Question:
What is the best way to cover over an acrylic painting on canvas?
Jim
2010-08-20 13:20:05 UTC
I created a painting (using acrylic paint) on a piece of canvas.

I no longer like the painting and wish to start again from scratch and save money by re-using the canvas.

What would be the simplest/best way?

Would white acrylic paint cover the original painting? Wouldn't it need a lot of layers? It is also a fairly large canvas (60cm x 41cm), so i would need a lot of white acrylic paint which would be expensive.

Could i not get a can of white spray paint cover the original? Would i be able to paint on the dried spray paint?

Apologies if these questions seem ridiculous.
Four answers:
Carl
2010-08-20 21:30:11 UTC
Try gesso. It will cover the canvas . You can use a brush to put on the canvas or pour it into a container and use a roller to put it on with. Let each layer dry before putting on another. 2 layers should do the job. And the gesso will cover oil paintings or acrylic paintings either one. It will also seal plaster which is porous. It can be purchased at any art or craft store or wal-mart in the craft section. Also, when your painting is complete, you might seal it with clear acrylic sealer. It will seal anything--acrylic, oil paint, watercolor, oil or chalk pastels, marker, crayon, ink, charcoal, other varnish or shellack. You can get the sealer at the same places mentioned above.
richert
2016-10-17 14:52:12 UTC
by portray over the graphite, you have encapsulated it. There particularly isn't something which you're able to do to get rid of graphite from the portray, in need of abrading the exterior all the way down to bare textile. The sanding will destroy the portray, of direction. whether you paint over the graphite, it is going to at last bleed by distinctive layers. The old masters used a comic book strip: an extremely final drawing on paper. The comic strip replaced into then perforated and finely powdered chalk utilized. Small bits of chalk fell for the time of the holes to type an define for his or her portray. particularly than use graphite, next time use charcoal or chalk. those may well be bumped off with the sparkling paint. the assumption is two pull off the powder from the as you paint over it. in case you fail to get rid of it, charcoal acts as a black pigment that's additionally stable. in case you have a great variety of money, you is additionally waiting to settlement for a laser to burn the section away. this might contain expenses to layout and build particular kit to realize this. Emphasis is on fee...
Mere Mortal
2010-08-20 17:16:10 UTC
It is not a ridiculous question at all. It was quite common in the 18th and 19th centuries for artists to reuse base.



You need to cover the old art with gesso.



http://www.dickblick.com/products/winsor-and-newton-galeria-acrylic-gesso-primer/
Jay
2010-08-20 14:57:59 UTC
I would recommend buying a small jar of Gesso and give it at least two coats.

Gesso is what the canvas originally has on it when you purchase it.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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