This was a great project for many reasons:
1. Cheap and easily obtainable materials
2. Vibrant colors
3. Can use up all those old crayons we were required to have for school but never finished off
4. Semi-fast results
5. Childhood memories
50 or so crayons
hot glue gun
old newspapers
stack of books
hair dryer
16x20 white canvas
Instructions
1. Choose your crayons. It's easiest just to buy a box of new crayons, but since I was trying to use up old ones, I went through my pile to find ones that were still fairly long and not too dirty.
2. Arrange the crayons. I chose rainbow order to use up a variety of colors, but other ideas would be warm colors, cool colors, reds, greens or blues (works great for a rain scene). I put a brown with my yellows and also put some whites and a black in the mix to try and get some interesting streaks. Crayons on the edge may leak off the canvas, so if you have a really cool color you want to show off, place it at least two or three spaces from the edge.
3. Prepare the crayons. I think keeping the wrapper on the crayons gives off a nice professional look, but just make sure all the labels are facing the same direction. If you prefer not to have labels, the easiest way to take them off is to use a utility knife and make a cut down the side; if it cuts into the crayon, place this side down when gluing.
4. Secure the crayons. If you don't mind having the crayons as part of your final product, use hot glue to secure each crayon to the canvas. If you don't want the crayons interfering with the piece of art, one idea I've heard is to use masking tape across the whole row of crayons or gluing them to a separate piece of paper or cardboard.
5. Set up the workplace. Ok, maybe I should have done this before using the hot glue, but oh well; I didn't make a mess there. With melting crayons though, don't take chances. There will be some splatter if your crayons go all the way to the edge. Put newspaper along the wall and on the counter/table/floor.
6. Angle the canvas. You want a gentle slope so the wax will drip down, away from the crayons. Depending on the kind of dripping and dispersion you want, the severity of the slope may need to be different. I leaned my canvas against a stack of books (covered with newspaper) about 6-7" tall.
7. Melt crayons! You want high heat and low blowing. I tried using the low setting on my dryer, but it wasn't hot enough to make the wax run, so I had to change to high heat. Run the dryer over a section of crayons. Depending on how you want the wax to run, either fan the head of the dryer back and forth (colors will disperse and run together more), or hold the head straight and move the dryer as a whole from side to side (colors will run straight down). You can push the wax drippings as far down as you like; they stop running once the heat is removed.
8. Admire. You're basically done; just take off the crayons if that was your plan, clean up your workplace and show off your design to your friends!
5 crayons
hair dryer
old newspapers
small canvas
utility knife
old pencil or stick
Instructions
1. Choose your crayons. I chose along the blue color scheme, mixing in a green and white as well.
2. Prepare your workplace. Set up newspapers on your counter/table/floor. This one is not quite as prone to messes as the other one, but it's still better to be safe than sorry!
3. Cut pieces of crayon. Remove the wrapper by cutting a slit down the side with the utility knife. Then cut the crayon into several small pieces, about .5-1cm long. Put the wax chunks in piles off to the side, sorted by color. (You want them a little ways from the canvas so they don't blow away when the hair dryer is going.)
4. Melt large pieces. Using the pencil, hold down one piece of crayon against the canvas with one hand and melt with the blow dryer in the other hand. When liquid begins to pool, turn off the blow dryer, and use your finger to press the half-melted wax into the canvas. Now you can continue melting the wax without having to press down with the pencil. Do this with several colors in various places. Don't worry too much about dispersing the first few; they will continue to disperse as other pieces are melted onto the canvas. The wax will look kind-of like watercolor as it thins out in some areas.
5. Melt the small pieces. When the canvas is mostly covered with wax, take a small chunk of wax and press it against the newspaper with the pencil. Heat the wax until just before it would begin to liquefy and turn off the dryer as you take the small piece and push it onto the canvas. Heat for a couple seconds and press again to secure the piece to the canvas.
6. Draw. The crayon can look cool against the texture of the canvas. Instead of taking a regular crayon and just drawing, I took a small chunk with a flattened edge and heated it for a little while. Before liquefying, I took the piece in my hand and rubbed it against the still-warm canvas to add just a bit of color to some of the white areas.
7. Admire. You now have a piece of crayon art that looks something like a splatter painting. Enjoy. Perhaps if you left some white space on one of the sides, you can paint a small figure or set of words.
Something like this was going to be one of my craft projects for VBS. But it failed since parchment paper does not act the same way as wax paper and I was trying to sandwich the crayons between sheets of paper for a translucent effect.
ReplyDeleteCool. I still have some crayons leftover, and I was wanting to do something like that.
ReplyDelete