Hand Painted Artist Brush Boxes

Meet my six brand-new artist brush boxes that I hand painted with animal motifs, using acrylic colors. Used to store pencils and brushes (or gummy bears, for that matter), the boxes are 28 cm long, 14 cm wide, and 4.5 cm high, and come in unique designs. Check out the images below for close-up views.

Here’s how they were made:
- I treated myself with six bamboo artist brush boxes (that was the easy part).
- Unfortunately, the flexible lid had the engraved silhouette image of a bamboo tree on it, which sucked. It required a great amount of beveling to get rid of it. In aiming to get the paint to adhere to the surfaces, I used sand paper on all sides.
- I subsequently applied molding paste to cover up some of the crevices on the lid, and coated all sides using white acrylic primer – I needed to do this three times (ugh).
- THEN came the color, at last. I used a variety of acrylic colors for the various undercoats before painting the animals on all sides.
- After drying up, I used sandpaper to abrade, however loosely, some of the spots where I felt too much paint was applied. This process also introduced slightly grungy streaks to the surface, which helped attain that vintage look, turning the designs lively and animated.
- The last step was to apply matte varnish on all sides for permanent protection.
Baseline is, I had a great deal of fun working on this, as I’m sure you can see ;-)




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And these are the top lids for all six boxes:

Box 1 - Crocodile, giraffes, bear, fish, white tiger
Box 2 - Frog, llama, dog, cat, giraffes
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Box 3 - White elephant, birds, giraffes
Box 4 - Elephants, cat, giraffe, snake
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Box 5 - Cat, elephant, frog, duck, squid
Box 6 - Whale, bear, monkey, birds, crocodile

4 Comments so far
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Lovely! I can’t recall at the moment where you found your 16thc. animals but if you don’t already know of it, here’s a wonderful site to explore: http://bibliodyssey.blogspot.com/
By Ilene Winn-Lederer on 12.26.09 6:46 pm
Thanks for that Ilene, you have pointed me to that site at the time – it’s really a treasure chest, so much to explore!
Actually, I got the 16th century animals print from a Swiss second-hand store – allegedly it’s a print from Matthäus Merian, the famous German printer at the time. (I suppose someone else did the water coloring though, and possibly more recently, too.)
By Oliver on 12.26.09 9:31 pm
Oops, guess I forgot. Anyway, the site is so rich, it’s worth checking from time to time as Peacay regularly adds new/old material. Back in June of this year, he added an image from my own book The Alchymical Zoodiac: http://bibliodyssey.blogspot.com/search?q=alchymical
By Ilene Winn-Lederer on 12.26.09 9:32 pm
how lovely that he has added your book there! – and yeah, there seems to be such a wealth of incredible images on that site that it makes you feel dizzy just browsing away…
By Oliver on 12.26.09 9:32 pm
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