The first penetrates and covers the fabric, while the second levels the print. A standard two pulls of the squeegee are required when printing. Follow the same printing process when using PERMASET AQUA® Puff Paste but bear in mind you may need to lay down a little more ink to get a good 3D effect. Use to highlight a few elements in your design to really make them pop or bolder. PERMASET AQUA® Puff Paste is ideal for those people who want to add volume and texture and more interest to their fabric designs (such as custom t-shirt designs). PERMASET AQUA® Puff Paste has a soft textured feel and is wash and dry-clean resistant. It can be mixed with Permaset Screen Printing Inks and will print flat, then as the medium cures it will puff up to give an interesting 3D matt effect. It can enhance designs and provides a raised, textured feel to the finished print. 13, 1972.PERMASET AQUA® Puff Paste is a printing medium that is used to achieve a 3D effect on fabric. Washington, DC, Phillips Collection, Gifford Beal: Paintings and Watercolors, Sept.New York, American Academy of Arts and Letters, Memorial Exhibition of Paintings by Gifford Beal, 1879–1956, Dec.South Bend, South Bend Art Association, American Painting in the Manner of the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries, Feb.Urbana-Champaign, University of Illinois, Dec.Chicago, Garfield Park Art Galleries, Exhibition of Greek Sculptures and American Paintings lent by the Art Institute of Chicago, Nov.Minneapolis Institute of Art, Oct–Nov.San Francisco, California Palace of the Legion of Honor, Exhibition of Paintings: Collection of the Friends of American Art lent by the Art Institute of Chicago, June 26–July 26, 1926, cat.Milwaukee Art Institute, Exhibition of Forty Paintings Presented to the Art Institute of Chicago by the Friends of American Art, Mar.Art Institute of Chicago, Twenty–fifth Annual Exhibition of American Oil Paintings and Sculpture, Nov.Barter et al., The Age of American Impressionism: Masterpieces from the Art Institute of Chicago (Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago/Yale University Press, 2011), cat. Paintings and Drawings (Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, Aug. Art Institute of Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago Handbook of Sculpture, Architecture, Paintings and Drawings.“Catalogue of Artists and Acquisitions,” Friends of American Art Sixth Year Book Chicago, 1916–1918 (1918), 9.“Acquisitions,” Friends of American Art Fifth Year Book Chicago, 1914–1915 (1915), 21, 33 (ill.).“Recent Accessions to Public Collections,” Art and Progress 6, 8 (June, 1915), 287. “Notes: Accessions to Museum,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago 9, 4 (April, 1915), 57 (ill.).“Friends of American Art,” Art and Progress 4, 4 (February, 1913), 880.“Accessions to the Museum,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago 6, 3 (January, 1913), 46.“The Exhibition of American Art,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago 6, 3 (January, 1913), 34.Giselle D’Unger, “Chicago,” American Art News 11, 10 (December, 1912), 8.James William Pattison, “Annual Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture Art Institute, Chicago,” Fine Arts Journal 27, 6 (December, 1912), 793 (ill.), 796.Status On View, Gallery 272 Department Arts of the Americas Artist Gifford Beal Title The Puff of Smoke Place United States (Artist's nationality) Date 1912 Medium Oil on canvas Inscriptions Signed and dated lower left: Gifford Beal 12 Dimensions 92.1 × 122.6 cm (36 1/4 × 48 1/4 in.) Credit Line Friends of American Art Collection Reference Number 1912.1802 Extended information about this artwork He applied the paint with brisk, fluid brushwork, especially in the billowing cloud, which he rendered with a tactile, white impasto. The artist employed a cool, silvery palette to describe the crisp atmosphere of this cold day. Although Beal did not depict the source of the steam, it is probably from a passing train connecting Newburgh with the major metropolitan areas of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut. Several utility poles frame the panorama, while the titular puff of smoke billows up from below eye level. In The Puff of Smoke, Gifford Beal portrayed a view of the Hudson River at Newburgh, New York, concentrating on the scene’s urban elements.
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