Very good video! Informative and right to the point without a lot of unnecessary chatter. You have a GREAT voice for a tutorial! I will be looking for more instructionals from you. Thank you for taking the time to share your talent. I can’t wait to try this.
I think this painting really has the perfect message that is further enhanced by the weathering/aging of it! I think for me, the appeal of old and rough looking art is that it was appreciated, forgotten about, and then has gotten new life and appreciation again. There is something romantic about that to me, that value is something that is always there but it hasn't always been recognized. I really love this piece, great job
Really interesting, thank you. The streaks from the crackle don't work for me, but the hand especially worked well. Just a thought, here you're using a primed canvas on a thin stretcher. If I were you I'd buy better quality stretcher bars, the thicker ones which hold the canvas away from their edge, and stretch the raw linen yourself with tacks. It would give much more of an aged and quality look, also would look better when you scrape through with a knife. You could also consider buying old paintings at a flea market and painting on top of the original painting for instant aging.
Help! I’ve always been taught to not use acrylic paint over oil. Should I use oil paint to do the glaze? And how would the crackle texture work on an oil painting?
Very good video! Informative and right to the point without a lot of unnecessary chatter. You have a GREAT voice for a tutorial! I will be looking for more instructionals from you. Thank you for taking the time to share your talent. I can’t wait to try this.
I think this painting really has the perfect message that is further enhanced by the weathering/aging of it! I think for me, the appeal of old and rough looking art is that it was appreciated, forgotten about, and then has gotten new life and appreciation again. There is something romantic about that to me, that value is something that is always there but it hasn't always been recognized. I really love this piece, great job
Really interesting, thank you. The streaks from the crackle don't work for me, but the hand especially worked well. Just a thought, here you're using a primed canvas on a thin stretcher. If I were you I'd buy better quality stretcher bars, the thicker ones which hold the canvas away from their edge, and stretch the raw linen yourself with tacks. It would give much more of an aged and quality look, also would look better when you scrape through with a knife. You could also consider buying old paintings at a flea market and painting on top of the original painting for instant aging.
As someone who's studying to become an art conservator-restorer this both amazes and terrifies me! Lol Nice video tho, I might try it!
Great tutorial, and I love the message behind the painting! I think the aged effect goes really well with it.
thank you! i like the effect with it too, adds another layer to the meaning.
A good video. I learned some techniques but I did not like the brush or swipe marks left on the painting. The crackle effect I liked very much.
Help! I’ve always been taught to not use acrylic paint over oil. Should I use oil paint to do the glaze? And how would the crackle texture work on an oil painting?
Looks terribly interesting, maybe I’ll try it in some of my pieces! great video!
i'd love to see what you come up with!
I've just tried this and I'm so happy with it 😆 Also, loving the weekly uploads😊💖💖
awesome!! thanks for watching
Thank you for your art 😆💖💖
Same I want to learn it but the only medium I know is pen😣
Thank you for sharing your procedure.🙂
Your art is really cool!
Ahhh tyy
Thanks! Time to do a Kimetsu No Yaiba old painting 😁
Absolutely Wonderful! Super Like! Congratulations! I hope you like my channel! God bless you!
You're quite the up-talker.
how to make it look old.. step one : use old stuff