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How to Make an Artistic Clay Mask: Video Series | eHow Videos. Learn how to make an artistic clay mask out of porcelain clay, in this free ceramics video tutorial. Clay masks are among the many works of art created by ceramic artists. There are innumerable ways to make an artistic clay mask. Changing the size of mask, the type of mold you use, the facial features, and letting your artistic creativity run wild will allow you to create a new and unique artistic clay mask every time.

If you would like to learn how to make clay masks, you can learn for free, online, from one of our ceramic experts. In this free online video series, learn how to make a pottery clay mask from ceramics expert Susan Ting. Susan will show you how to cut clay from the block and how to use the slab roller to roll out the clay to make a clay mask. Learn how to mold a pottery mask out of porcelain clay in this free ceramics video tutorial.

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Below The Horizon Line. Geometry in composition. PDF version In the previous Lessons, we've gone over some general principles about making photographs. The first lesson, the Rule of Thirds, introduced a widely usable principle that helps decide *where to put the subject*. The second one, Simplicity, was about taking out what's unnecessary and concentrating on the important. The third one, The Phony Subject, was about *adding* something to a picture to make it more interesting or dynamic. The previous lessons have more or less taken the subject, or main interest, of the photograph as a given. We're going to look at geometrical elements, and how to use them in a composition. What is it for? Geometrical elements are rarely very good as subjects, primary or secondary. 1.

A leading line does what it says: it leads the eye from one part of the picture to another: from the foreground to the background, the secondary subject to the main subject (but very rarely the other way round). 2. 3. What does it mean? Diagonals Triangles Arcs S-curves and. Texture Gallery: Textures created with acrylic paint.