Autumn Acrylic Pour Painting on Rocks || Fluid Art Painted Stones || Pour Painting Basics
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- čas přidán 5. 08. 2024
- In this rock painting tutorial, we are creating beautiful pour painted stones. Using autumn themed colors we are painting kindness rocks to hide around town. This rock painting idea is perfect for all skill levels and they always turn out beautiful and unique.
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Happy Painting!!! - Jak na to + styl
Great ideas and help. I love that you talk to us and yourself too. ❤️
Thank you!!
Such a good idea to paint onto rocks!
Great way to add pops of color to the garden!
This painting is very interesting and amazing. I also paint on rock in the rocks art painting channel. Thank you for sharing this painting
Cool designs.
Glad you like them!
Turned out amazing!! Love those colors!
Thank you so much!
Just did my first paint pour following your instructions and I’m totally hooked! These turn out beautiful so thank you for showing us how to paint pour.
Wonderful! I'm glad you gave it a try!! It is very addicting!
This is beautiful. I really like this warm orange.
Thank you! 😊
they turn out amazing, thanks for the technique
Glad you like them!
Thank you for this video! I've heard about this technique but have never seen it done. A couple of questions, for the white base coat, are you using straight white acrylic paint? Is it necessary to use your type of "contraption " or could I just brush on a base coat? Also, does the metal grid dryer rack dry the paint into squares on the back of the rock? Sorry for the onslaught of questions.🙂TIA. I really enjoy your videos.
The white is mixed the same as the colors. You can definitely just base coat them ahead of time with white or you can paint right on the rock too if it's not too dark. You will end up with some dried paint on the back edges this way. There will also be some if you move your rocks to parchment paper. You can just scrape the edges on the back when you are done. Happy to answer the questions :)
Do you wait until the white base coat is dry before pouring on the colors? I watched twice but I missed that detail. I like your rack. I assume that's a cooling rack on a cookie sheet?
No the white is still wet here. But it could be dry too. It just helps keep the top colors move vibrant on gray rocks.
Hey. Thanks for the tutorial, but there's one part I don't understand. What do you do with the bottom part of the rocks? Do you flip them over to paint?
In this video you can see how I dry them and what the bottoms look like :) czcams.com/video/4fYfPOBwLog/video.html
Can I use the liquitex pouring medium instead of flotrol?
Sure!
I was wondering if you could please do a video on how to erase template chalk lines? I am just starting out and most videos do not show that end step. Is it easy to wipe them off. Should you use a wet cloth or an eraser? What works best and what makes sure you do not damage your design? Thanks for your wonderful videos, I am so enjoying them. Much love from Tasmania :)
Chalk will wipe off most rocks with a dry cloth. If that doesn't work you can get just the smallest amount of water on it. Just make sure your design is completely dry before removing.
@@RockPainting101 Thank you so much for taking the time to respond!
If we buy the pouring acrylics does it still need flotrol to is it already in it.?
I believe those are pre-mixed paints. I've never purchased them so you would have to read the label.
Thanks. They don't give the ingredients but they say don't add water.
What will underside look like???
It depends on how you let them dry. I like to move mine to parchment paper and move them around a little while they dry. That helps cover the underside with a thin layer of paint.
You end up adding water; why not just use water to thin the paint from the beginning and skip the other product?
You can get away with adding a small amount of water to your paint, but it can break down the makeup of the paint if you use too much. The Floetrol is actually a leveling agent. It helps keep the paints colors nice and bright and helps it flow on the rock and level out nicely. You can make a DIY version of this using 50:50 White glue (like Elmers) and water. Mix it well and then add to your paints.
Better without writing over!
You can definitely leave them blank!