Remember when you were a kid and had a watercolor box? Well, this is the grownup version of it, with high-quality pigments. The best thing about it is that you can carry it in your pocket since its made with the ubiquitous Altoids tin.
Oh yeah, this is my first Instructable.
Remove these ads by
Signing UpStep 1: Materials
Materials
- Altoids Tin (shown in picture)
- White Fimo Clay (shown in picture)
- Cheap white plastic color-mixing palette (shown in picture) - OR - white enamel paint (Krylon spray can or such)
- Your selection of watercolor paints (more on this later)
Tools
- Dremel with cutting wheel attachment (shown in picture)
- Sandpaper (anything along the lines of 80 grit is good)
- Oven or Toaster Oven
- Toothpicks









































Visit Our Store »
Go Pro Today »




I also have one of those snooty Windsor and Newton travel things, got it with a 40% off coupon and birthday money a couple years ago. I use it sometimes at IHOP, hanging out with friends, making those little "artist trading card" size paintings. But this is way cooler.
I'm going to make a couple of these "kits", so when my buddies snicker at me, I'll pull out a tin for them and tell 'em to get cracking on their own ATC. I could even keep them in the glove box of the car for those spontaneous moments where you just have to paint something.
For those asking about rejuvenating dried out tube colors - I have two different types, Sakura Koi and Pentech, some of which dried out in the tube.
I got some empty plastic "jars" - the type that come attached to each other on a strip, the sort that come with paint-by-numbers kits. I cut up the metal tubes and mashed up the dried paint until it fell apart into smallish chunks. Then I put it into the jar and taped the label to it.
One of my professionally arty friends said if I add just a drop or two of linseed oil it will soften it back up.
I like the idea of glycerine better (as someone suggested)... but in both brands' case, just using water was enough to bring it back to life. In a couple of instances -depended on the color- I had to work it a bit or to let it sit for a few minutes to soften up, but these were long-dried-out hard little lumps. Sakura Koi, a higher quality brand than Pentech, worked up a lot faster. The Pentech type took rather a while to soften but then it had also been dried up a lot longer. (Yeah I should have just tossed them all, but hey, it's watercolor, it should work even when dry, right? And the Sakura Koi was expensive.)
With the Altoid case method, where it's just enough paint to get you through a few paintings, just swiping it with water in the usual way would work just fine.
As to carrying the water... I often need water on the road (makeup jobs, etc). I use either contact lens saline solution (comes in a big bottle, cheap), or refill said bottle with distilled water and enough vodka to preserve it.
If you wanted a palette you could conceivably make one with fimo as well, sealing it with nail varnish or polyurethane, or put in a bit of plastic that fits in the lid if you have it to hand and don't want to spray paint. I use styrofoam plates when I do acrylic, but when I do watercolors I like separate wells. But you can just use a piece of silicone parchment paper (or two or three, they'll easily fit in the lid).
Such a cool idea - thanks!!
Also, I used something called milliput, it is like fimo but does not need baking, and is quite a bit cheaper.
Good instructable!
Also, regarding the brushes tip, I have been using water-brushes for several years (and paying dearly for them) - So I will add your tip to the related Instructable on how to make your own inexpensive waterbrush
http://www.instructables.com/id/The_1_Waterbrush/
I will make one of your watercolor tins for my next international trip (we do not check luggage, so small is better) and include a waterbrush and watercolor board cut into postcard shapes (another very cool instructable at
http://www.instructables.com/id/Better-Travel-Souvenirs-Watercolor-Postcards/
I will include some painters tape wrapped on a tiny fine-tipped marker (got one for $1 next to the cash register at my local grocery store- it is only 2 inches long) and I can tape the card down, use the marker to make fineline and details or write home, and it should all fit in a quart ziplock with room to spare.
Travel Art in a Baggie! I love it!!
Makes me want to go make plane reservations right now!
Thank you for such a fine fine FINE idea!
Favorited and plussed (wish that I could Plus Plus Plus it!)
(hmm, now what else needs small compartments in an Altoids tin?........)
Commercial "travel paint kits" are expensive and tend to contain poor-quality art supplies. You get what you pay for in artist's materials, so using your idea I can now take my good paint in my choice of colors with me. (I plan to rubberband a paintbrush to the outside of the tin. Clumsy girl that I am, I've snapped many EXPENSIVE brushes over the years - by mistake of course! I never threw them out since the brush end is what matters; still good quality, just with short, splintered handles! Now I can call them portable!)
Acrylic painters could use this too. Most know to keep their paint moist by misting it with water even as they are painting. A misting of clean water on the paints, then some cling-wrap over the compartments prior to closing the lid will last at least a few days. Putting the container in the fridge will keep acrylic paints wet longer. And the idea would be to use up the paint they've put in their tin, not store it forever. Acrylic painters know that if they leave their palette of paint unused too long, even when sealed, that the paint becomes little colorful plastic blob-sculptures :)
This was a brilliant idea and you did a great job creating this Instructable to share with the world!
sorry, couldn't help it.