enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

Marbling

Have you ever gotten lost on Instagram? It starts by clicking on the popular page and the next thing you know, an hour has passed and you're wrapped up in some drama involving two thirteen year old girls, a boyband and a heavy use of emojis. It's never good but always enthralling.

This is how I stumbled on the #barbienails hashtag and discovered "water-marbling" with nail polish. People do insane things with nail-polish. I had no idea. And while I wasn't interested in trying this on my nails, I decided to experiment with the technique on paper.

Watermarblingstep1

For supplies I used a small plastic container filled with warm water. (The water temperature is key. If the water is too cold or too hot, the nail polish "dries" too quickly on the surface and will not properly swirl.) I also gathered folded cardstock, a variety of nail polish colors and a bunch of toothpicks. Not pictured, but necessary were some rubber gloves; this gets messy.

Marblingstep2

Then I just poured some polish in various colors into the water and most of it floated to the top. I learned quickly that a little goes a long way.

Marblingstep3

I used a toothpick to drag the paint around the surface. If the paint just sort of clumps together on the toothpick or gets wrinkly, try adjusting the water temp (making it a little warmer or a little colder). When the temp of the water is right, you you'll be able to play with patterns and swirls. (Much like Instagram, it's totally addicting.)

Marblingstep4

When I was happy with the design, I stuck a folded card onto the water surface and lightly pushed it (there is no need to fully submerge it). After a second or two, I carefully pulled it up (wearing gloves).

Watermarbling

The result was awesome. The paint stuck to the cards…

Marblingstep5

…and my plastic dish was now ready for more paint.

Marblingcards

Seriously, so fun and addicting. I let the cards fully dry and tucked them into my crazy stash of envelopes. I loved experimenting with this technique and I ended up using it again on a few different materials… look for that in part two.

ps. nail-polish works, but a "real" way to do this on fabric with paint is explained here in an awesome tutorial on the Etsy blog.

Posted in , ,

69 responses to “adventures in water marbling / part 1.”

  1. alexandra sirugue-macleod Avatar

    so beautiful!
    Thank You so much for sharing this with us, I can’t wait to try!
    I have done a lot of marbling with shaving cream and food coloring, it’s great but the colors obtained are not as intense as your cards.
    OMG, I think this might be the 1st comment I leave on your blog Elise, sorry for being a lame “ghost reader” of this time…

    Like

  2. Kelsey McEvoy Avatar

    It looks like when you dipped the paper/card in the water+ nail polish mixture, the paper/card soaked up all the water. Out of curiosity, did this “mess up” the paper/card at all (I’m thinking along the lines of when you spill a glass of water on a book and all the pages expand and curl up as they dry)…? They look pretty flat and “undamaged” in the last photo.

    Like

  3. Lisa K Avatar
    Lisa K

    Did your cards lay flat once they dried? Mine are a little warped. Any tips? Maybe heavier card stock?

    Like

  4. Emily Creteau Avatar
    Emily Creteau

    Your cards look great! I had a snow day and tried them but they didn’t come out all that great because I couldn’t get the water temperature right 😦

    Like

  5. Bailey Avatar

    Oh my gosh, it’s so easy to do!! I love that you did these on cards – great idea!
    Bailey
    http://akabailey.blogspot.com

    Like

  6. Lauren Avatar

    I tried with nail polish and didn’t get very good results. After reading the comments I tried with shaving cream and paint. It turned out well. Thanks for the inspiration. My Valentine’s Day cards are all done now thanks to you! 🙂

    Like

  7. Corinne Avatar

    Gotta try this! Especially since I have tons of old nail polish!! Thanks!!

    Like

  8. Stephanie Avatar
    Stephanie

    These almost made me cry. When I was a kid, my grandfather dyed Easter eggs that looked just like your marbeling of your vases. I have never been able to repeat the look. He didn’t use nail polish but I never thought I’d see the look again.
    It seemed like you added paint but I can’t see anything about the paint you used. What am I missing?
    Thank you.

    Like

  9. Tracie Avatar
    Tracie

    OMG I want to stay home and just try this today.
    Stumbled upon this while having coffee….. Can I call in???? WOW AMAZING

    Like

  10. Chrisy@GoodNorthCoastLife Avatar

    Hi Elise – Had an attempt at this today, with mixed results. I know you said water temp is really important, and l did play around with it – but didn’t feel like it really worked for me. Am wondering whether my water dish needed to be deeper – l just used a shallow tray, also do you think the quality of the nail polish matters. I bought some really cheap $1 polish, but to be honest it didn’t seem to behave any differently from the more expensive stuff. It’s just when l tried to swirl, it just clumped or got hard. Any ideas? It was fun to experiment though 🙂

    Like

  11. Sarah Watts Avatar

    This is pretty cool definitely will be added to my to-do list

    Like

  12. Our Sweet Somewhere Avatar

    Those colors are so full of life!
    (and I too get caught up in the Insta-world. Emoji battles can be quite entertaining!)
    xoxo, Kate

    Like

  13. Paul Thomson Avatar

    Great tutorial Elise, thanks for taking the time out to post it!
    FYI, I used it as a reference on a recent paper marbling tutorial I did myself a week or two ago, figured it might be a a good resource for some of your readers… http://www.ibookbinding.com/blog/marbled-paper-bookbinding-tutorial-and-photo-gallery/
    Keep up the good work and again, many thanks!
    ~ Paul

    Like

  14. Gianelli Avatar

    Great idea! I can’t wait to try this .. Where did you get your neon envelopes??

    Like

  15. Ydrokroma Avatar

    Hi there!
    Very nice work with your marbling.
    You should also try it with acrylic paints, the results are alos exquisite and the ink is way cheaper.
    Have a look at my website and check some of my works in paper marbling.
    http://www.ydrokroma.weebly.com

    Like

  16. Charlotte Avatar
    Charlotte

    I tried this today and it worked out exactly as you described and what your photo’s looked like!! Unfortunately on some cards the nail polish is a little too thick to my taste, but at least two of them turned out great. (and the tip about the plastic gloves was great, I really needed them 😉 Now my house smells like nail polish!) Thank you!!

    Like

  17. Candyce Avatar
    Candyce

    I’m having trouble getting the water right or something, the polish just balls up no matter what temperature the water is. Any hints?

    Like

  18. casey Avatar
    casey

    I totally believe this is a success, but I just couldn’t get it to work for me! I tried adjusting the temperatures, first warmer, then colder, trying to see which temperature made the polish more pliable. Each time, though, it was just tacky and would stick to the toothpick instantly. I feel like I’m relatively craft savvy, so I don’t know what happened! I’m not at all criticizing the project or your tutorial, I just thought you might have a few more tips for me! Thanks 🙂

    Like

  19. Gayle Avatar

    Blerg. Been waiting to try this and had time on a snow day today. Crafting fail. Just couldn’t get the water temp right. Oh well. Going to bake a cake, something I know I can’t goof up!

    Like

Leave a reply to Corinne Cancel reply