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Prep Bare Art Canvas for Acrylic Painting

Prepped for Acrylic Paint

Many artists are painters, using both; oil and acrylic paints with a preference for painting on canvas. Canvas is an age-old substrate used as a painting surface and is traditionally stretched and fastened onto a wooden frame. The bare canvas must then be coated and prepared to accept paints. The bare canvas must be sealed, and the weave of the fabric filled before it is ready for painting art work with acrylic paints. The compound used to treat the canvas is called “gesso,” (meaning “chalk” in Italian). Gesso is very expensive in art supply stores, and many artists have discovered various blends of PVA glue, water, acrylic paint, and baby powder to make their own gesso.

This video shows you how to prepare the bare canvas to accept acrylic paints after it has been stretched over a frame. I’ll also share tips and tricks on how you can mix your own coatings (gesso-like blend), using commonly available materials. The materials I use are much less expensive than the special preparations sold for this purpose at art stores.

Please feel free to ask questions or leave suggestions in the comment section. I would also ask that you subscribe to my YouTube channel, “Like” and share the video. This helps me provide more YouTube content, and won’t cost you a dime!

Giveaways: As I continue to build my YouTube channel, I periodically hold random drawing giveaways as I reach certain milestones for numbers of subscribers gained. If you are a subscriber, you don’t have to do anything, as you are automatically entered into the drawing. There are no purchases necessary.

Here’s the video:

 

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