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LunaFiberArtist

October 23rd, 2016

10/23/2016

1 Comment

 

Working artist...Canvas building

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I'm busy in the wood shop building new cradled wood panels for art work planned for this winter.  My medium is fiber art, specifically, torn paper collage paintings. 
I layer lots of paper and glue and more paper and glue on my artwork, so the canvas needs to be a solid, durable substrate.  The wood canvases hold great for the weight of the material--traditional fabric canvases tend to sag.

There's a lot of "working artist" work that I don't like--namely, paper work and accounting.  But wood shop work is totally different--I love the step by step process of building my art canvases!  I usually build six to ten panel canvases at a time, so it takes a lot of forethought to consider what sizes to build for the subjects I have in mind. 
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My canvases:  I use quarter inch birch high grade plywood for the canvas surface and create the cradle--the support structure--from quality one-by (1"x2" sticks, usually 8' long).  The sheets come in 4'x8' panels which I have cut down to rough canvas sizes at the building store.  I re-cut the sheet edges at home--making cleaner cuts and squaring up pieces. 
When attaching the top sheet to the cradle support, I glue and air staple.  Once the glue dries, the finished canvas is super strong and durable. 

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The staples in the canvas are covered with plastic bond material and sanded after drying.  Then the panel is ready to seal with primer paint--important given the wood panel must hold up to lots of wet glue and paper.
Once sanded and sealed, the final canvas is ready for art work--my favorite part! 
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1 Comment
Glass Doors Clearwater link
7/5/2022 11:23:00 am

Thoughtful blog, thanks for sharing.

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    kris grover

    Artist Kris Grover works in fiber arts, particularly torn paper collage paintings.  She lives in Iowa with her husband and dog. 

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