The Art Alchemist's Guild
Good day and welcome to The Grind and Bind Art Alchemist's Guild.
This is a dark place.
Most art will leave you feeling inspired, maybe even joyful — if not a little thoughtful. Not this art.
Most art makes people better, but this place can only make you worse, poorer, stained, and consumed by the craft.
All flavors are welcome to:
- Show off finished pieces
- Share your hand made or foraged materials
- Ask for advice on anything art related
- Share articles and how-tos
- Post art memes
- Participate in weekly discussions and monthly challenges
- Promote Free Workshops and Resources
Be kind
Do onto others with kindness, curiosity and civility.
Please include images
Remember to attribute other's work, tag NSFW and Content Warnings if necessary, and describe with alt text for our differently sighted pals.
No AI*
This isn't a community for AI *unless you've built it yourself and trained it on your own work.
Tags are Optional
Make 'em up if you need 'em.
On Self-Promotion
We all need to put food in the ferret bowl, but let's not talk money here. If someone asks to buy something, please take it to DMs.
!artmarket@lemmy.world and !artshare@lemmy.world are geared toward self promotion if you want to cross-post.
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Icon drawn by Wren
Banner image taken by Cottonbro on Pexels
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This is a new community, the structure and rules may change without notice. All things are ephemeral. Shoot Wren a DM if you have any ideas or want to help out.
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I wonder, if you painted your design, in reverse, onto a piece of paper, could you then use that like a transfer by just pressing it onto the surface you wanted to beautify? It would be quicker than painting it in place, but I don't know it it would transfer enough gel to work effectively. If you could leave the paper in place for a while it might work quite well.
It might be quicker to use stencils, but that's a great idea. I wonder if it needs to be the wet state for it to work.
Could potentially work, you'd need something that grips the moss paint enough to hold the design, but not more than the wall surface. That'd be tricky.
I knew a couple street artists who pre-printed all their work, they used wheat paste to slather it onto back alley walls and painted over top. If you used a cheap, recycled paper that decomposes just a little slower than the moss roots in, that could work to just glue it in place.
Stencils are my personal go-to.