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Another Fish pattern by Falcon


New Guy

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5 minutes ago, amazingkevin said:

whoa! A light water color wash on the backing board with grain so nice in green or blue would be a big plus for this gem.perfect match wood and fish!!! 

Just wondering, would a watercolor wash not raise the grain severely? I agree, a light green tint on that cutting would be terrific. Would there not have to be some wood protection be needed before the wash? I would like to know as I would like to do that on my cutting.

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I think a thin rubbed on tint would be ok.although i.ve only done this once on a grizzle bear who's hands were on the sides of a door jam and his head on top of the door frame,which I still have. Thinned down water base paint is what I used back then as suggested by the pattern designer.

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13 minutes ago, amazingkevin said:

I think a thin rubbed on tint would be ok.although i.ve only done this once on a grizzle bear who's hands were on the sides of a door jam and his head on top of the door frame,which I still have. Thinned down water base paint is what I used back then as suggested by the pattern designer.

...I'd kinda like to see pics of that!!!!

 

(and possibly a pattern?)

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19 hours ago, Rockytime said:

Just wondering, would a watercolor wash not raise the grain severely? I agree, a light green tint on that cutting would be terrific. Would there not have to be some wood protection be needed before the wash? I would like to know as I would like to do that on my cutting.

I think any water based color would raise the grain some but, not severely. Just knock it down with a scuff pad or sandpaper. I personally would not prefinish because the experience I've had with prefinishes is they seal the wood and while they do minimize bleeding they often obscure the grain. I like to use aniline dyes because they don't cloud the grain, you can mix any color imaginable and you can mix any intensity you want. You can even wash some out if you decide it's too bright. Play around with some scrap and don't forget to apply some sort of top coat. The color wash will look OK but the clear finish will really make it pop. Think of how good cherry or some other woods look after applying an oil finish of some sort. You'll feel that smile growing as the piece comes to "life."

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Nicely done. There are a few 'hold your breath' cuts in it , like around the fishes eye and on the  frog's feet. I like how it turned out quite well. I was thinking about the conversation about the grain possibly rising if it was washed in an additional color and  the thought occurred to me that perhaps that would be  what one might hope would happen, considering this is supposed to by under water and looking skyward. It might add even more realism to the pattern.

Dick

heppnerguy

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