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Another secret to create cell is to use metallic paint or play with the transparency of the paint. I know that because I've done a few pourings trying to make cells and I mamaged to make some cells by only playing with transparency in my pouring.
the dish soap really does work too it just makes different shapes than silicone. He just doesn't have the perfect ratio I think. But I pour with paint/glue/water/soap and not flow medium
I loved the piece where Jazza reused paint from some of the test pours, and tried the revolutionary techniques of straws, blow dryers, and *taking art slowly* 😂
I love how Jazza casually creates awesome textures with acrylic pouring. Tryi silicone oil next time for cells. I can’t wait to see more acrylic pouring from you. ❤️🥰😍
Or even better, australian flotrol. That is the best way to get cells. Unfortunately i can hardly get it here in europe, but in australia it should be possible.
I am IN LOVE with these pieces - especially the ocean and glitter ones! You should try an ocean piece again, but add glitter to the sand and waves. That would really bring it to life! 🎉
I agree with you on the oceans one but I honestly didn't see artistic value in the last one, im not an artist or artistic in any shape or form but i guess ark speaks to different people in different ways.
Jazza!! You make me laugh, and I got excited when you said you're falling in love with fluid art. Just a few tips: watch your consistencies! Making sure your consistencies are the same will make pouring a lot better. You cannot mix lower viscosity and heavier viscosity mixes together. Also, when using a hair dryer to blow the paints instead of just swirling and stretching, you need to use the attachment that directs the flow. Without it, you're just blowing air around. Watch the densities of the paint when mixing with pouring mediums. Each paint behaves differently based on the pigment used, so you can't just use the same amounts. Try a drip test to test your consistencies. You mentioned using soap to create "bubble effects" - I think you mean cells. Try silicone oil instead of soap. You'll get much better reactions with silicone. You can even try to mix in Australian Floetrol with your paints (in a 3:1 ratio of Aussie Floetrol:paint, and do not add water), and swipe this mixture over the paints to create bubbles (i.e., cells and lacing). Finally, you use the torch to pop air bubbles trapped in your paints. You are mixing and pouring at the same time, so you're getting a lot of air bubbles from the mixing. These will create pinholes (and in some extreme cases, cracks) in the dried piece, so you want to pop them while the paint is still wet. Some great fluid artists who also teach: Molly's Artistry, Olga Soby and Rinske Douna. Look at videos by LeftBrainedArtist, who explains the science behind fluid art.
I'd love to see you use these acrylic pours as backgrounds for some art! Either by drawing/painting directly on top or transferring them to a computer programme to draw on top!
These aren’t necessarily my style but I love the concept of learning and practicing techniques for future pieces of art! You’re always a joy to watch 🎉
You might want to try the heat gun or torch every time to get rid of the bubbles on the surface. Although, I think your paint is still a bit thick…. Love my sketch kit btw!
Thinking about the fact that Jazza's kids probably always imagine him with paint or ink or clay on his hands, and it's such an integral part of how they see him, and something about that is so sweet and wholesome and cozy.
Your first go had so much texture and looked 3D. The ocean pour was gorgeous. I could see the waves moving. Those 2 were absolutely gorgeous. Love them and I'd like to see more.
Man watching jazza expirement and create stunning pieces of art through the years really makes me and prob others happy enough to try it out our selves.... keep up the gud work and thank u for this amazing content
With this style there is no way to avoid "too much paint" so instead use more flow medium and get a flow medium that is a self leveler (I recommend floetrol from the hardware store)
Ahhhh I’ve been waiting for this one! This is my medium 😍 Except starting to wonder if anyone else gets really frustrated wanting to give hints and tips throughout the whole video when it’s their medium. Usually I have no clue what’s going on and I’m learning with Jazza, this time I just have the urge to step in and help 😂
Acrylic pouting is one of those things that's extra fun because anyone can really do it and enjoy to some point and it look nice then others can take more techniques and create full on beautiful artwork
I was a technical theater major and focused on making the sets. the paint department had to custom mix paints to match designs for painting the flats, and there was often a lot of scraped and leftover paints that we would pour into a big 10gallon bucket called the "mud bucket." more often than not it made a good "monster gray" that we either used as a primer to paint over old flats or used for "monster mud" which is a whole other thing you should totally look up! it's often used for making halloween props and fake statues. I highly recommend keeping a mud bucket. BUT! keep in mind yellow paints often go rancid faster so keep a nose on it if you put a lot of yellow in it. rotten paint is NOT good
I have been watching you for up to a year now and the awesome thing about you jazza is that even when you fail doing something it's not actually a failure but it turns into something so unbelievable that my eyes can't turn away from 🥺🥺🤩🤩 You are so wonderful man,so talented ✨♥️
These type of "pour" videos always give me a bit of anxiety. With someone as heavy-handed and madly chaotic as Jazza, my anxiety is at a steady 7 but I'm hanging on because this is very entertaining!
@@Hadri_ART I'm assuming because unlike most pours where they plan things out and go slow for a single piece, Jazza is just going in, no real plans till the end and is just jumping from pour to pour without giving us a moment to breathe. It's pure chaos which is extremely entertaining but also can be bit overwhelming compared to more calm paint pours
@@Hadri_ART What Lacy said, but also there's the "mess" element that triggers my OCD. Just seeing Jazza's hands covered in paint and moving on without cleaning them gives me the sweats
I received your sketchpack a couple of days ago, it's my first time dabbling with alcohol markers but I love it so far! I've drawn so many porpoises its insane.
"Pouring" started out from a sciency place: the weight of the paints and how they interact. Some colors pop to the top because of the chemical whatever, others ooze. I've seen lists of weights per color per brand. The very first reaction I watched was between black and white paints without any additives. REALLY COOL
As much as I like acrylic pours I find myself wishing people took them further by using them as backgrounds to more detailed paintings, for example the circle fire pour is crying out for a Knight and dragon, the yellow and purple screams 80s so why not do an art stack collage, others scream alien space scenes.
I remember seeing some who used a piece to make like a pond from an aerial view with lilly pads on it. It was so cool. I wish I was more able to use the pours in such a way, but I like to stare at my and my Husband's pours and see the different stuff in it.
One thing I don't really like about this kind of video is the amount of wasted product used for this kind of art. I wish I could buy a quarter of what you have on that desk and then watching it spill all over in a useless mess to leave only a small amount in the artwork is almost painful
Jazza I want to see you recreate something like "Starry Night," Van Gogh. That style lends itself to what I see you doing here, it's an actual representative art piece but the moderately free flow of the lines and features in the painting would be great for acrylic pours.
I'm a plastic model builder but I love any kind of art and these techniques that you have displayed here have given me multiple ideas for bases for my models when I take then to shows. May have to try one in black, greens and tans for a camo effect for my armor models. And the sea painting gives me an idea for a ship diaroma. Excellent tutorial.
Have you tried out Paper Marbling, like what is found in antique bookbinding? it is created by floating paints on a liquid in a tray, and laying the paper on the resulting pattern. You can pull all sorts of items through the floating paints, like combs or marbles, to create various patterns. There are so many styles of marbling, and it is VERY temperamental, but so very satisfying and mesmerizing. The fluidity of this video’s medium reminded me of it. Also, my husband, 3 & 1/2 year old daughter and I all absolutely LOVE your channel. Thank you for inspiring our family of artists to try something new!
Tip - don't listen to most online ones - I buy acrylic paint - then mix with water until it's runny but not watery. I have used that method now for years. Also if you want the the 'bubble' effect - add some drops of Mont Marte Silicone Oil into your mixture. Use basic acrylic and water for base coat - then what ever paints you want with Silicone oil - just a few drops. Use a hair dryer for first try. Then a mini fire burner to bring out the 'bubbles'. Give it another try Jazza. I'll give you all the secrets xxx
I absolutely love these videos where you try new mediums, and I loved this one, but when you're working with something you know how to use the process can be so exciting! I'd love to see bigger projects on the channel, where you make something huge with the skills you're already comfortable with. I'd love to see how far you can stretch your talents!
That was very cool, Jazza! That last one looked like the ocean splashing onto the sand shore! Love it! 🥰🌊🏖️ The other one looked like a bright fire ball sun 🌞! That also was awesome! 🥰💖
Here are some tips I’ve learned: 1. 1:1:1 paint, pouring medium and water. Consistency like warm honey. 2. For cells you need silicone oil 3. A heating gun helps develop the cells before and after tilting the canvas 4. A heating gun helps with air bubbles 5. Like Jazza said: A rule of thumb is: make sure the heavier (usually darker) colours end up on top. 6. Decide for a base colour for your pouring. I usually take white. When pouring colours in your cup start of with your base colour, than any other colour then again the base colour. You basically separated each colour to make sure they don’t mix too much. That’s why white is a good base colour. 7. When using a hairdryer you should add the thin air nozzle and move the hairdryer in a scooping motion. 8. Just have fun 😊
Love how much you like to experiment and go with the flow. Acrylic pouring is pretty tough in my experience. Can recommend thinner paint mixes and a less strong hairdryer for a more controlled effect! Why not try a Dutch pour sometime? They're gorgeous!
The best method for thinning is actually water. Mix the pouring medium into your paint to your desired strength (after you have mixed the color,) then thin with water. You might not need to even add water to cheaper paints but with those you may also suffer a lack of pigment. Pick what matches your budget and go from there. You don't even have to use pouring medium if it's not in your budget. PVA glue works pretty well (mixed with water.) If you want cells on a budget, you can use Rainex or rubbing alcohol in place of the silicone liquid. Good luck!
Has it already been a couple of users since his last acrylic pouring video?!?!?! Damn time flies so quickly it feels like just a couple of months! Keep up the great work Jazza❤
Ordered the ProSketch Pack on Tuesday as a birthday gift to myself. Can’t wait to get it. The last piece in the video would have been hung in Andy Warhol’s Factory back in the day.
I did pouring at school and got amazing results! I only used the circular swirling technique but got different results each time. I love pouring soooo much but I can’t do it anymore because I don’t have where I hope you like what you did because you can even express your feelings through this😊😊
The fire looking one, if you turn the yellow upside down, it looks like abstract flames. However, I also like it the dark side down cause it looks like mountains with the flames burning behind and going into a yellow sky. I would 100% buy that one.
A lot of these remind me of dyeing disc golf discs. One method is to pour/stir/mix dyes into a flotreol or dish soap base, then press the disc down into the dye. Or use a record player or spin table to do swirling designs. Similar viscosities and designs. Cool stuff.
It would be really cool to see you do this on a full tabletop! Also, you can use a spray bottle of rubbing alcohol to get the same effect as the dish soap. You can either spray the surface after the pour or you can spray it in the cups between the addition of each color.
One thing I'm not seeing Jazza do that helps significantly is to lay on a full layer of background color or a large unstretched puddle of color that the poured/dropped colors go on top of. That base layer between the canvas and top color helps the colors move well. I do love the water one!
They look awesome! I've had a go with acrylic pours a few times with my child's "assistance". They're always an unknown - could be amazing, could be crap, but always interesting! I love the fiery effect Jazza achieved here, and I think the "Simpson's Doughnut" pour had a little bit of Lichtenstein about them! Jazza mentioned using soap to get bubbles, but I didn't see him using any silicone oil. When I've done pours, I found that was the best method to get bubbles/cells. And a little goes a very long way! I'd love to see Jazza do even more of these!
As a person who does acrylic pouring a LOT- couple things: thicker paints consistency work better if you don't want the colors to blend- such as layering cups for ring pours or straight pours. Thinner paint consistency works better in techniques where you want the paint to react (cells or lacing) or blend like in swipes, blow-outs, Dutch pours, dirty pours, etc. Also you can get cells, etc with just paint and water if you use paints that have different base densities (like titanium white is typically more dense with other paints that are the same consistency) or use metallics (which have a matte finish) in conjunction with non-metallic paints (which tend to have a more glossy finish). Pouring medium isn't really necessary, but it does help keep the pigments from breaking down too much as you thin the paint. You can also get cells in pours where the colors are allowed to churn a bit so if you pour from higher up then you're more likely to get cells in my experience. Also- with the tray, you could peel off the skin once it's dry and use those for like collage or jewelry making and other stuff too. I love fluid art SO much; so it always makes me happy to see people try it. It's fun right?? Also the ocean was my favorite!
My favorites are the warm, fire colored pieces and the tray. Resin that tray! Or seal it with something else.. That would make such a cool serving tray! 😁
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first reply
Jazza , we both live in Melbourne 😳
Jazza pls u need to make a product for us South Africans coz its soo expensive 😫 plss 🙏 love the vids ❤
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉⁰
Use Coconut hair syrup/oil.....for your cells.....it take a while to get it right.......I did it for a about a yr but hated the cleanup
i love how each of these videos start with a calm intro but then quickly devolves to pure and wonderful chaos. I love it! I crave the chaos!
Yes. But this must be expensive
Yep
The secret to get the cells is use silicone oil. You just need a couple drops mixed with the color, but it gives that “sploopy” effect
Another secret to create cell is to use metallic paint or play with the transparency of the paint. I know that because I've done a few pourings trying to make cells and I mamaged to make some cells by only playing with transparency in my pouring.
the dish soap really does work too it just makes different shapes than silicone. He just doesn't have the perfect ratio I think. But I pour with paint/glue/water/soap and not flow medium
Wait I’m Ethan your Ethan what is going on.
The coastal one made my jaw drop and my eyes pop out. Absolutely gorgeous
That was my favorite too, those textures of the waves and shore 🙌
I loved the piece where Jazza reused paint from some of the test pours, and tried the revolutionary techniques of straws, blow dryers, and *taking art slowly* 😂
I love how Jazza casually creates awesome textures with acrylic pouring. Tryi silicone oil next time for cells. I can’t wait to see more acrylic pouring from you. ❤️🥰😍
Or even better, australian flotrol. That is the best way to get cells. Unfortunately i can hardly get it here in europe, but in australia it should be possible.
I am IN LOVE with these pieces - especially the ocean and glitter ones!
You should try an ocean piece again, but add glitter to the sand and waves. That would really bring it to life! 🎉
Yessss
The ocean one looked awesome! And that last one shows you always come up with a new spin in the techniques you try
I agree with you on the oceans one but I honestly didn't see artistic value in the last one, im not an artist or artistic in any shape or form but i guess ark speaks to different people in different ways.
Yeah, it wasn’t really my style either. But, it was like no other acrylic pour painting I’ve ever seen, and it had a real pop art vibe.
It had a real graphic artist-cartoon-graffiti vibe. It'd be a great piece to put in the lobby of a tattoo shop
Jazza!! You make me laugh, and I got excited when you said you're falling in love with fluid art. Just a few tips: watch your consistencies! Making sure your consistencies are the same will make pouring a lot better. You cannot mix lower viscosity and heavier viscosity mixes together. Also, when using a hair dryer to blow the paints instead of just swirling and stretching, you need to use the attachment that directs the flow. Without it, you're just blowing air around. Watch the densities of the paint when mixing with pouring mediums. Each paint behaves differently based on the pigment used, so you can't just use the same amounts. Try a drip test to test your consistencies. You mentioned using soap to create "bubble effects" - I think you mean cells. Try silicone oil instead of soap. You'll get much better reactions with silicone. You can even try to mix in Australian Floetrol with your paints (in a 3:1 ratio of Aussie Floetrol:paint, and do not add water), and swipe this mixture over the paints to create bubbles (i.e., cells and lacing). Finally, you use the torch to pop air bubbles trapped in your paints. You are mixing and pouring at the same time, so you're getting a lot of air bubbles from the mixing. These will create pinholes (and in some extreme cases, cracks) in the dried piece, so you want to pop them while the paint is still wet. Some great fluid artists who also teach: Molly's Artistry, Olga Soby and Rinske Douna. Look at videos by LeftBrainedArtist, who explains the science behind fluid art.
I love Olga's work. Anne Marie used to make some nice stuff too.
I'd love to see you use these acrylic pours as backgrounds for some art! Either by drawing/painting directly on top or transferring them to a computer programme to draw on top!
Yeah. That's how I'm feeling. I don't love these natively as pieces of art, but man they make some great backgrounds
The ocean piece truly blew me away! It's really beautiful and nice to look at
These aren’t necessarily my style but I love the concept of learning and practicing techniques for future pieces of art! You’re always a joy to watch 🎉
You might want to try the heat gun or torch every time to get rid of the bubbles on the surface. Although, I think your paint is still a bit thick…. Love my sketch kit btw!
Was coming to the comments to see if anyone else was gonna say he need to thin them out more!
Hi Jazza! That ocean piece was my favorite😍 Awesome to see that you keep exploring fluid art!
My pro sketch pack arrived today and I am SO EXCITED to get creative again with new materials :) thank you jazza for being such a great inspiration
Thinking about the fact that Jazza's kids probably always imagine him with paint or ink or clay on his hands, and it's such an integral part of how they see him, and something about that is so sweet and wholesome and cozy.
Your first go had so much texture and looked 3D. The ocean pour was gorgeous. I could see the waves moving. Those 2 were absolutely gorgeous. Love them and I'd like to see more.
Love the ocean one!. I've seen a lot of acrylic pour videos but they are all abstract; it's nice to see a piece that's actually meant to be something.
The point of pouring is the abstract nature of it.
I really love the effect of that "oceanic" piece!
That beach with ocean one is so dreamy. I wish I could jump into the painting and relax on the beach.
Man watching jazza expirement and create stunning pieces of art through the years really makes me and prob others happy enough to try it out our selves.... keep up the gud work and thank u for this amazing content
Expired Jazza 😂
The ocean one was my favorite because the water looked really realistic while the sand colors did a cool thing
Too much stacked paint will make it warp and cause it not to dry evenly which is why the paintings havent dried flat and smooth instead of textured
With this style there is no way to avoid "too much paint" so instead use more flow medium and get a flow medium that is a self leveler (I recommend floetrol from the hardware store)
The ocean concept is my favourite. It has a direction rather than complete abstract unlike most of the pours.
I really liked the beachfront water piece. You managed to create a wave looking effect washing up on a beach and I think it's really great.
I think the beachy one is clearly the best, and still one of the cooler i've ever seen 🤩
Ahhhh I’ve been waiting for this one! This is my medium 😍 Except starting to wonder if anyone else gets really frustrated wanting to give hints and tips throughout the whole video when it’s their medium. Usually I have no clue what’s going on and I’m learning with Jazza, this time I just have the urge to step in and help 😂
Acrylic pouting is one of those things that's extra fun because anyone can really do it and enjoy to some point and it look nice then others can take more techniques and create full on beautiful artwork
I like the fire cats and the beach the most. This looks like such messy fun!
I was a technical theater major and focused on making the sets. the paint department had to custom mix paints to match designs for painting the flats, and there was often a lot of scraped and leftover paints that we would pour into a big 10gallon bucket called the "mud bucket." more often than not it made a good "monster gray" that we either used as a primer to paint over old flats or used for "monster mud" which is a whole other thing you should totally look up! it's often used for making halloween props and fake statues. I highly recommend keeping a mud bucket. BUT! keep in mind yellow paints often go rancid faster so keep a nose on it if you put a lot of yellow in it. rotten paint is NOT good
Raise your hand if you've been watching Jazza for a long time🤚
✋
✋
👋 since 2013
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I started watching when he was doing the RUclipsr cinematic universe drawings
So glad to see you trying acrylic pouring again.
This kind of fluid painting must be so fun 😍
And satisfying
Some of the best moments from these videos are just the sound effects Jazza adds to anything and everything
Love the beach themed one gorgeous
I have been watching you for up to a year now and the awesome thing about you jazza is that even when you fail doing something it's not actually a failure but it turns into something so unbelievable that my eyes can't turn away from 🥺🥺🤩🤩
You are so wonderful man,so talented ✨♥️
12:19 the waves look surprisingly realistic!
were not even in the first minute and you have already created a masterpiece
These type of "pour" videos always give me a bit of anxiety. With someone as heavy-handed and madly chaotic as Jazza, my anxiety is at a steady 7 but I'm hanging on because this is very entertaining!
Why do these pouring video give you anxiety if i can ask?
@@Hadri_ART I'm assuming because unlike most pours where they plan things out and go slow for a single piece, Jazza is just going in, no real plans till the end and is just jumping from pour to pour without giving us a moment to breathe. It's pure chaos which is extremely entertaining but also can be bit overwhelming compared to more calm paint pours
@@Hadri_ART What Lacy said, but also there's the "mess" element that triggers my OCD. Just seeing Jazza's hands covered in paint and moving on without cleaning them gives me the sweats
Mind spiked to an 8.5 cuz I love pouring and it hurt to watch this and I kept freaking out.
After watching pour painting content for probably 2 years I finally tried it out. It's a lot harder than you think!
This is sl cool!!
I too started acrylic recently and it was kinda hard at first. But once I got the hang of it, it got so fun!!!
You should do more resin dioramas! I loved those!
Im in love with the sand and ocean painting!!! It came out like blurred realism.
"I dunno if im doing good things or dumb things!" 😅🤣 literally me everytime i craft!
Thanks for the laugh Jazza
The ocean one is OUTSTANDING!
I received your sketchpack a couple of days ago, it's my first time dabbling with alcohol markers but I love it so far! I've drawn so many porpoises its insane.
porpoise? like the animal?
@@Maki_Coloma yes xD
"Pouring" started out from a sciency place: the weight of the paints and how they interact. Some colors pop to the top because of the chemical whatever, others ooze. I've seen lists of weights per color per brand. The very first reaction I watched was between black and white paints without any additives. REALLY COOL
at this time no one has watched the video fully except for jazza himself
These pours were all great, but that last one is so visually striking! I love that cartoony affect.
i hope to do this art style myself someday i enjoy acrylic
I have missed watching your videos, sadly life happens and time became limited. You are an inspiration!!
As much as I like acrylic pours I find myself wishing people took them further by using them as backgrounds to more detailed paintings, for example the circle fire pour is crying out for a Knight and dragon, the yellow and purple screams 80s so why not do an art stack collage, others scream alien space scenes.
I remember seeing some who used a piece to make like a pond from an aerial view with lilly pads on it. It was so cool. I wish I was more able to use the pours in such a way, but I like to stare at my and my Husband's pours and see the different stuff in it.
Casually creating magical patterns =3 So satisfying!
Hii Jazza pls do more Bob Ross vids ❤
That beach one is actually amazing, good job
One thing I don't really like about this kind of video is the amount of wasted product used for this kind of art. I wish I could buy a quarter of what you have on that desk and then watching it spill all over in a useless mess to leave only a small amount in the artwork is almost painful
Jazza I want to see you recreate something like "Starry Night," Van Gogh. That style lends itself to what I see you doing here, it's an actual representative art piece but the moderately free flow of the lines and features in the painting would be great for acrylic pours.
Would be cool if he seriously tried and put some actual effort into it. Definitely feels like he's just making fun of this art form.
I'm a plastic model builder but I love any kind of art and these techniques that you have displayed here have given me multiple ideas for bases for my models when I take then to shows. May have to try one in black, greens and tans for a camo effect for my armor models. And the sea painting gives me an idea for a ship diaroma. Excellent tutorial.
I love how easily entertained Jazza always is
That maroon, red, orange and yellow one reminds of when Australia had the bushfires, cause it looks like a sun rising over a burnt forest.
Anyone else wildly curious to see Jazza do nail art? I just think it would be neat!
Have you tried out Paper Marbling, like what is found in antique bookbinding? it is created by floating paints on a liquid in a tray, and laying the paper on the resulting pattern. You can pull all sorts of items through the floating paints, like combs or marbles, to create various patterns. There are so many styles of marbling, and it is VERY temperamental, but so very satisfying and mesmerizing. The fluidity of this video’s medium reminded me of it.
Also, my husband, 3 & 1/2 year old daughter and I all absolutely LOVE your channel. Thank you for inspiring our family of artists to try something new!
The coastal one was absolutely gorgeous! It made me nostalgic for a tropical beach I've never been too
Tip - don't listen to most online ones - I buy acrylic paint - then mix with water until it's runny but not watery. I have used that method now for years. Also if you want the the 'bubble' effect - add some drops of Mont Marte Silicone Oil into your mixture. Use basic acrylic and water for base coat - then what ever paints you want with Silicone oil - just a few drops. Use a hair dryer for first try. Then a mini fire burner to bring out the 'bubbles'. Give it another try Jazza. I'll give you all the secrets xxx
I absolutely love these videos where you try new mediums, and I loved this one, but when you're working with something you know how to use the process can be so exciting! I'd love to see bigger projects on the channel, where you make something huge with the skills you're already comfortable with. I'd love to see how far you can stretch your talents!
That was very cool, Jazza! That last one looked like the ocean splashing onto the sand shore! Love it! 🥰🌊🏖️ The other one looked like a bright fire ball sun 🌞! That also was awesome! 🥰💖
The poured beach painting is awesome and using the dust pan of all things.
Here are some tips I’ve learned:
1. 1:1:1 paint, pouring medium and water. Consistency like warm honey.
2. For cells you need silicone oil
3. A heating gun helps develop the cells before and after tilting the canvas
4. A heating gun helps with air bubbles
5. Like Jazza said: A rule of thumb is: make sure the heavier (usually darker) colours end up on top.
6. Decide for a base colour for your pouring. I usually take white. When pouring colours in your cup start of with your base colour, than any other colour then again the base colour. You basically separated each colour to make sure they don’t mix too much. That’s why white is a good base colour.
7. When using a hairdryer you should add the thin air nozzle and move the hairdryer in a scooping motion.
8. Just have fun 😊
This seems like it could be a really cool way to get some crazy backgrounds to paint characters on top of
Love how much you like to experiment and go with the flow. Acrylic pouring is pretty tough in my experience. Can recommend thinner paint mixes and a less strong hairdryer for a more controlled effect! Why not try a Dutch pour sometime? They're gorgeous!
The best method for thinning is actually water. Mix the pouring medium into your paint to your desired strength (after you have mixed the color,) then thin with water. You might not need to even add water to cheaper paints but with those you may also suffer a lack of pigment. Pick what matches your budget and go from there. You don't even have to use pouring medium if it's not in your budget. PVA glue works pretty well (mixed with water.) If you want cells on a budget, you can use Rainex or rubbing alcohol in place of the silicone liquid. Good luck!
Love the beachy one - crazy how good the water looks
I have also recently got into acrylic pour painting and it's so much fun. Can confirm the plastic box lid works perfectly as a drip catcher.
everything was just a fun and some experiments till i saw that land and water art that was a masterpiece .omg that was so fantastic .
Has it already been a couple of users since his last acrylic pouring video?!?!?! Damn time flies so quickly it feels like just a couple of months! Keep up the great work Jazza❤
Ordered the ProSketch Pack on Tuesday as a birthday gift to myself. Can’t wait to get it.
The last piece in the video would have been hung in Andy Warhol’s Factory back in the day.
I did pouring at school and got amazing results! I only used the circular swirling technique but got different results each time. I love pouring soooo much but I can’t do it anymore because I don’t have where I hope you like what you did because you can even express your feelings through this😊😊
Yay, finally an acrylic pour that I'd gladly hang up- the beach one.
you should use this method and combine it with the draw what you see trend to make the ultimate random masterpiece!
i loooove the beach one, and the 2 black/red/yellow ones
Just pulled an all nighter watching your videos; you uploaded a new video. Let's go!
ive never wanted to buy art before but i would love to buy that 2nd pour!
Less than a minute in and he made smt better than I could ever do in my life
Some of these paintings look like the surfaces of planets. Very cool stuff
I just noticed and jazza Is probably the only youtuber who does this,
He's not even one minute into the video and he's already got a piece of art done
The fire looking one, if you turn the yellow upside down, it looks like abstract flames. However, I also like it the dark side down cause it looks like mountains with the flames burning behind and going into a yellow sky.
I would 100% buy that one.
why am i not surprized that jazza loves the chaos so much
Wow the last two pours are so beautiful.. Specially the ocean one.. I love it .
A lot of these remind me of dyeing disc golf discs. One method is to pour/stir/mix dyes into a flotreol or dish soap base, then press the disc down into the dye. Or use a record player or spin table to do swirling designs. Similar viscosities and designs. Cool stuff.
It would be really cool to see you do this on a full tabletop!
Also, you can use a spray bottle of rubbing alcohol to get the same effect as the dish soap. You can either spray the surface after the pour or you can spray it in the cups between the addition of each color.
Hi Jazza! You did great! I use my left over pour to make jewelry. I let it dry and it becomes a skin. Can use it for collages as well. So many uses!
One thing I'm not seeing Jazza do that helps significantly is to lay on a full layer of background color or a large unstretched puddle of color that the poured/dropped colors go on top of. That base layer between the canvas and top color helps the colors move well. I do love the water one!
The beach/waves was bloody amazing... 🇬🇧🏴
They look awesome!
I've had a go with acrylic pours a few times with my child's "assistance". They're always an unknown - could be amazing, could be crap, but always interesting!
I love the fiery effect Jazza achieved here, and I think the "Simpson's Doughnut" pour had a little bit of Lichtenstein about them!
Jazza mentioned using soap to get bubbles, but I didn't see him using any silicone oil. When I've done pours, I found that was the best method to get bubbles/cells. And a little goes a very long way!
I'd love to see Jazza do even more of these!
You should make a blob of different colors and chase it away with a feather or string, that would look awesome.
Would be very cool to see you use some of these as backdrops/canvases for future paintings!
As a person who does acrylic pouring a LOT- couple things: thicker paints consistency work better if you don't want the colors to blend- such as layering cups for ring pours or straight pours. Thinner paint consistency works better in techniques where you want the paint to react (cells or lacing) or blend like in swipes, blow-outs, Dutch pours, dirty pours, etc. Also you can get cells, etc with just paint and water if you use paints that have different base densities (like titanium white is typically more dense with other paints that are the same consistency) or use metallics (which have a matte finish) in conjunction with non-metallic paints (which tend to have a more glossy finish). Pouring medium isn't really necessary, but it does help keep the pigments from breaking down too much as you thin the paint. You can also get cells in pours where the colors are allowed to churn a bit so if you pour from higher up then you're more likely to get cells in my experience.
Also- with the tray, you could peel off the skin once it's dry and use those for like collage or jewelry making and other stuff too. I love fluid art SO much; so it always makes me happy to see people try it. It's fun right??
Also the ocean was my favorite!
The beach setting was drop dead gorgeous!
My favorites are the warm, fire colored pieces and the tray. Resin that tray! Or seal it with something else.. That would make such a cool serving tray! 😁
really love what you do, you are like Art Attack of our generation