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Title: DIY with Joanne Condon: transferring font
This is one of my favourite techniques. You can transfer any font or graphic that you wish and it couldn’t be easier. Personalise a kid’s chair for their bedroom or toybox! writes Joanne Condon
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This is one of my favourite techniques. You can transfer any font or graphic that you wish and it couldn’t be easier. Personalise a kid’s chair for their bedroom or toybox! writes Joanne Condon
DIY with Joanne Condon: Transferring font. \ Philip Doyle
What you need
Sugar soap for cleaning, available in your local hardware shop
Sanding block, medium
Undercoat
Paintbrushes
Satinwood paint; I used Colourtrend’s “Pantry Blue” to paint the whole chair, Colourtend’s “Porceline Doll” to fill in the lettering and Colourtrend’s “Peacock Blue” for the outline of the letters.
Carbon paper/duplicate paper, available from office supplies shop
Pencil
Frogtape
Thin artist’s brush
Computer with printer
Method
1 Clean down the kitchen chair with sugar soap, making sure you remove any grime build up that easily accumulates on a kitchen chair.
2 Sand the chair with a medium sanding block in the direction of the grain. It can be difficult keeping with the grain on the spools, but just make sure you are sanding them.
3 With undercoat, turn the chair upside down first and paint everything that you see. Then flip the chair over and paint everything else. Be careful when painting spools as they tend to build up paint at the edges. Leave to fully dry, preferably overnight.
4 To paint, repeat the process with Colourtrend satinwood paint in “Pantry Blue” and leave to dry fully. Apply second coat. Leave to dry fully.
5 To make your template, print out any wording that you like from your computer on to an A4 sheet of paper and tape your template on to the piece of furniture where you would like it positioned.
6 Place the carbon paper under your template, with the darker side facing down and tape it in place.
7 Trace over all the details on your template with a sharp pencil or pen. Peel back the template and the carbon paper.
8 You should now be left with the outline of your template. Using Satinwood paint in “Porceline Doll”, fill in the lettering using a thin artist’s paint brush.
9 To define the outline of the lettering, I used Colourtrend’s Satinwood paint in “Peacock Blue”, applied with a thin artist’s brush.
Next week
Stencilling
What you need
Sugar soap for cleaning, available in your local hardware shop
Sanding block, medium
Undercoat
Paintbrushes
Satinwood paint; I used Colourtrend’s “Pantry Blue” to paint the whole chair, Colourtend’s “Porceline Doll” to fill in the lettering and Colourtrend’s “Peacock Blue” for the outline of the letters.
Carbon paper/duplicate paper, available from office supplies shop
Pencil
Frogtape
Thin artist’s brush
Computer with printer
Method
1 Clean down the kitchen chair with sugar soap, making sure you remove any grime build up that easily accumulates on a kitchen chair.
2 Sand the chair with a medium sanding block in the direction of the grain. It can be difficult keeping with the grain on the spools, but just make sure you are sanding them.
3 With undercoat, turn the chair upside down first and paint everything that you see. Then flip the chair over and paint everything else. Be careful when painting spools as they tend to build up paint at the edges. Leave to fully dry, preferably overnight.
4 To paint, repeat the process with Colourtrend satinwood paint in “Pantry Blue” and leave to dry fully. Apply second coat. Leave to dry fully.
5 To make your template, print out any wording that you like from your computer on to an A4 sheet of paper and tape your template on to the piece of furniture where you would like it positioned.
6 Place the carbon paper under your template, with the darker side facing down and tape it in place.
7 Trace over all the details on your template with a sharp pencil or pen. Peel back the template and the carbon paper.
8 You should now be left with the outline of your template. Using Satinwood paint in “Porceline Doll”, fill in the lettering using a thin artist’s paint brush.
9 To define the outline of the lettering, I used Colourtrend’s Satinwood paint in “Peacock Blue”, applied with a thin artist’s brush.
From surviving sepsis to heart-breaking loss, Julie-Anne Kelly’s journey has been full of twists and turns. But she has found healing and hope through harnessing her creativity.
In this week's Meet the Maker, Soma Biro chats to Sherkin Island artist Majella O'Neill Collins about her creative process and George Clooney purchasing her work.
In this week’s Meet the Maker, Grace Hanna chats to artist and truffle farmer Catherine Cocollos about her artistic journey and how she found solace in painting after a cancer diagnosis.
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