Now that the children have opened their gifts and are busy playing, it's my turn to play! I just started my first large, ambitious piece. I am hoping to make a 3-ft-long wallhanging. I have been preparing the Lutradur with some inexpensive acrylic paint, and today I prepared the actual foundation. For this layer I still used inexpensive acrylic paint (Delta Vintage Wine) but I added the foundation texture. I decided to use one long piece of scrim with loose vertical folds. I extended the scrim past the piece on all four sides and will trim it later. I learned from the bookmark piece that I don't like the look of the background lace stopping before the edge.
I opened up the scrim to its furthest width and then arranged loose folds on the piece (like a curtain). Then I used a round sponge brush and started tacking it down with paint in various places. Gradually I worked until the entire surface was saturated in paint. This took almost two little bottles of paint! Now I'm out of my favorite cheap color. Boohoo! I think I'll wait a few days to brave the stores to get some more. I dislike holiday shopping crowds.
Anyway, the resulting effect is subtle vertical stripes of texture that vary slightly and will make a nice background. Next, I plan to add some lace accents on top of it. I considered doing the lace in this step also, but because this step used sooo much paint, I decided to hold off so this layer could dry properly. If I can get a decent picture of the texture tomorrow when it dries, I will post it.
In case you're wondering why I'm working in purple so much, I bought a house with purple walls. Yep, purple. It's a beautiful house and the color is nice, but you have to be careful what you put with it. So, I have been experimenting with purples leading up to this wallhanging so that it would be the right hues for my wall. After the wallhanging is complete, I will try to snap a photo of it on the wall so you can see it in context. But it will have to be a nice sunny day to get the colors right, and sunny days are in short supply in eastern Washington at this time of year.