Tutorial: Water Marble Nail Art

♥♥♥**Please Read me for more details on products used, and info! **♥♥♥ Hey loves, ♥ Check out my online store for affordable fashion clothing, accessories, makeup and more: glamboutique.weebly.com ♥Check out my boyfriend’s new online store monkiesplayground.weebly.com for cute affordable erasers!! ♥My facebook! Ask me questions here and get updates! http Today I’m going to be showing you how to do this super unique and pretty marbling/ marble nail art design, and it is actually really fun to do because it involves dripping the nail polish into water to get a super pretty marbling effect!! 🙂 I really hope this helps you out or gives you some inspiration! Thank you so much for watching ! Have fun and good luck. If you do try this out, let me know what color combos you used! 🙂 Products used: – OPI Done out in Deco – OPI Glamour Game – OPI The color to watch – ELF eyeslipsface Smokey Brown – ELF Desert Haze – Vasaline – Cue Tips – Napkins to wipe your fingers! – Water (make sure its room temp!!! not cold!) – Disposable container/ cup xoxo, Kathleen

How to Price Your Artwork

If you are just starting out as a professional visual artist and you have a good body of work that you’d like to sell, but you don’t know how to begin when it comes to pricing your art….here are a few pointers that might be helpful! *Note: I do try to respond to everyone in the comments, but sometimes it takes me a while! My website: ArtByCedar.com A few footnotes I wanted to add after receiving some helpful feedback from other artists: The price examples I give are for gallery-wrapped canvases, ie unframed. So for me, the cost of framing is not a factor. If you frame your work, you will have to add your framing costs onto your retail price (obviously, or you wouldn’t make a profit!) In this case I’d probably still price by size to start with, then tack on the framing costs afterwards. I’ve seen many artists that have 2 prices for each piece they sell, a framed price & an unframed price. I think that’s a smart way to do things, as many galleries and collectors may prefer to frame a piece themselves. (But of course this all depends on your work–the frame you choose may be of integral importance to the work.) A note about size: looking through the goggles of my own situation, I hadn’t even considered how low /inch would be for very small sizes, since the smallest size I typically work in is 20″ x 20″. If you make smaller paintings, you’ll want to start higher than /square inch. (A 5″x7″ painting for would be ridiculously low for most painters–except possibly if