I began with the three castle scenes (there is one inside the lid), as I thought these would be the most challenging. A few hours watching Phil Speight and Tony Lewery videos once again, regained my confidence with the castles, but there was a fair amount of white spirit and tissue required to rub out and try again and this can only be used when the background paint is dry, thereby taking a lot longer than the practised professionals.
I bought four sign writers' lining brushes a while ago, knowing that I could use them on the can and it took some courage to try one out when it was loaded with paint, but I surprised myself by how easy it was to do and the paint seemed to last forever before it thinned out. The brush seems to run on rails however much your hand shakes! Watch it done on You Tube and you would think "I could never do that!" but you can.
I had never tried any sign writing before and this presented problems that caused some concern over what font to use and where I could find exemplars. Brighton Public Library came up with very little information, so it was back to the internet and there was considerable material to be found, mostly on boat sign writers' web sites and You Tube. I had also started taking photographs of suitable sign written boats on my travels, so I was building up quite a library of material. The original font used on the stern of Stronghold was the basis of the chosen font, which went on reasonably well, but the drop shadow took several abortive attempts before getting a satisfactory result. Similarly with the scrolls at each end - all rather frustrating, but I got there in the end and am pleased with the result.
3 comments:
Ray, that is absolutely fantastic.. I wish I could do that!
Nice one Ray, all that effort and research clearly shows in the end result. Well done!
Thank you both. It's good to get some encouraging feedback.
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