I find her tone of voice and the speed at which she spoke very relaxing. I found this helpful for me. It seems I absorbed her lesson more thoroughly. Thank you.
What she means is you need laser toner so if you own a laser printer you CAN print at home. Some of us do own laser printers. Inkjet ink copiers and printers do NOT work. Thank you great video.
Hi Cristina! I saw your section on clay photolithography and I was very impressed! I am a beginner in ceramics, retired, with all the time to study and learn. I would really like it if you clarified the composition of the paint. I watched your video several times and couldn't figure it out. thank you very much! Congratulations on your brilliant talent!!
It needs to be baked on like glaze, and hardened so it stays on. It will not work on bisque, and needs to be applied to moist leather hard, then fired in the kiln. There is iron in the ink and it needs to be fired so it adheres like glaze.
+jasveen sabharwal It's linseed oil, the raw kind. You find it at healthy grocery shop, it's edible. Second is ingredient is mason stain, but you can use any good quality pigment.
She said on wet leather-hard clay - so unfired clay that is drying and still somewhat wet, and behaves like the way leather would bend and behave. If the clay is already fired, I'm guessing the colorant may not stick to the clay. If it does stick, the clay would still need to be re-fired to make the color permanent.
Yes its glazed so of course you can - it may be more fragile than stoneware fire clays, but if it's glazed there's absolutely no reason not to eat off it unless there is toxins like lead
Excellent tutorial! One question, Acacia gum (or gum arabic) is really hard to get in my country. I can find it in powder but not in liquid form. Is there an alternative product I could use instead?
I am not having any success with this technique. I wonder what I am doing wrong. I have a laser copy, I am using black masons stain. I had to buy powdered gum arabic so maybe my solution is the wrong consistency but other than that, I have no idea what else to check. I just seem to end up with a muddy puddle - really disappointing!
Bia Melo in oil painting, I substitute walnut oil as it’s easier for me to get at the grocery store. It’s another drying ink just like linseed. I’m going to give this a shot at some point with the walnut oil as it’s what I have on hand.
@@emilyblythejones have you tried this? One commenter said a regular copy machine won't work, it has to be a lazer jet printer, do you know about that?
@@Lyddiebits I haven’t tried the walnut oil yet, I was actually hoping to within the next week or two. It doesn’t matter what kind of printer or copier you use with photo lithography, it just needs to be toner rather than inkjet. Most copy machines are toner, but theoretically, people have combo inkjet machines that could be throwing them off. @Miller Mommy, you might have already been aware of that. Xerox copiers are just a brand that have become ubiquitous with toner copies over time. Just like Kleenex!