Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Completed Projects: No. 5

I unpacked a lot of orange faux pumpkins from the boxes in the garage. I have been wanting a white pumpkin. So, since I've been mixing up a lot of chalky white paint, I decided to see if I could create a white pumpkin from one of my old ones.



I started painting around the stem at the top. I painted with the tip of the brush right into the edges of the fake stem. Once I got the edges of the stem painted, I spread out down the pumpkin to just below half way down.



After the top half dried, I turned it up and painted down. One thing I really like is that there is very little dripping with the gesso-based chalky paint and the brush strokes don't show. The jar to the right of the pumpkin in the picture below is what I use to mix up the paint.


I buy the glass jars at garage sales, usually for around 10 cents a piece. The plastic lids I buy at Walmart for very little money; I think there are about 8 plastic lids in a box for around $3. I like the plastic lids much better than the metal ones that come with the jars when you buy them new. I use a permanent marker to write the color of paint (e.g. yellow) I used to mix with the gesso and then dot a bit of paint on the lid like they do when you buy paint at the store. I also dot the gesso-paint mixture on the top of the lid too.


It would look something like this: yellow paint (dot of yellow paint) with white gesso - mixture color: chalky off white (dot of mixture)


The great thing about the plastic lid is that you can scrub the permanent marker and the paint dots off the lid with a little effort when the paint mixture is gone. I only re-use them for other paint mixes once I've mixed paint in them.


I like how the lines on the pumpkin really show up with the chalky paint. I'm happy with the results and would rather make my own white pumpkins out of old orange ones than buy them new because I can change the white to make it browner, grayer, bright white...you name it...just by adding a little of that color to the gesso-white paint mixture.



I know you might think the drips on the picture above disprove my statement about the chalky paint not dripping, but this paint on the paper is from some testing I did to check out the color.



Here's a close up. What do you think? Have you tried painting pumpkins?




4 comments:

  1. They have been saying that 'white is the new orange for pumpkins' and I love what you did with yours! I've never painted a pumpkin, but my husband has painted a few faces on them over the years! :-)

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  2. Very cute. Now don't you dare paint Santa white! ;-0

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  3. Nice mom. I actually painted white two ugly orange pumpkins I've had forever. They look SO much better. It is amazing what a little paint can do. I used spray paint though and it is a little drippy... I have no patience for painting.

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  4. I tried my hand at painting one just this fall. LOVED how it turned out! I'm hoping to get my husband to grow white pumpkins next year in the garden. We'll see.

    Hugs,
    Judy

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