Crackly Goodness

I couldn’t let the last days of the year go by without stopping to admire a little crackle. These sumptuous discs here are the work of Barbara Fajardo. She developed a technique that layers alcohol inks to get a multi-dimensional texture with, of course, lots of fine crackle.

deepseanecker

In this case, the polymer is a carrier rather than visual element, but even without knowing the particulars of Barbara’s technique, it’s unlikely that there is another material that could be paired with the inks and manipulated so as to develop the light crackling effect. These are some of the most magical aspects of our medium–the plasticity and ability of polymer to take on a wide variety of other mediums.

Even though color is what often draws us to polymer, it’s the physical characteristics of the material that make it so versatile. One of these days I’m going to count how many ways we can use it just for crackling.

In the meantime, we hope Barbara has the opportunity to develop a class for CraftArtEdu on this beautiful technique. She has four other classes available there right now. If you want to see more applications of Barbara’s crackly goodness, take some time to look through her Flickr page.

 

Sage

1 Comment

  1. Barb Fajardo on January 12, 2013 at 9:25 pm

    Hi Sage, I wanted to let you know that my “Crackly Goodness” tutorial is up on CraftArtEdu…

    http://www.craftartedu.com/barb-fajardo-crackly-goodness-on-polymer-clay-with-barb-

    Thank you again for the feature!
    xo
    Barb



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