photo of Jazz as part of a mixed-media piece. Titled "All That Jazz," the piece was included in the monthly show at the co-op gallery I was a member of, and it sold almost immediately, but not before I received a commissioned to make another, similar one.

    I'm excited about having the chance to work with Jazz again. I really enjoy her company.

  • Encaustic Textures and a Cow: A Busy Week in the Studio

    Encaustic Textures and a Cow: A Busy Week in the Studio

    I've been spending a lot of time in the studio over the past week and I've got several projects in progress.

    One of the nice things about working with encaustic is that you can have multiple pieces going at the same time. While the freshly fused layer of one piece is cooling, you can work on another and keep the momentum going.

    I've been revisiting some of my older encaustic works in progress. Last year I spent some time making small, textured encaustic squares in different colors using shellac and Jacquard Pearl Ex Pigments. Each square is 3 x 3 inches. I put them aside for awhile because I was unable to figure out what to do with them. Did I want them each to be an individual piece or did I want them to be grouped together somehow?

    Well, yesterday I finally decided that I wanted them grouped together to make a larger square.

    And here's a closer view of the surfaces of the squares.

    I'm also working on a commissioned mixed-media piece. Of a cow.

    More about that later.

  • Photography and Encaustic: A Match Made in Heaven (at Least for Me!)

    Photography and Encaustic: A Match Made in Heaven (at Least for Me!)

    I enjoy experimenting with photographs and finding new ways to use them. I've used my photos in printmaking, but I really don't have the temperament to be a printmaker. And since I'm definitely not a painter, using photos for reference is out.

    When I started working with encaustic, however, I discovered how wonderfully photography and encaustic work together.

    Up until now I've been embedding photos in encaustic or making image transfers. Recently I learned a new way of doing image transfers. Turns out I've been doing them the hard way!

    I've been doing what Linda Womack calls "water transfers." I print an image is printed using a laser printer or a copy machine onto regular copy paper. (The cheap stuff works just fine.) Using the back of a spoon, I then rub the image into the slightly warmed and very smooth encaustic surface. Once it cools, I use water to help break down the paper and rub it off very gently, leaving the toner in the wax.

    The water method is good for fine lines, and you can get good details in the transfers, but it's difficult and slow-going, especially for large transfers. Patience is key.

    © 2010 Susan Stayer, ASTRAL OPHIDIAN II. Encaustic, 6 x 6 inches.

    Earlier this week I discovered another way to do image transfers using ordinary kitchen parchment paper. It's so easy! The process still uses laser printer or copy machine images rubbed onto the wax surface, but it couldn't be easier. There's no dampening and rubbing off of the paper. It practically slides right off the parchment!

    Today I got back into the studio and tried my hand at the parchment paper transfer for the first time. It was a lot of fun and I'm already planning to do more.

    If you're interested in doing encaustic, Linda Womack offers in-person as well as online courses that are terrific. I've done two of them online. Her classes can be found at Womack Workshops.