Kyse Report post Posted September 4, 2016 I have spent hours with a backgrounding tool a114. I have tried watching videos and reading everything I can find. My issue is that everything I do leaves tool marks or ends up looking smashed down because I have to go over it so many times. Please help! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ferg Report post Posted September 4, 2016 Photo of your work would help. Ferg Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kyse Report post Posted September 4, 2016 (edited) This is just one of many scraps that I have worked on. I have tried to dampen then let dry a bit and even tried the next day. I have tried different mallets, angles, how hard I strike. I just feel like I'm doing the same thing over and over expecting that practice will make perfect but it's been everyday for a week and it's like I just started. Edited September 4, 2016 by Kyse Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DJole Report post Posted September 4, 2016 (edited) So that's a pear backgrounder, right? I can see your frustration! Here's some things that might help: 1) small 'steps' of the tool-- at least 3/4 to 1/2 overlap 2) not too much pressure-- it's a shader,not a stamp. 3) realizing that it will take a couple of passes before the pattern becomes randomized. Go left to right, then right to left, trying to overlap just enough to slowly blend in the tool marks. I don't use this tool very often, but the times I have used it, the above have helped. You have one line (just to the right and down a bit of the center of the photo), right along the edge of a "scale," with the shader vertical, which looks like a good start. Edited September 4, 2016 by DJole Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JMWendt Report post Posted September 6, 2016 That tool doesn't walk as well as a 101, 104, 105. I tend to use the 114 for small corners of things, not whole areas that need backgrounded. You've got the hang of it on some of your samples. It's backgrounding . . . it should never look "perfect" . . . it should just push the things that aren't backgrounded to the front. You don't have anything in the front on your practice piece, so it can't look that good. Carve a flower, tool the flower, then background the stuff that isn't flower. You'll be surprised how much better it looks. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites