Thursday, January 19, 2012

Friday Art Poll

 

utensils

Do you use any unconventional or unexpected tools in your art?  Or, do you use a tool that surprises you in its application?  Please Share in the comments!

6 comments:

  1. Thinking specifically about beading, I'm amazed at how often I use MARKERS when doing bead work. It seems like I am contantly reaching for my Copics to dye thread or disguise stitches or to just make the fabric background bend to my will in appearance.

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  2. Hi Beth! My brush holder is an old flower frog. Not the sharp wire frog, but this one has metal spirals going up from the base. I found it at an estate sale and knew when I saw it that it would be perfect for brushes.

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  3. I use a lot of blue painter's tape in quilting, but I think that's fairly common...

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  4. Like Beth, I use my markers a lot, but perhaps that's not too unusual. I use an emery board to test the coating on beads and to smooth edges. Oh, but my favorite and most used tools are my diver's weights. I have four 5-pound lead blocks (covered in thick paper so I don't get lead on my hands) and four, fancy, 3-pound canvas bags with lead shot in them. These I use nearly every day in countless ways... to hold electric cords in place on the floor, to hold paper (etc.) when I'm cutting with a mat knife, to hold cords while I braid them, to weight things while glue dries or to flatten things, to hold a box with a spool of cording in it while I'm winding or measuring lengths, to hold my sewing machine food pedal in place so I don't push it out of reach.... that's off the top of my head; as I said, countless ways!

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  5. Hi Beth, I too use markers at times with my beadwork, and I have several old glass milk bottles that I use to hold my paintbrushes in my paint corner, and I save the containers from the Airborne tablets to hold my small spools of thread when I take a project with me. I guess we all like to recycle.

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  6. Love making marks on nonobjective paintings, oils primarily, with alternatives to brushes. My fave? Probably the ends of chopsticks ... my fingerprints : forks, sticks ... there go the kitchen gadgets!

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