
Experiments with carbon paper
Drawing Lab Challenge #11 – how did you do?
I managed to slip off the rails somewhat and do something not quite what the challenge was asking for. I didn’t really feel like drawing something, I felt like playing with textures, so I did. I grabbed some carbon paper (of which I have a pile of since my office working sister was kind enough to give me a stack years ago and it has been sitting in the bottom of my art cupboard since) and did some experimenting.
I was interested in what kinds of marks I could make on the paper using the carbon and a variety of implements. I used the ends of pens, the edge of my plastic sharpener, a playdough tool I borrowed from my daughter, but the most interesting effect I managed came from using a meat tenderiser and a citrus zester (yes, I raided my kitchen drawers :D).
A meat tenderiser, if you haven’t seen one, is a small metal mallet with shallow spikes on the hammer face. Mine has little pyramids that come to dull points. This is what happens when I drag those points around in small circles on the carbon paper.
This is what happens when I hit the carbon paper repeatedly with the meat tenderiser. I hit in circles.
And this texture was created using the citrus zester, a small tool with five tiny cutting circles on one end. Those five little circles create four points of contact with the carbon paper, all nicely in a row. The above was created by dragging those four little points across the carbon in a shallow zig-zag.
And then I played with home made circle stencils to see how I could control some of these effects.
But the biggest experiment of all this was using the meat tenderiser again with that first texture/pattern.
I did this the same way I have been doing most of my other experiments – created the background and then looked for the art, drawing from what I could make out of the elements.
Caravel of Dreams, carbon paper, felt tip and gel pen on fineliner paper, approx. 250 x 200 mm.This was fun, though I think I’ve hardly scratched the surface with the possibilities. One thing I wish is that I could do something similar in multicolour. I did a quick attempt with my watercolour pencils to create a rub down effect, but the transfer rate was very poor compared to the carbon. I might investigate different coloured carbon sheets (though they are likely to be in boring office colours if I can get any) or dig through my art cupboard and try different media….hmm, come to think of it, pastels might do the job 😀 Another experiment awaiting my play.
Anyway, this is not what the challenge called for, but it did sprout art which all I really care about. How about you? How did you go with the challenge?
Nutty
(who introduced her nearly three year old daughter to carbon paper too)
Loving your new home on the web!! Well done 🙂
I’d forgotten all about the Drawing Lab until I read this, so grabbed my book and had a go. Managed to combine it with a couple of other challenges too which was rather handy! I love the thought of you bashing at carbon paper with a meat tenderiser!! Some of your pics didn’t show on my pc – the bottom two.
http://all-the-wright-stuff.blogspot.com/2011/01/im-not-chicken.html