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How To Turn a Digital Photo Print into a Beautiful Painting (using water!)

How To Turn a Digital Photo Print into a Beautiful Painting (using water!)
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These are great ways to decorate your area, give as gifts, or just to try something new on an afternoon.

Using a technique I call "reverse painting", you can use a paintbrush and water on a printed digital photo to manipulate the printed ink for different effects! In particular, you can turn a photo into a beautiful and unique painting.

Compare and contrast the two images shown (a "before" and "after") - make sure to click on the images to view larger versions and see the differences better.

The results shown were obtained with a digital photo print, water, a brush, and the techniques described in the next steps.
 
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Step 1Why and How It Works

Why and How It Works
One day, I noticed that glossy photo paper is a little like the back of a postage stamp. If you wet your fingertip and touch the paper, you will find that it sticks.

Now, while the ink that the photo image consists of isn't necessarily water-soluble, the back-of-postage-stamp binding agent between the paper and the ink is.

This is why we can apply water selectively with a paintbrush to loosen, diffuse, and lift/wash away sections and layers of the printed photo. I call this technique "reverse painting" because instead of painting color onto the paper, you are instead selectively lifting it off and allowing it to remix or reflow (or be removed entirely). You control how this happens with your brush and water.

This process allows you to create beautiful and interesting effects, which I will cover in the next steps.

Note: In my tests, cheap photo paper ("Likon" 20-pack from the 1$ store) seems to work better then the more expensive kinds (such as HP Photo Print).

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13 comments
Aug 17, 2011. 7:44 PMverdastel says:
super idea! i can get cheap decorative paintings this way. thanks a lot for sharing.
Jul 9, 2010. 10:55 AMverybluesky says:
Very nice technique. One time (long time ago) I saw this lady at a crafts fair and she had a similar technique. She would take a polaroid picture and with a nail would smudge all the chemicals before they developed. The result was a little painting. The only drawback is that she would have to take a nice picture first and do it right there and then. With you technique, the images are endless, and if you mess up, just print another one!
May 2, 2008. 1:19 PMartificially_flavoured says:
I was wondering, could you just edit the image on the computer and print the mirrored version then put that face down on a piece of paper and take a wet sponge and wet the entire back of the photo paper and have the photo transfer to the other paper? Would that work and would that still give the painted effect?
May 6, 2008. 3:19 PMartificially_flavoured says:
I just might give it a try!
Apr 21, 2008. 12:59 PMCazza says:
Hi, I love the idea that you have presented here. I am not sure what you mean by eraser, smudge and sanding though, can you explain what these actually mean. Many thanks, very creative!!
Mar 12, 2008. 7:01 PMxxarpian says:
Wicked cool! From a certified just-don't-touch-I'll-fix-it-in- Photoshop whiner! KUDOS!
Feb 26, 2008. 6:31 AMincorrigible packrat says:
Neato! A whole evolutionary leap beyond the "eraser aging" technique, that I, and probably everyone else, used to use on newspaper photos of public figures.
Feb 25, 2008. 1:42 PMmorCadillac says:
Very illustrative, inspiring and with nicely described clear steps! For someone totally not able to draw, paint or do any such things, this technique could be useful. I'll definitely try it! Thank for giving me hope (that I can also "paint" :P) !! Loves, Eda
Feb 25, 2008. 12:36 PMcanida says:
This is so neat! Thanks, I've got to try it.
Jan 7, 2008. 6:16 PMDotatDabbled says:
Really neat idea!
Dec 21, 2007. 7:12 PMtheRIAA says:
looks cool

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