Wednesday, September 26, 2012

He Came Bearing Gifts of Painted Rocks

With the holidays approaching, small painted stones make great gifts and travel well.

My husband took a trip back East to visit family and friends after a 10-year absence. I did not accompany him but wanted to let everyone know I missed them and was thinking of them. A variety of painted stone gifts transported in an egg carton was the perfect solution.

Getting through airline security can be problematic, however, the stones were light enough and the egg carton compact enough to fit in a carry-on bag and go through security with no problem. I wrote "painted stones" on the carton in case questions arose as to the contents.

A plain egg carton transported small painted rocks

At the family get-together, my husband placed the egg carton on a table and surprised the group by opening the lid to expose a painted rock menagerie smiling up at them.

painted rocks, gifts, rock painting, Cindy Thomas
A collection of painted gift rocks
The egg carton was passed around and each family member chose the painted stone they liked best. Some comments about the painted stone gifts sent in my absence were:
  • Thank YOU Cindy for the wonderful gift of stones!
  • Thanks for sending so many NICE SAMPLES !!!!!
  • Thank you so much for my cute gift.

A great gift idea for kids, especially at Halloween or Easter, is painted mystery rocks in an egg carton. Imagine their surprise as they open the carton expecting eggs and see this instead.

painted rocks, eggs, mystery, carton, Cindy Thomas
Surprise - it's not eggs in that carton


As Cathy A. Malchiodi states in The Soul's Palette: Drawing on Art's Transformative Powers: "It would be indeed revolutionary if each of us could offer one small act of art to another person...a single act that eventually "pays it forward" in ways that often cannot be predicted or planned."


My painted rock gifts were a small act of art kindness which, similar to a stone skipped into a lake, created ever-widening circles of smiles.


© Cindy Thomas Painted Rocks

Monday, September 24, 2012

What is a Person Who Paints Rocks?

Am I an artist? Am I a crafter?

I've never known what to consider myself and my rock painting and this informative infographic has the answer.


Careers in Art by Madison Art Shop


I'm a craft artist.  What are you?

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Painted Rocks on Facebook

Painted Rocks by Cindy Thomas is now on Facebook.

painted rocks, rock painting, Facebook, Cindy Thomas
Painted Rocks Fan Page

On my painted rocks fan page you can:
  • See the projects I'm working on and those completed
  • Get rock painting tips and ideas
  • Post and share your comments
  • See albums of painted rocks
  • Read my latest blog posts
  • Follow my Pinterest boards
  • Follow me on Twitter
  • Connect to my painted rocks shop and other sites
  • Smile and be delighted

Here's a FB post from 9/15/2012:

"The goal: paint all of these rocks this weekend."
Visit my fan page to discover if I reached the goal set on 9/15/2012 and Like me or leave a post
Allow me to delight your heart and bring a smile to your face.
© Cindy Thomas Painted Rocks

Friday, September 14, 2012

How to Paint Water Droplets on Rocks and Stones

A droplet of water adds a little "something extra" to a painted rock or stone.

Cynthia Snider generously shared her illustrated, step-by-step lesson for painting water droplets.

Something extra would be nice here

Step 1

Step 2

Step 3

Step 4

Step 5

Following Cynthia's steps, here are my results. I painted the water droplets on paper first to get the hang of it and then painted the rock.

My 1st water droplets on paper

painted rocks, rock painting, water, droplets, how to
My water droplets painted on a rock

painted rocks, rock painting, water, droplets, how to
Another view of my water droplets painted on a rock


Jewels and gems can also be painted using Cynthia Snider's technique. 

Cynthia painted jewels on her fence

Closeup of Cynthia's fence jewel

Thank you for sharing your lesson, Cynthia Snider. You're a great teacher!


© Cindy Thomas Painted Rocks

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

How to Paint Gems and Pearls on Rocks

I thought gems and pearls painted on rocks could be eye catching and this easy lesson courtesy of Elaine Benfatto helped me understand how to paint them.


"How to draw a gem" by Elaine Benfatto "urbanspinner"

Although this is a drawing lesson, I figured it could also work with rocks and acrylic paints.

First, I ran through the steps using paint on paper.

My attempt at gems painted on paper

My attempt at pearls painted on paper

I thought the painted gems and pearls looked pretty good on paper so I tried the techniques on one of my round rocks. 

I used the same acrylic paint colors for both the gems and the pearls and used the different shading methods Elaine demonstrated.

painted rocks, rock painting, how to, gems
Gems painted on one side of a rock

painted rocks, rock painting, how to, gems
Pearls painted on the other side of a rock

My thoughts on painting gems and pearls on rocks:
  • A Micron pen may be better than black paint and a liner brush to outline each circle for both the gems and pearls
  • When painting gems, the paint must be thinned with the correct amount of water to achieve the graduated shading referred to in the lesson (I considered using white paint but thought allowing the rock to show through would be better)
  • I wasn't sure what paint color to use for the drop shadows on the rock so I chose gray
  • My pearls remind me of candy
  • I will keep practicing this technique -- stones painted with pearls and gems would definitely be "eye-catching" when placed in unexpected places.

Coming soon: How to paint water droplets on rocks.

Do you have tips or suggestions for painting gems and pearls on rocks? Please leave a comment.

© Cindy Thomas Painted Rocks