These films attempt to
scrape under the paint - spatt...
Not exact matches
When I went back and started
scraping, I found out that this poor dresser had literally 6 coats of different colored
paint under the black.
All of the fenders and quarter panels were pulled and rolled with chipped
paint only on one of the fenders (this is due to a poorly recommend body shop, once I saw how they messed up the original fender I took the car to another shop, The chipped
paint is only seen
under close inspection), finally the car has a CNT racing catless stainless steel downpipes with a ceramic bell mouth, CS style polyurethane front splitter to protect the bumper from
scraping, and GFB (Go Fast Bits) recirculating adjustable blow off valve.
But one might just end up
scraping the
paint off the wheel cover while removing the Mahindra logo —
under which resides the nut to remove the spare wheel.
Either square or rectangular in format, the
paintings were constructed by laying down (mostly) opaque layers of
paint and then
scraping away one layer from another by use of a squeegee, as in Little Three for Two: Red, Yellow, Blue (1976), or exposing
under layers by peeling away tape.
Frottage Technique In the early 1920s, in his pursuit of Surrealist ideas of automatism in art, he developed a technique called frottage (rubbing)- which involved placing objects
under a canvas layered in
paint, and then
scraping back the
paint on the raised areas of the canvas.
These «oil skins» are then
scraped off in sheets and draped onto canvas, revealing layers of
under painting and distorting the original image.
When I went back and started
scraping, I found out that this poor dresser had literally 6 coats of different colored
paint under the black.