ADDING WORDS TO A painting FOR customized ART

remember when I shared our possessed painting that jumped off the wall low-cost painting that we got for $20 at a yard sale…

… and discussed that we:

mostly liked the size of it and the chunky frame (which actually came with a little dent in it – a total sign that this man was a trouble-maker)

weren’t in love with the art itself (it just felt sort of generic and hotel-ish in person)

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Yes? Me too.

And then remember when a bunch of you (seriously, like at least a dozen of you guys) recommended that we do some sort of letter stenciling over it like this genius creation by Emily Von Henderson or this masterpiece by A stunning Mess (psst – you can check out other amazing painting-words-over-things art projects here, here, and here).

Yes? Me too.

Well… we were sold. and the deed is DONE!

We debated just leaving the letters unpainted and covering the rest of the canvas with white paint, but actually liked the idea of white letters with the painting as the background. and it was actually really simple. Seriously, the hardest thing was deciding what we wanted our dining room wall to be saying to us every day. but we finally arrived at an oldie but a goodie: All You need Is Love. Ain’t that the truth? It somehow has:

an ode to one of my favorite bands (my father and I know nearly every word to every album & even view old Beatles films together)

part of our blog name (same last name, haha)

a positive general message (it’s not a bad pointer for any of us)

a classic feeling that we hope is timeless (it shouldn’t feel “so last year” like lady Gaga’s meat dress or The Bieb’s old haircut)

So for all of the above reasons, we went for it. The next step was faking this baby in photoshop first, just to help us picture it. Here’s a quick photoshop rendering that I threw together to see what we liked:

I certainly don’t think you need photoshop to imagine this though. We just had it on hand, but if you don’t I think a totally free program like gimp could work equally well just for laying type over a basic image and seeing what fries your bacon. Aaaand we’re back to meat.

Anyway, we realized that we wanted each letter to be about 5″ tall and the typeface we preferred was Optima bold (with a point size of 507 which got it to be exactly 5″ tall). how did we know we needed the letters to be 5″ tall? I just discovered in the rendering above that the stripe of green in the middle of the painting was about the height of those letters on top of it. So I walked over to the painting, asked it not to jump off the wall on me, and very gingerly measured that green stripe. five inches tall = the answer.

Then I printed each letter out in a very light grayscale ink (to save money/ink) on card stock (only one letter fit on each page, but I saved all my leftover cuttings for Clara-projects so it wasn’t too bad) and I was left with this:

After I cut them each out thoroughly with a scissors (and an x-acto knife when they had interior sections to cut like the O and the D), they looked like this:

Then I placed them all on my painting so I could figure out the spacing…

… and used a light pencil line traced around each one directly onto the painted canvas.

That way when I lifted them off it was literally just a good old fashioned game of fill-in-the-lines, which I did with white acrylic paint and a small craft brush.

It only took one coat, and that’s all she wrote.

The result = something that feels modern but still has those soft tones and texture behind it. It really is a fun way to update a piece that kinda feels hotel-ish and mass produced. all of a sudden it’s all yours (picking what it says, and even choosing things like the size, the color, and the typeface all of a sudden makes you feel like it’s sweet and personal).

Oh and I had originally planned to paint the frame white but the wood tones in the frame tie into the exact warm oak-y color of the buffet where the paint is chipping off, so there’s something kind of sweet about leaving him naked. and John was on the No-Paint frame Train (choo choo) so he even more convinced me to leave it be for now. I’m actually loving it as-is.

As for the cost, this update was totally free (since we just used what we had on hand like existing printer ink, white acrylic paint, and card stock from our stash) and the actual project total was $20 if you include the loot we doled out at that yard sale for the art itself. Not bad for a customized painting that’s over three feet wide, right? now let’s just hope this man doesn’t dive off the wall again anytime soon. I like to think he did that out of boredom but now that he’s much more entertained by his outfit it’ll be amazing from now on.

This really was an easy, cheap, and satisfying project. So if you have an old canvas, print, photo, or poster that you’re feeling meh about (or you find something ok-but-not-amazing at a thrift store) a $2 tube of white acrylic paint, a small paint brush, and a printer might be all you need to fall in love with the guy. Oh yeah and a scissors. You need those too. and you need a sentence that you like enough to stare at for a while. but that’s the fun part!

What did you men do this weekend? Is anybody else painting over art? Were you all out yard sale-ing? It rained for about 70% of our weekend, so I completely want a do-over. Who’s with me?

Psst- Wanna know where we got something in our house or what paint color we used? just click on this button: 

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