 Hi guys it's Jasmine from Art Resin and I'm gonna show you how to do window painting today. So this is this is just an old window it's a double pane of glass here with layers of art resin on both sides tinted with resin tint and it looks good here if I do say so but it looks really good in front of the window it just absolutely lights up because it's all translucent back here just lights on fire so I'm gonna show you how to take just a regular old to grab a glass like this and do a fun window painting with it all right we can get started so here's my pane of glass I'm gonna probably do this one horizontal obviously you can do either so the first thing you're gonna do before we start anything else is clean it off this was like absolutely filthy when it started so we can start creating and the first step is gonna be painting a foreground on the front and then a background in the back and the reason why we're gonna do that is because you got this really nice double pane of glass like this so it's gonna really create a lot of depth in our picture you're gonna be able to see that the the backgrounds farther away from the the front ground and it just looks really nice so I'll show you how that works I think today I'm gonna paint just a landscape I think they're really nice you can use water-based ink alcohol ink even just acrylic paint I really like using the ink because it just gives like a more like abstract interesting feeling the important thing about this is you're gonna want to choose a composition that doesn't fill up your entire space because you want to leave a lot of background area so that you can see the resin pour because that's really gonna be the star of the show here not your foreground so I chose this thing because you see how it just really captures the idea of a tree so I just find it really inspiring to go along and kind of let the tree you know pick itself out of the ink okay so I'm gonna try and work on the background now so the foreground is still drying if it's like really wet still you probably don't want to do this because it's gonna like drip down but number one it looks really cool when it drips down and two mine's not very wet so it's okay in this case so turn it around so now I'm looking at the back here and I obviously I can see all my stuff through it right so I'm just gonna take this like spongy brush and back here I'm going to put in a whole bunch of little trees to make it look like there's like a really far away and like down low like this cliff here is hanging over a valley or something it doesn't have to be like detailed at all because it's so far away right so I love it now our ink is dry on the front so I'm gonna come back with the paint marker to like kind of fill in the trees a little bit so I don't want to put this stuff down on the paper again so I'll just use these little cups to hold it up so the ink is on there pretty tenuously right now so you don't want to like come like scraping through with your marker so you just you want to be delicate with it so you don't like it off and I think that looks really great so we're done with this stuff and I'll show you what's next okay so now we have our trees painted and our backgrounds laid so we're gonna tape up the edges and that's just gonna keep all the resin from sliding off and then we're gonna mix up some resin and we're gonna tint it and we'll pour it on and that'll create our sky background all right so we're gonna mix up some art resin with our regular wonderland ratio here and you stir it for three minutes scraping the sides on the bottom so I'm gonna pour it into each of these individual cups and then to those cups we're gonna add our resin tin and that'll make up all the different colors that are gonna be part of our sky okay so I think I'm gonna do like a purple to indigo to kind of teal color so I'm gonna start with a few drops of neon pink in this one and I'm gonna take the neon blue and add some of that so this is a nice color but you'll notice when I like bring it up onto the walls of the cup you'll see that it's almost clear so you want to keep that in mind so when it's poured over the whole thing it's gonna be a lot thinner so you're gonna have to add a lot more color into your cup you can see like how it's super dark in the cup but then if I bring it up in here it's just like a nice plum color that's what it's gonna look like all right let's move on to our next cup here it's a nice periwinkle blue so you'll notice I used neon blue and neon pink to mix this up and not regular blue and red to try and make this so the pink kind of tones it down a bit makes it a little look a little softer and now I'm gonna go for like a teal you want to be careful you want to make sure that the green isn't overpowering all right and now we're gonna be moving on to our next cup here so we're gonna add white to this cup there's not very much resin in it because we don't need very much resin this is gonna look like the clouds it's just gonna be a whole different aspect to differentiate between these more translucent colors so I'm gonna do this and I'm gonna actually I'm gonna tint it just very light blue okay now this next cup over here I'm gonna be adding glitter because I think once it gets all mixed in it looks like very organic looking canopy of stars in the in the sky okay so we got our colors mixed up and now it's time to pour on to our background there's no right or wrong here it's really about being creative it's really about finding the patterns that speak to you it's really about being loose as an artist and feeling what you like and seeing it come to life in front of you definitely experiment so have a lot of fun with it okay so I'm gonna add glitter here so the glitter sinks to the bottom so don't add a big glob of it in one spot just sort of scatter it through and then I'm gonna add a whole bunch of clear and it's just really gonna open up cells and colors and it's gonna look super cool I promise so you can kind of move the colors around now using a hairdryer or by blowing on it and I'm just gonna blow on it right now so here we go so insignificant well now that I'm all out of breath let's start it so the great part about using resin tint is that it's non-flyable so you can torch it when you're finished which is really nice and then you get rid of all the bubbles but you don't have to be too concerned about things landing in here having any sort of imperfections because this is the back of your piece all right well we're finished up here usually at this stage without a cover but this is actually the back of our piece so it doesn't really matter so I'm just gonna leave it out and I'll come back to it tomorrow hey guys we're back so here it is today I think that it looks really good I really like the colors and how they transition so the only thing that I did off-camera was I added a layer of resin to the front here and the reason for that is you see where all these like drips come through from the back these snuck through the tape while we poured our back so once we have this layer of resin on the front we're safe to grind these off so you're just gonna want to take a belt sander or palm sander or Dremel or even just a grinder and you're just gonna buzz these right off but you don't have to worry about your art it's gonna be all protected because it's covered in a nice layer of resin and then don't worry about scratching it up because we pour another layer on top it's gonna restore like the shine and everything it'll be beautiful again so we have our piece I think it looks really great over here but let's find out what it looks like in front of the window all right so here it is in front of the window I absolutely love it it really glows it's not even a particularly sunny day and you can see it really glows like a real sunrise so do your glass art put it in the window and it's super impressive I absolutely love them so thanks for watching bye for now