12-23-2005, 12:00 PM
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#3
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Juried Member PT Professional
Joined: May 2004
Location: Americana, Brazil
Posts: 1,042
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Recently, Mr. Whitaker emailed me about the subject and gave me the following tips:
- 1. Wrap your linen around your stretcher bars - not too tight - and staple the linen to the bars, about every four inches or so. This is temporary!
- 2. Brush on a coat of acrylic medium - whatever brand you prefer - Winsor&Newton or whatever.
- 3. After that clear coat dries, sand it lightly with fine sandpaper.
- 4. Doesn't hurt to brush on a second coat, and sand again, but not absolutely necessary to apply two coats.
- 5. Brush on two or three coats of acrylic gesso - thinned to the consistency of milk or cream. Sand between coats.
- 6. Notice that traditional canvases primed with flake white are relatively smooth - not too much weave showing. You want to fill your canvas with enough gesso coats to fill a lot of the canvas weave. Do this to personal taste.
- 7. When the canvas is dry, restretch it drum tight. Some folks play a hand-held hair dryer on the back of the canvas while they stretch. A canvas stretched dry will keep from getting slack much better than a canvas full of humidity.
Hope it helps.
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