A Wizard's Guide to Paper Marbling for Bookbinding, Crafting, and Scrapbooking
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- čas přidán 18. 04. 2022
- #craft #diy #bookbinding
In this DIY video we'll be making marbled paper for use in bookbinding, crafting, scrapbooking and more! We will marble paper the traditional way, how it's been done since the middle ages.
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White streaks are usually caused by hesitation as you roll the paper onto the size. Often happens if your paper is too dry/brittle. Marmorpaperie in the UK has a great troubleshooting guide on line. You can combine a brief hesitation with a wave like motion to actually create a pattern called Spanish wave that looks like moiré fabric.
And for anyone who has a chance to take a class with Lucy at Marmor Paperie in London, she's an absolute joy to learn with :D I did the intermediate class last week and had a fantastic time!
Finally! Someone with a marbling tutorial that makes the process easy, understandable and affordable for a beginner. Thanks!
I did marbling in a very traditional way (using organic pigments, Ox gall, brush from horse tail..etc.. We Turks take pride in marbling art so we try to do it as traditional as possible :) )Streaks are all about how you take the paper from the water tank. You should take the paper with stable hand motion and power. One more recommendation, don't dry your paper by hanging. Put them on a horizontal surface.
For the first time doing it, you did a great job! I must applaud your for that!
Great comment. So kind!
What do you mean by “stable hand motion and power?”
@@Signal_in_the_noise I am going to assume they mean as one smooth, even pressured, pull out of the water. Slight hesitation can cause water ripples to go against the small current you create while pulling. At least, that is how I learned it with hyrdodipping.
For the people talking about the white streaks are caused by " hesitation "... yes it can be, BUT...
There is also a technique where you actually do it on purpose, it is know as the " Spanish wave or ripple ". Iam a full time professional artist and Bookbinder and I hand marble all of my papers for my sketchbook line. And when you are laying the paper down into the bath to print... you have the 2 opposite corners pinched and you start to gently rock the paper causing it to ripple in the water. When it is done correctly, the pattern on the print will look LIKE 3D waves ripplingthrough the pattern, and it cause white streaks sometimeswhen the paint is to thin on the surface of the water. White streaks are also cause by air pockets between the paper and surface of the bath, that is the main cause for white spots near the corners and edges of the paper. People drop the corners unevenly, and way to fast and It traps air...which cause blind spots in the print. Alot of people also sway the paper while putting down the paper on the bath to create an erratic pattern. The best paper for marbled paper prints IMO, is the Mohawk super fine paper, Talas professional marbling paper and Rives BFK paper ( can be bought in 100 yard rolls too ) .. the Mohawk is shiny, very smooth and prints like a dream, and super saturated and smooth. Hope you all have a wonderful day 😁
Hi! Thanks for all the detail your answer provides. I am still looking for the best paper for me and your suggestions were intriguing. How heavy should the papers be? I can find Arches Rives BFK paper, but it comes in 300gsm (probably too heavy for marbling if I want to do bookbinding?) Would 120 GSm Or 90gsm be better? Do they need to be 100% cotton, like Rives? I am looking for papers I can use to do book covers, as I am making my own sketchbooks. Thanks in advance for your comment, if you see this and have a chance to reply.
@@berolinastrassmannever find an answer ?
@@Signal_in_the_noise Hi! I found another marbled in the UK using Munken 120gsm paper. I like Munken in general. Very reliable paper. I need to get some big sheets to try.
The one at 32:54 gives me a Van Gogh Starry Night vibe. Beautiful!
The name of your feather pattern is actually called Get Gel. Come and Go. It's the beginning pattern when you use tools. So many wonderful traditional patterns can be created using the tools that you have made. One suggestion. It would be easier if your tool matched the width of your tray. It might mean that you need two sizes depending on how much you want to explore marbling. Your idea for making the tools is a great idea. Another thought. I was taught to hold my paper at the opposite corners. Lay down one corner and gently, and continuously, lay down the rest of the paper. No hesitation lines will happen with a little practice. Thanks for the tutorial.
can you please reiterate the laying down technique? i was having alittle trouble following😅
@@henryyancey1117 Sure. You laid down your paper from the middle. That is why you had hesitation lines. It's hard to do that smoothly. I was taught to hold the right side of the paper with my right hand at the top right corner, and the left with my left hand at the bottom left corner. (I'm right handed, If you're a lefty it might be opposite) . Then before touching the paint wiggle the paper around to be sure it moves smoothly. Sometimes after we alum the paper can get dry and rigid. Once it is moving smoothly, plant for feet well, take a good breath to relax. Once you feel centered touch the left corner down and in one smooth motion move across the tray by holding the left in place and pulling slightly with the right. You will be laying the paper down at an angle. You should finish by touching the top right corner down. It takes a little practice but you will get the hang of it. Try to watch more you tube videos of people laying paper on a marbling tray. It's good to take a class if you can. Also, since you enjoyed the swirls, please know that there are wonderful traditional patterns. I suggest "Marbled Designs" by Mimi Schleicher. She gives you step by step directions for 55 different patterns. I do love your concept for making your own rakes. That can save a lot of money, plus for the different patterns you will need a number of different rakes. With your concept a person can have all the rakes they wish for just a little time and work. Thank you for that! Please keep marbling and Have Fun!!
@@sherrybee7227 very helpful. thank you
@@sherrybee7227 Thank you so much, I've currently got a couple dozen tabs open trying to find a compilation of pattern techniques, to no avail. So thanks so much for the rec! ✨
Just so you know it’s generally pronounced “Cara-jee-nan”! It’s actually a type of algae that is used to thicken all types of foods! One of the most common is ice cream. So you can thank algae for your thick and creamy sweet treat!
…now I’ve watched the entire video and really enjoyed it, thanks so much! I was in L.A. recently, visiting my young grandkids and we did paper marbling. It all turned out really well and we only used regular printer paper (cut in half) and smaller pans for the size. I had pre-treated the papers with alum before my trip so those were ready to use. I found that the lamda powder completely dissolved when I left it in the jug overnight but I did use distilled water as another marbler highly recommended it depending on how hard your tap water is (I assumed city water is quite hard as it likely has a lot of additives/deposits). I never needed to strain the size at all and thankfully had no clumps or bubbles. The only thing I didn’t have was the ox gall but I played with how much I diluted the paints (inexpensive acrylic craft paint) and it turns out that certain colours just work better than others which I’m assuming has to do with the pigments that were used to make them…maybe some are heavier, which causes them to sink, and or not spread well (???). I used small (2 oz) dropper bottles for each of the colours, which were easy for my grandkids (ages 5, 6, and 7) to add paint to the size without making too much mess. The only tricky part is that we made so many papers, it was challenging to find places to let them dry. The kids had so much fun making beautiful marbled papers and once they were completely dry, we cut some into shapes and collaged onto blank greeting cards for their teachers.
Paper marbling is one of my favorite and strongest memories of my grandma. She always made the most beautiful cards with them too. I bet your grandkids will remember doing that with you as long as they live. :)
Next time you are in LA, bring your grandkids for a field trip to visit our marbling studio in Huntington Beach! You paint your own silk scarves and other fabrics, as well as paper, wood, and lots of other materials!
Danny ~ For your first go you did great, next time lay paper on surface holding opposite corners starting with hand you don’t write and lay going towards the corner hand you write with, remove in same manner as here but without the dragging on the edge of the dish, rinse at a horizontal, then dry vertically, try same cardboard top hot glue strip on a roll of Afro combs the length of your tray and if your tray is clear you can see your progress!
Very nice. It would have been nice to see a demo of rinsing the size off the paper.
The blue and yellow one at 32:50 reminds me of the painting Starry Night by Vincent Van Gogh! So beautiful! Thanks for sharing your tips, i'll surely be trying this in the future!
Thank you! You'll love doing it, it's so satisfying!
That's totally what it looked like!!
Came here to say that very thing! This one was my favorite out of all of them, I loved the contrast between the vibrant yellow and the dark blue and black.
100% my association as well. Starry Night also happens to be one of - if not _the_ - favourite paintings of mine. (Though to give an exact ranking of painting's, when it comes to favourites, are impossible in my view, so even saying it's _"the"_ favourite is really to say "It is *_the_* no. 1, without a question" without saying there's only room for one on the stand). In general van Gogh's most famous for his sunflower painting, but I find Starry Night (or De Sterrennacht) to be a much more accurate testament to his true genius as an artist. This is my view and mine alone, but I stand by it as truth: van Gogh painted the world not the way it _looks to be_ , but the way it actually _is_ - and while this holds true throughout especially the later part of his artistry, I believe de Sterrennacht to be the foremost manifestation of this skill. Closely followed by Sterrennacht boven de Rhône (Starry Night over the Rhône) painted one year earlier in 1888 in Arles. It's sad to think that two years later, in July 1890, almost exactly one year after painting de Sterrennacht, van Gogh died, presumably from a self inflicted gunshot to the chest, at the all too early age of 37. And yet, almost 1,5 century later, and despite all of the development seen in art since, his works still has the power to evoke thoughts and feelings and inspire a great sense of genuine awe in people of all ages, from all walks of life, all around the world.
While I'm an atheist, and not a believer in anything supernatural, I can't help reserving a place in my mind where the hope that somehow, in some way, he knows that. And it brings him the joy he deserved, but never found, while he was still here, alive, on earth, in this world.
that was really wonderful! thanks
As others have mentioned, the streaking is typically from inconsistent speed as the paper is laid down. This is not just the inconsistent speed you initially lay it down, but also as you remove bubbles by pushing them out with the plastic paint knife. Inconsistent alum application can also cause this if one side of the paper was more saturated than the other (or your alum started separating, so it was inconsistently concentrated), or the treated sheets dried/drained unevenly as they were hanging. Another thing I've had happen... once your size gets overused and dirty, chemicals from your paint - including the ox gall - mix in and effect how the paint reacts or spreads on various parts of the surface (even if you try to remove it with the newsprint). I used to get annoyed when this kind of thing happened and considered them "errors." By now I have come to realize paper marbling is chaotic by nature, and you never know what you'll get. In this sense, everything is an "error," but if it looks interesting, who cares!? :) Many of the favorites I've done were from weird experiments like you also tried.
The items used to pull the the inked marbled bath are called: combs and an Afro comb works perfectly for this purpose!
First it was resin, then it was acrylic pour painting and now it's marbling. I need a bigger apt 😅thanks for the thorough video😎
Hi Danny, I’m so far only at the beginning of your video where you’re gluing the toothpicks into the homemade marbling rake but I have a quick tip I wanted to share before I forget: to quickly remove pesky glue strings, hit them with a blast of hot hair from a hair dryer or heat tool and they will magically disappear….like poof, they’re gone! :-)
alum is pronounced like Allen. One reason your colors may not be as intense as you would like, is that is that you have not created enough layers. Each time you flick a new color onto your tray, you are concentrating the intensity of the previous boundaries of color. You can also tone down colors before hand with their compliment.
Those white streaks are waves. As the surface tension stretches out between the peaks and valleys the paint layer becomes thinner making the paint less vibrant. Those streaks are essentially imprints of waves.
Yeah those are called hesitation marks. They're hard to avoid but it's about laying the paper down in one fluid motion
I love it! Thanks for this tutorial. ❤
L'effet plissé se produit lorsque l'on fait bouger le papier au moment de le déposer sur la peinture. Le moindre tremblement produit un effet "drapé" qui peut aussi être voulu dans ce cas il faut faire bouger légèrement le papier de haut en bas lorsqu'on le dépose dans la peinture. Ne pas commencer par le milieu du papier mais par un angle en tenant la feuille par deux coins opposés. Merci pour votre tuto bien expliqué.
White streaks are usually caused by hesitation or the paper not contacting the water quickly, I suggest using an alcohol ink instead of paint for colour that really really pops
Very nice results
New subscriber: I am so grateful that you posted this do-it-yourself rake. I am introducing marbling to my fundamentals of art students in Owning Mills, MD this is a first time for the high school students, and my funds were drying up this saved me a lot of frustration. Thanks
I put a small pencil x on untreated side of papers before treating with Alum.
Part of the issue with the light streaks could be the way you are putting the paper down, hesitating after the center is down. Try holding the paper by opposite corners when putting it down. I don't use ox gall and it works just fine as well.
These look amazing, I can't wait to try making some. Your hair looks cool btw
Best paper marbling tutorial for people just starting out. Thanks so much!
The blue, orange, black one was my favorite. I LOVE complementary colors together so that one just popped to me. Nice video! First one I've seen of yours.
Thank you so much for this workshop, just one suggestion treat yourself on a white or clear plastic tray you can see so much better what you are doing!
"Aloom" as you called it, is pronounced "AL-uhm" (accent on the first syllable,) and it's an astringent- it's the stuff in pickles that makes you pucker.
Absolutely amazing, Danny!! Professor Snape would be so proud of you… mixing things you get magic on a paper🤩🤩. I love all the designs you have gotten.
The white streaking on the page happens when you hesitate putting the paper down/ don’t put it down smoothly. Sometimes it’s actually down intentionally to create a moiré effect.
The swirls one was my favorite! But all are very beautiful
i had to lol at 5:18, everything up to that piont was like, wahtever you have in your house, you can do this it's totally diy friendly. Lambda Carrageenan powder ???? wtf hahaha, good vid tho
Gracias ❤
Awesome man, you did great. My first tries on anything end up with me painted, stuff everywhere except for the paper. Yep I’m up to try it for sure
Amazing! Be sure I'm going to try it!. Thanks you for sharing. Greetings from Mexico.
I just noticed my kleenex box has the same swirly pattern on box as you created in this video.
And I thought you make these digitally 😅
It's awsome!
32:20 It's pretty amazing how the green one tourned out looking just alike some microscoped colored cells vues.😊👍❤
THIS IS AMAZING!!! Danny, you are the real wizard here.
I tried book binding for the first time back in December and at the time I wish I knew where to find pretty paper like this one that wasn't too expensive. I'm definitely going to try this! thank you!
They look great! The experiment with the big green circle and blue on the outside reminds me of tentacles and a big seamonster a bit like cthulu :D
This reminds me the thing with dish soap and a straw , creating bubbles lay the paper on top and then you can take print of bubbles. It’s a different pattern but very pretty also :)
I want to come make marbled paper with you. I love doing this
The cardboard & toothpick tool is such a great low cost diy idea.
finally sum1 that takes the time to explain step by step. tyvm
Funny, I think the last one is the prettiest 😊
I've been thinking about maybe trying out bookbinding because it looks like a fun hobby and I can get a cool sketchbook out of it, but I'd never thought of doing this. I might use it on the inner covers or even throw them in between some of the regular pages, just for fun. Thank you! :))
Thanku❤❤❤❤❤
I've always been interested in this. So thanks. And, love your hair.
Added question: You said we need to rinse the carageenan water from the printed paper and then hang to dry. How does one do the rinsing?
You can do it either in your sink with a gentle drizzle of water (if your sink is deep enough), or you can use a watering can and do it outside or in your bathtub! It doesn't take much, just a quick rinse for about 10-20 seconds.
@@wizardryworkshop Thanks for the info. I'm doing a book page-folding art work I saw on TikTok and wanted to put some pretty marbled pages on the inside covers. Your tutorial came at just the right moment!
You have hooked me! Great tutorial, I too would like to know the complete process of rinsing the paper. I think you could do this with fabric? Has anyone done this process using muslin yet? Thank you! ❤
You presented a very clear explanation of every step. BTW, if you treat glass bottles with alum, you can also marble them.
How about Wood? Can you marble Wood by treating it with alum?
👍👍Danny, these turned out fabulous. Thanks for showing us that this gorgeous paper can be made at home using a baking pan.
Wow love these!! The bleu and yellow one is my favorite.
Thanks! I'm starting to lean toward that one too!
The last one looks likes swans:it’s beautiful. The large green one looks like a frog! I
like that one too. I think the quality of the paper affects the result. How did the Arches work? That does become an expensive proposition!
Yes rolling onto size has to be fluid, pun intended.
Love this video, and looking forward to more diverse kinds of art from you!
Damn you! Now I want to try doing this myself for my books. Great work.
I loved this. Ya need a few instructions on how to use your stick blender, such as burp the air out and keep it under the surface. The chunks would’ve been thoroughly dispersed. This was pretty cool. Hugz, Tree
Alum is pronounced al-uhm
The pattern is called a Taiwan swirl and a Peacock swirl when you use your cardboard and toothpicks
(I use these designs while making soap)
Thank you SO MUCH
What an amazing work! Congratulations 🎈
Liked that Van Gogh-looking one
😅 I really want to try this
Seeing this, I am immediately thinking about colored paper stock. like a black or a red background and using stickers to mask off areas to peel them off later and using it to print delicate patterns over it later to use as a cover for pocket notebooks.
That was so cool to see how each one turned out differently! I can't wait to see them on the book covers you design!
Really enjoyed watching this. I've always wondered how they do the marbling :)
Omg! New addiction 😆 I will give this a try soon!
Really beautiful, thanks for showing how it’s done.
You can enhance the steaks to where they look like cool folds
In the paper. It you kind of rock the paper on the surface of the size *as you lay it down*, then you will get streaks and they can be used to your benefit.
Gorgeous!
What a random video to stumble upon... I will follow this, and like your 'last drops' experiments not try to scribe stars but a short firstname. I'm hoping it will be hard-to-make-out-yet-undeniable-once-seen, like recognising a clear shape in a cloud; for a personal bookbinding gift (inside, not cover -- again, subtle).
So pretty!
Wow! I love it!
i'm taking a marbling class in 2 weeks, can't wait! thank you for a primer, looking forward to more of your videos
Nice! Give us some pointers when you're finished!
this was so mesmerizing to watch!
Amazing!!
Great tutorial thank you!
As a marbling newbie who made alot of frustrating mistakes thank you for a full step by step tutorial!
That was fascinating!
Great tutorial. you have carefully selected what works best and explained it in a nice, calm manner. what I like is that you are also critical of your own creations. and being open to improvements from mistakes is what you learn the most. I now have every confidence that I will succeed in this process. thank you
Wahoo! Thank you
I’ve got this on a loop while I work - a mix of the calm instructions and relaxing paper sounds strangely help me concentrate - thanks Danny 😊
Amigo arteiro. Voce não tem noção de quanto grata estou pelo sua aula. Irei guarda-la, com muito carinho, farei essa bela arte. Gratidão
Excellent video. Thanks. 😊
Cannot wait to do my own.
I loved them all. Thanks for sharing.
Amazing! Thanks for this video :)
Thank you for this 👐👐
Thank you for your wonderful and informative video on marbling paper, also for the links for supplies.
Awesome! Thank you, Danny. ♥️
Love your videos Danny. Love from India
Omg I am loving this tutorial! Very cool! Thanks for taking the time to show us how to do this, Danny!
Stunning effects!! I love the process. Thanks for sharing
the thing that makes the streaks the paper is maybe water streaks.31:25
Hey Dan! Thanks for this super helpful video on the basics!!!
Wow!
Wow that is some stunning work thanks for sharing
Yes, the pale lines are usually caused by hesitation in your movement as you lay the paper down onto your size. Try
doing a "Spanish wave"- where you hold down one corner of the paper in the tray and you do a "back and forth "
motion in smooth conjunction with laying the sheet down. This results in creation of waves or lines running across your sheet..it looks cool over a basic shell marble pattern. Keep experimenting! Keith M.