mardi 12 septembre 2017

Few Things To Do Before Creating School Mascot Murals

By Jason Fisher


Mascots are objects, animals or persons used to symbolize a group with public identity like brand name, military unit, society, professional sports team and school. They are usually confused with their team nicknames, although they could be interchangeable at times. These can adopt the form of costumed characters, inanimate objects, live animals, persons or logos.

Schools display their images all around the campus to increase the morale of students and remind visitors of where they are. Their costumes are usually worn during sports and social events and others have school mascot murals painted somewhere everyone could see. Here are several things you need to do when you want to create one.

Make sure that wall where you would paint the murals has been cleaned and without any structural problems and moisture damage. If some cracks are noticeable then spackle them but it sometimes has hidden issues that will cause cracks eventually again. Check closely for any presence of oil, wax, dirt, mold or grease and thoroughly clean them.

Prime the wall as it would help to let the paint easily stick more and could be directly applied over existing drawings. If you want the mural to last though then some measure for preparation should be done first before painting starts. Acrylic coats have better and longer adherence when existing ones would be stripped with a sanding block dipped in mild solution for lessening dust.

Allow the wall to properly dry and apply on its entirety after the acrylic primer and you may now start painting directly. You can add texture also like plaster application and create intriguing surface but its effect on the final result will not be sure. If you prefer painting on an unstretched canvass then first, glue it one before it is painted.

When painting, first sketch your design with a pencil based upon the prepared image then enlarge it with art projector or grid method techniques. After doing the outline, begin underpainting, which consist of large blocks of color that more details are painted on after. You could use mural techniques which are similar to the painting ones for putting details.

Sponging is good in creating texture such as clouds on sky and the leaves on trees or a color can be sponged over another for more depth. This is a useful technique for filling colors quickly in larger areas. Wet first your sponge and squeeze the excess water out then lightly dip paint on it and softly blot it at some paper in avoiding to overload it.

Stippling is done with applying thin coats in either darker or lighter shade over the underpainting when it has dried. When this new coat s wet still, use stippling brush and dab around that new color until this layer is stippled. When done correctly, the result would look not brushed and you will see through some underpainting.

When the mural is finished, next is protecting and ensuring its beauty would stay longer with seals. Apply isolation coats and varnish with either matte sheen or satin one because glossy are reflective. Check the instructions in its bottle for the right varnish and water ratio.




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