thankyou for this beautiful picture, simply explained, perfect for knowing what to do step by step with no fluffy unnecessary extra content. great way to introduce a how too. thankyou
This was really helpful. Thanks so much. I've seen others use a special blend of Karo Syrup, mason stain, and underglaze etc, and put it on rice paper. Others use newsprint and regular underglaze to transfer, but this really seems the most straight forward and your results were beautiful! Thanks again for sharing your knowledge on this subject.
Hi, thanks so much for your informative videos & generous sharing. Which 3 primary colors of Velvet Underglaze would you pick for mixing? Thanks so much in advance!
oh!! I'm about to try this myself today. I wondered if the photocopy should be printed in laser printer or inkjet or if that doesn't matter. Any particular notes and concerns that I should be aware of before trying? such as the paper type? Thanks for this wonderful tutorial!
The underglaze is Amaco Velvet Underglaze. AMACO Velvet Underglaze 12-Pint Class Pack a.co/d/aWCE8Sh Underglazes are REALLY EXPENSIVE right now, sadly. When I made the video they were not that expensive.
Will this work with an inkjet printer or will that ink not resist the underglaze? Also, can you do this same thing with other glaze or just underglaze? TIA
I haven’t tried either. You should be able to do the same thing with regular glaze. I’m not sure that I would because you probably want multiple coats of the glaze on your piece. The inkjet printing… my gut tells me that it would not work, but it is worth trying.
@@mountpennart I'm just wondering if I could do it for at least a road map basically of the first coat rather than trying to free-hand a design. I think I'll try it - most that can happen is it doesn't work lol -
thankyou for this beautiful picture, simply explained, perfect for knowing what to do step by step with no fluffy unnecessary extra content. great way to introduce a how too. thankyou
That was Awesome !! Thank you !!😊
This was really helpful. Thanks so much. I've seen others use a special blend of Karo Syrup, mason stain, and underglaze etc, and put it on rice paper. Others use newsprint and regular underglaze to transfer, but this really seems the most straight forward and your results were beautiful! Thanks again for sharing your knowledge on this subject.
Thank you!!! Sincerely- thank you.
Hi, thanks so much for your informative videos & generous sharing. Which 3 primary colors of Velvet Underglaze would you pick for mixing? Thanks so much in advance!
@@mahoneybee v-308 yellow,
V-387 bright red, v-386 electric blue
😍
oh!! I'm about to try this myself today. I wondered if the photocopy should be printed in laser printer or inkjet or if that doesn't matter. Any particular notes and concerns that I should be aware of before trying? such as the paper type? Thanks for this wonderful tutorial!
Does the photocopy needs a special printer or special ink like laserjet or inkjet?
It does not. I used a laser jet in the video, but for my classes, I just run them off from the photocopier.
Great job. Question; what type of ink did you use to color in the template?
The underglaze is Amaco Velvet Underglaze.
AMACO Velvet Underglaze 12-Pint Class Pack a.co/d/aWCE8Sh
Underglazes are REALLY EXPENSIVE right now, sadly. When I made the video they were not that expensive.
Does the printed part of the image transfer or just the underglaze?
Just the underglaze
Can these transfers be used more thannonce- say if you wanted a set of those pasta plates?
Sadly no- it’s basically a monotype. Any additional printings would be very degraded.
Is this printed on a normal printer paper or newsprint ?
Printer paper
Will this process work on a bisque fired piece?
I don’t think so; the water in the clay is what pulls the underglaze off of the paper.
Is this just a normal paper and paint?
I saw similar technique like this but they use special thin paper and they leave the paper on when they glaze
This is regular printer paper and underglaze.
Will this work with an inkjet printer or will that ink not resist the underglaze? Also, can you do this same thing with other glaze or just underglaze? TIA
I haven’t tried either.
You should be able to do the same thing with regular glaze. I’m not sure that I would because you probably want multiple coats of the glaze on your piece.
The inkjet printing… my gut tells me that it would not work, but it is worth trying.
@@mountpennart I'm just wondering if I could do it for at least a road map basically of the first coat rather than trying to free-hand a design. I think I'll try it - most that can happen is it doesn't work lol -
@@kellysnider5138 😂 it should work for a road map!!
What kind of underglaze is that? The colors are so brilliant. My low fire and high fire underglazes dry so dull.......
@@Cre8tiveLifeJournal Amaco Velvet Underglaze
I did this and half the transfer didn’t stick and paper bits are all stuck to the clay. What did I do wrong?
I suspect the clay was not wet enough and the paper was too wet
The wetness of the clay/ paper is a little finicky. Try it a few times.
@@mountpennart Could the paper thickness have anything to do with it?