Not exact matches
I think I
saw such fast results when I started dry
brushing in Scotland because I had been living without fluoride for several months already (even though I didn't know the
effect fluoride was having on my body at the time).
Below you can
see the
effects of dry
brushing.
His first real
brush with international acclaim came with «Dead Alive» in 1992 (also known as «Braindead»), which was a gory zombie flick that included some of the most gruesome, outlandish and hilarious
effects seen on film since Sam Raimi's «Evil Dead 2.»
The vid shows off some of the
effects you'll get to
see including floor tiles busting up, cobwebs in vents being
brushed aside, and random sheets of paper swimming through the air.
As I teach, judge, visit exhibitions and look at work in books or across social media, I
see bits and pieces of paintings that cause me to think about how a particular
effect or even a type of
brush stroke could impact my own work.
Direct drawing, calligraphic use of line, the
effects of
brushed, splattered, stained, squeegeed, poured, and splashed paint superficially resemble the
effects seen in Abstract Expressionism and Color Field Painting.
Tres Memoria, which you
see here, represents one of Lynda Benglis's smooth - surfaced encaustic paintings executed on narrow, vertical supports using multicoloured liquid wax in even
brush strokes, which she then manipulated with a blow torch to obtain a marbleized color
effect.
Dark imagery is painted with imprecise, yet delicate,
brush strokes that give the
effect of shifting visions we
see in our dreams.
so i would
see if you can
brush some off and lighten the painted
effect but thats just my opinion.