We printed outside to have enough room but that meant paper blew around the yard.
I brought a clothes drying rack out & used bulldog clips to hold pages onto the bars.
I am Loving all the gellies & the doodles & the SCRAPINESS! Oh, you know I keep all the little pieces…
Has anyone tried putting the papers on an indoor clothesline to dry? I wonder if the clothespins would cause too much of a warping of the paper. Heavier weight papers might be better, but maybe all the layers of paint would make the flimsy paper less susceptible to damage.
Smmarrt
(Susan - You can just add more paint!)
1207
I just stack them as I print. I have a very small area to make gel prints so I print about sixpences of paper, step away to gather more materials or paint, then make 6 more. I try to print index cards and smaller pieces of paper too but I just toss those into a basket or shoe box.
After I am done printing the first batch, I go in for a second round to add stencils or stamping with foam stamps. Again, I just stack the less-juicy ones, If they stick, they stick. You can just add more paint.
Educate me on gelli plates my lovelies. You
They are for a mono print, right? So I don’t understand why you can’t move paint on say, glass. And then take a print off that. What advantages do gelli plates offer?
Since I’m an absolute gelli beginner, I can’t say for sure…but I would guess it has something to do with the squishy texture? You get great contact between the paint and the paper. In saying that, I’ve never done mono printing on anything before.
Yeah it’s just mono printing. And nothing wrong with using glass. Or even plastic like overhead projector transparencies.
Like princessp said gelli plates are slightly squishy. and slightly sticky so it’s Just a bit easier to work with.
You can also make your own gelli plate. I used a homemade one for a year before buying one. The store bought ones give better prints. My homemade one had tiny air bubbles I couldn’t completely get rid of.
I loooove printing with the gelli! The squish is super satisfying & they are so easy to layer on with stamps & stencils.
I have a sheet of glass on my desk, I’ll try some printing on it & see how it compares.
That would be good, I’d be really interested to see the results.
AIMR
(Linda -2024 Choose Projects that You Want to Do :us:)
1217
The biggest difference I saw was that if you are making a lot of prints for backgrounds using cheaper acrylics, the paint seems to hold better on a gelli plate rather than on the glass…it is very minor, however since the end result seems to be the same. I just love that it holds the stencils and other things for printing … I don’t use it to its full advantage yet, but hope to learn more as well.