String painting is such a fun and easy way to create beautiful artwork!
We used regular acrylic yarn for all the paintings you’ll see below. We also tried cotton yarn and it worked really well too.
Cut a piece of yarn that’s about 18 to 24 inches long. The shorter your piece of yarn is, the easier it is to work with.
Optional: I found the yarn absorbed the watercolor paint better when it was soaked in water first. It doesn’t need to soak for long. A couple minutes while you’re preparing everything else will do the trick.
Pour the liquid watercolor paint into a small bowl. You’ll need the bowl to have at least 1/4 inch of paint in the bottom of it.
Dip the String
Place your piece of yarn into the bowl of watercolor paint, leaving about 4 inches of clean yarn outside the bowl so you can pick it up later.
Use a fork or a popsicle stick to get the yarn completely saturated with the watercolor paint. We cut wooden coffee stir sticks (from the dollar store) in half and they worked perfectly for pushing the yarn around in the paint.
Feel free to water down the paint a little if you like. The more water you add, the less bright the colors will be in your artwork.
The only color we watered down was the purple because our purple is really dark and saturated.
Fold a piece of regular printer paper in half like a book.
Place the String on the Paper
Pull the clean end of the string out of the liquid watercolor paint and lay it out on one half of the paper.
Fold the paper in half.
Then place a small box such as a tissue box on top of the paper to hold everything down. Keep in mind that a little bit of paint will end up on the bottom of the box, so I recommend using something from the recycling bin.
Pull the String Out
While pressing the top of the box down on the paper, slowly pull out the string. Make sure you pull it out as straight as you can keeping the string as close to the same position as possible.
You only need to push down on the box gently. If you press it down really hard, it will be difficult to pull out the string. So if you notice the string isn’t moving very well, release some pressure from the box.
When you’ve pulled out the entire piece of string, you can open up your creation. You’ll have mirror images of your design on each side of the paper!
It’s really addictive! We tried all sorts of designs and patterns!
The images below will show you how our various string layouts turned out.
String painting with a single color:
To make your string painting look more like flowers, cross the string over itself into a loop or two.
String painting with the string dipped in multiple colors:
This was my favorite method that made the prettiest paintings for us. Follow the same steps as above, but dip the same piece of yarn into 3 different colors.
Use the stir sticks to pull the yarn into each color. Make sure the yarn is completely covered without any gaps.
They turned out SO PRETTY!
FAIL! Here’s what DIDN’T WORK for us:
Don’t use the yarn or string more than once. When the yarn is super saturated, you don’t get those cool looking lines coming down from the string. Just a solid block of color.
Still pretty, so not a complete fail. See the photo below.
Here’s what they look like when you layer the colors:
FAIL! LOL I’m embarrassed to even show you this next one.
I KNOW it’s possible to layer multiple string paintings on top of each other. But it just didn’t work for us.
If you decide to layer different string designs onto your artwork here’s my tips so yours turn out better than mine:
- Make sure the first painting is completely dry before you add another string design on top.
- Use thicker paper like card stock or watercolor paper so the paper doesn’t wrinkle as much.
- Check out this string art post from TinkerLab for more tips.
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