My latest project has again been in the field of artistic creativity and I have spent the last three months. (we are talking about 60+ hours per week) painting some large plaster cornice moulding. A part-time assistant also helped to sealed up the top and bottom border where the gilding was done.
Three pieces of finished moulding |
The moulding comes from my friends at Decorator's Supply in Chicago Illinois. They have been producing plaster and compo mouldings and ornaments for more than a century and have some very nice products on offer. This particular plaster moulding was absolutely perfect to begin my project with. I usually do not like buying ready-made products because it means that someone else, somewhere in the world will also have the same product, but with this project, I knew the level of decoration that I was planning would truly make it 100 per cent unique and individual.
The mouldings come completely white, and crated up, six pieces to a crate. (Very heavy to move around) What follows is a picture sequence of most of the steps in decorating them.
The piece has been shifted so that the lower quatrefoils can be painted |
Some pieces had imperfections and bubbles which had to be fixed in the process of doing the work |
Painting the "pink" is the most time consuming, taking more than one day for each piece. The next most time is taken up with the mustard yellow... |
The green leaves follow. Most of the colours are applied in a wash so that the plaster still shines through as can be observed in porcelain painting |
A lighter "russet" wash and then a dark opaque add some colour to the flowers which will remain white |
The last step in the painting comes with manipulating a single colour of blue to create an entire spectrum of colour for the remaining flowers (in this picture, the paint is still wet) |
For gilding, I used a "slow set" oil size. This meant that in the evening, before going home, I would need to apply it, and on the following day (12 hours later) apply the leaf. |
I lay all the leaf on and then press it down on simple reliefs such as this |
The final product - almost. The flowers do not have as much definition once the paint is dry... |
...so a bit of clear shellac in places gives them back the look that they had when wet |
Quite surprising for myself, was the fact that in the course of three months of painting all of this I really never got burnt out and fed up with doing it. I was afraid that it would become drudgery, but up to the last one I was still actually enjoying painting these. Now I have to get the space ready for the installation...
Stay tuned.
A larger section of one piece, showing the entire pattern (This picture was taken before the last phase of enhancing the blue) |