Making Two near Identical Pictures

I see so many beautiful acrylic pours done as a pair of canvases or even a triptych. Could I create my own matching pair of canvases using pouring? I thought I would try to ‘photocopy’ one painting onto another.

Video tutorial for fluid acrylic pouring. How to make two matching paints that are a mirror image of each other in all 4 directions.

I thought I would try something a little bit different and instead of putting two canvases next to each other and creating a painting that flowed naturally across both, I would try to create a matching pair of paintings where one was a near mirror image of the other.

I’m using the dipping method to create these canvases. I’ve done a lot of dipping in the past because it’s how I use up all of my spilled and wasted paint, but most of them never make their way onto the blog or YouTube channel. There are a couple of previous examples you might like:

Red, white and blue dipped photo paper
Epic tile dipping session

Materials used in this video:

My paint recipe for these paintings:

  • 1 part Floetrol
  • 2 parts paint
  • water as needed
  • There may have been a few drops of treadmill silicone in some of the ready-mixed paints.

In this video, I am going to try to dip one canvas directly onto the other. Let’s see how I get on!

So I counting that as pretty darned successful. OK, so they aren’t exact copies. The paint is slightly different in each, one has different cells to the other, the centers are a bit different because of the way the white made the cells. But what I do like is that you can display these pictures any way up, all 4 sides work and in each case it exactly mirrors the other one. It feels almost a little bit like magic! I would definitely do something like this again in future.

As usual, here is my slideshow of the pictures, both wet close-ups, and closeups of the details. Enjoy!

2 thoughts on “Making Two near Identical Pictures”

  1. Meenakshi Sood

    Hi Debbie
    Enjoyed watching your video on resin coating of your acrylic pour. Gave me confidence to try it out.
    Have you tried a resin art project like the one Igor tyrovisky does by spraying epoxy and acrylics or mica? Or any ideas on how he gets it to spray consistency?

    1. The video you saw was my first ever venture into resin so that’s all the advice I can offer so far. I will have to go and look up the artist you mention. It sounds fascinating.

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