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- Café + Art = Arfe: The Art of Coffee Painting
Café + Art = Arfe: The Art of Coffee Painting
- By Andreanne Hamel
- Published 04/6/2008
- Food and Drink
- Unrated
Andreanne Hamel
My partner Luc Cloutier and I are a team of business owners and espresso lovers, combining our passion for publishing online and our coffee affair into our espresso machines website. Our goal is to offer valuable coffee and espresso insight to individuals interested in their home espresso machine, as well as to coffee shop and restaurant owners, in a fun and entertaining way through our articles.
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If you’re a coffee lover with a creative side, or even an artist seeking a new and innovative medium to work with, you’re in luck. Painting with coffee is a unique way to incorporate the two great loves of so many – art and java.
This isn’t an entirely new practice either, even though it’s been in more recent years that painting with coffee has grown in popularity. You see, for decades now, even centuries actually, the masters have been experimenting with and utilizing shades and tones developed with brush strokes through coffee on paper to create beautiful works of art. Fantastic images of landscapes, architecture, still life, animals, portraits and more are all the result of coffee incorporated with imagination. Today, in modern times, there are even gallery shows and international competitions for this type of artistic avenue – it is appealing in a global sense for both painters and spectators alike. People are truly amazed when viewing these pieces, that they’ve been painted entirely in coffee.
e the hue of your ‘paint’ – pure, black coffee will of course provide a darker tone; add a little water and develop it into lighter colors. Simply experiment by playing and creating as many different tones as you like for shading, fill and overall effect.
Coffee also provides an artist with the ability to age not only the paper, but the overall look of the piece as well. A sepia tone effect is easily created by either dipping the whole ‘canvas’ in coffee or covering its entire surface with long, wide brush strokes before or after painting of the imagery commences. Once dried, it will give that antiqued appearance that so many in the art world adore. This method of ‘dying’ the paper also provides a wonderful sheen to the piece as well.