Try This At Home – The Back-Splash Story

IMG_9461We all have gifts. Sometimes we recognize them. But other times, we take our skills for granted or limit them.

Others don’t.  They may even assume those skills expand way beyond what or how we’ve ever used them.  They’re often right. We just needed that nudge.

I wouldn’t be where I am today if others hadn’t encouraged, or pushed me.

When I came back from studying visionary art overseas a year ago, my friends helped me find a great place to live. My landlady/ housemate/ friend Orinda and I get along great. And I couldn’t ask for a better setting with trees and a river in the backyard.

Orinda just loved the fruit bowl I added to our kitchen. I’d bought it at a craft fair in Guelph years ago (it usually has fruit in it).

It inspired a whole new colour trend in the kitchen.

First, she asked if I could create something round and red for the fridge. No problem. Here’s a photo of the series of magnets I painted using sheets of magnet from Michaels and watercolour paper.

But then she asked me to create a glass back-splash for the sink and stove. She wanted them to look like my bowl, but one with the spirit of water and the other fire.

I resisted.  I’ll admit, I really don’t like being told what to do (even if that’s not quite what she was doing).

She didn’t give up though. One day, she came home with 2 pieces of glass.

I resisted again. I was scared of ruining it. There’s a difference between painting behind glass and painting layer up layer on canvas. I’d never done anything like that before.

“It’s just glass. I can get more.” she said.

After weeks of sitting in my studio, those pieces of glass finally spoke to me. Now they speak to Orinda too. She got what she wanted!

It’s not hard. Want to try?

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  1. Get a piece of glass in the size you need. Think back-splash, table top, etc.
  2. Get some Fluid Acrylic Glazing Medium (gloss).  It’s white but dries clear. Pour it on thick in the general pattern you want. It will spread. Let go of control. You have little here.
  3. Drip several drops of the colours you want.  Use fluid acrylic paint.  Just drops here and there. Lots of them.
  4. Move that paint around with something like a chopstick.  Don’t overdo it, but make sure some of the colours mix together in swirls.  Let dry for 1-2 days.

The paint will be on the backside of the glass.  So what you see when you’re creating it isn’t at all what you’ll get when it’s done. Plus it moves around for hours, so really, you have to embrace the mystery. Oh… don’t forget the plastic drop sheet underneath.

Do like me. Ask your Guides to help and trust in the co-creative process.  That’s how “happy accidents” happen.  I tell ya. The studio has been a great teacher for me.

No, I’m not going into the back-splash business. But I’m glad Orinda pushed me. The fact she also pushed my buttons has nothing to do with her. We both know that.  That’s another reason we make great housemates. 🙂

May my growing experience help you too.

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