Gel Plate Image Transfer with Colored Pencils

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Gel Plate Image Transfer with Colored Pencils

If you make botanical gel prints using leaves and flowers from your yard – you can add a gel plate image transfer on top of the botanical print.

Or, in reverse, make a magazine gel plate image transfer first, and then use a paper mask to preserve your favorite parts, and over-print with botanicals. Picture a pretty girl standing in foliage. 🙂

I’m new-ish to gel plate printing, but I really love it. There’s no press required, you can use standard acrylic paint if you don’t have printmaking ink. Also, there’s no laborious rubbing to transfer the image.

Plus, it’s fast!! At the end of a few hours of joyful rolling out color, dropping leafy shapes, and pressing with a flat hand, you could have 30-50 prints. Read on…

Transferring magazine images onto a gel plate for incorporation into layered print art using Gelatin based plates for printmaking (More on this below.)
The results of just a few hours of botanical gel plate printing, with some magazine transfers in the mix. The botanical gel plate image transfer at the top of this post is on the upper left of this photo.

Art Experiment Cheerleader

When an art process moves along fast, it’s easy to “get in the zone”. It’s also a quick way to zoom past disappointing prints.

If a gel plate botanical or an image transfer doesn’t work, 1) turn it 90 degrees and print over it, 2) cut it up and collage it, 3) use rubber stamps on it, and then write a letter to someone on the back, 4) shred it and make another one.

Gel plate printing is a perfect intro to printmaking, and each print works up very fast. Especially with botanical prints. The plate itself is made from gelatin, so it’s a rubbery, clear, shiny printmaking surface.

assorted gelli plate prints made from layered botanicals like leaves and flowers
Gel Plate Botanicals made with acrylic paint, leaves, stems and flowers, printing various colors and plants on top of previous layers.

Super Simple Prints

Select some flowers and leaves, roll acrylic paint onto a gel plate (like this one), lay the botanicals on the still-wet pigments, press a sheet of paper against that pigment-plant stack with your hand, and pull your print. Finished.

Now, pull the leaves and flowers up, and you’ll see a mask of their imprint preserved in the wet acrylic pigments. Lay another sheet or paper on the plate and rub and pull that one. Shazam! You made two prints in 1 minute.

Now, make another one. Or, turn your fresh made botanical print 90 degrees and print over it with another color and other plants. And then print another layer on top of that one. (<–Try this – it’s very fun.)

Explore the resource links I’ve listed below if you’re new to gel plate printmaking.

Rolling acrylic paint on a gel plate with a brayer
Acrylic paint coated leaves and stems from printing with them, and a palette of acrylic paint mixed on a paper plate underneath them.
Botanical prints using a gel plate and acrylic paint with plants from a walk in the neighborhood. These are all printed on standard white card stock and each print has at least three layers of plants printed at various angles. You can create a set of blank cards to use in your stationery stash.

Gel Plate Print Resources

  • One of the best resources for gel plate experiments and transfer images is Mark Yeates’ YouTube channel. Have a look at that over here.

  • Several companies make gelatin plates, and one of them – Gelli Arts – has an extensive set of demo videos here.

  • If you want to get inspired, visit the instagram account of UK Artist Jennifer Douglas. Just watch this short sample of her botanical

printing technique with small gelli plates here.

  • This post features a gelli plate monotype portrait print, done with acrylic paint, in layers, and then transferred to paper after the layers have dried using gel medium. This process was really fun.
Before adding colored pencil to this mixed gel plate image transfer and botanical print…. Compare this to the print at the top of the post.
Colored pencils are an exquisitely fun medium to apply to gel plate prints – both botanical and image transfer.
Sitting on the couch after dinner, using a lap desk, and adding other colors on top of the acrylic pigments.
Rooted Coral, Original Gel Plate Botanical Print with Colored Pencil – available in my Etsy Shop here.

Go Forth and Make Something

I hope you’re keeping your hands on art supplies, and creative ideas are flowing this season.

Let us know in the comments what you’re either working on, contemplating as a project, or what you’ve just finished.

Artists have a hard time tooting their own horn, but this can be considered a roll call. Check in. Tell us a little something.

Thanks for stopping by and I’ll see you in the next post –

Belinda

P.S. I recently tried these colored pencils by Amazon Basics, and I’m happy to report that they’re inexpensive and wonderful. 🙂

P.P.S. If you’re interested in subscribing to these art-process image posts, you can sign up here.

The beginnings of a gelli plate print using black acrylic to draw a figure onto the gelatin

Art Quote

When you’re in the studio painting, there are a lot of people in there with you.  Your teachers, friends, painters from history, critics . . . and one by one, if you’re really painting, they walk out. And if you’re really painting, you walk out.

Audrey Flack 1931-2024 Art and Soul; Notes on Creating

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6 thoughts on “Gel Plate Image Transfer with Colored Pencils”

    1. Hi Liz-Anna, I’m so glad your gel plates are getting as little love. It’s so much fun. And yes, Yeates Makes is an excellent sharer of great experiments, and he’s endlessly curious. 🙂

      1. Belinda this portrait of yours is amazing!! I wish there’s a video for it! It’s sooo beautiful!! ❤️ Right now I’m making a new sketchbook with a nice cardboard box I got with an Amazon sale. I love nice boxes for this 😊 I will definitely try to do a portrait-botanical-gel-pencil colors for my sketchbook. It looks like so much fun!! Thank you for sharing it!! ❤️ Best regards!🌷
        Marissa
        🙂

        1. Hi Marissa!Your sketchbook with recycled amazon box material sounds fantastic! And I bet it will look spectacular with a little gel plate botanical and image transfer magic added to it! Hats off to your art adventures and thanks so much for your compliments and encouragement.

    1. Hi Melissa, I hope you do give it a try. The squishy surface of the gelli plates are so very different from the sharp exact contact point of pen and paper, it’s good for those of us used to control during art-making. 🙂 Put our Adventure Seeker Hats on!

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