Традиционное искусство Эбру – это завораживающее зрелище! Тайна нанесения красок на поверхность воды, игра красок, их танец на воде. Эбру – это необычно, очень красиво и вдохновляюще!
Всем, кто еще не пробовал рисовать на воде, очень рекомендуем прикоснуться к этому искусству и попробовать эбру в Запорожье! Получается у всех!
Подарок на День Рождения – Эбру (мастер-класс по рисованию на воде) в Запорожье (Chipcha Art). Ваш подарок будет лучшим и самым запоминающимся!
For our English speaking friends
In English read below:
Hello everyone! Did you know that
Although 19th century books contain some of the best examples of marbled papers, the history of marbling began several centuries earlier. Suminagashi, a Japanese form of marbling, dates back at least to the 1100s. Ground sumi inks were floated on water, then lifted onto paper. The random patterns formed were revered for the way they emulated natural phenomena such as the waves created by wind in fields of grain.
The type we are more familiar with, Turkish marbling, was developed in 15th century Persia, and called ebru (cloud art) by the early artisans. More tightly controlled, it lay within the middle eastern artistic tradition of complex overall patterning. While marbling spread to Europe by the 17th century, the process remained a closely guarded secret known only to a few. For the next 300 years, marbling was primarily connected with the bookbinding trade, decorating endpapers, book covers and the edges of the pages.
Changing tastes and the continuing secretiveness of marblers combined to make marbling an almost lost art by the 1930s, but a great revival of interest began in the '70s. One reason for the current popularity of marbled motifs is the beautiful complexity of the colors and patterns-they cause one to ask "How do they do that?" What most people don't realize is how easy paper marbling actually is, and how quickly the basics, at least, can be learned.
Simply put, marbling consists of floating paints on a surface of thickened liquid, manipulating them to create patterns, then lifting the patterns onto prepared paper.
[url=