Being proud to show the rough with the smooth with blusher brush: coral and pink abstract

Does it look bashful to you? The fantasy flower in this painting appears to be slightly embarrassed.

I wonder why.

Perhaps it is because I used the big bold blusher brush to get all the emotion out to create those swirls.

There is no shame here. Be bold with your crimson connection. Personally I don’t see anything wrong with combining magentaish pink with understated and sultry coral.

Be proud we say!

Here is what the detail of it looks framed.

Shine on with your cool bold emblushered self.

Grey: Frosty Jupiter Dream scene

So I experimented last night I’ve been watching all these videos about acrylic pouring . I do like to see the finished results as these amazing sparkly Goldie blingy shiny paintings .

Doing an acrylic pour is one of the items on my activity wish list so I had a go and in this next series of five are the end results.

It’s not strictly an acrylic pour it’s a made up version. Normally a pour needs things like silicon and all kinds of bits added to make the the paint separate so that you get what they call cells.

So for the first one you can see in the next post that I added Environ face mask to it and I added a serum gel something I thought would be making the acrylic separation. But that didn’t work in the same way I would hope.

Instead what I do love is the smooth texture the my upcycled make up brushes make to the painting. Here I used the contour brush. I’m sure I would not be getting such a smoothly sumptuously painted surface if I used ordinary artists paint brushes.