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Beginners guide to graff..
What you will need :
Paint.
Oh really. However there are a fuck of a lot of different
types of paint so here's a few pointers:
You can tat paint very easily from scrap
stores, just-decorated houses, peoples sheds, car sprayers etc.
You can use virtually anything.
Brush paints:
come in several flavours. All of which are preferable to spray
cans as they are not so environmentally damaging. We generally
block the piece in using emulsion and then outline & highlight
it using cans (if its in a dodgy place, or if its small) or more
brush paint if we have time. Emulsion (or any other water
based paint) is crap in the rain. Otherwise, it lasts a fair while
and you can spray on top of it while its still wet. This is very
handy. Masonry paint has all these advantages, being water
based, but also lasts literally a lifetime. rrrowwrrr. You can
get the colour you want made up in shops. Emulsion tends to be
boring colours, but you can get fucking wicked coloured concentrated
dyes from paint shops that will dye a swimming pool full of white
emulsion pink / purple / whatever. Powder / poster paint also
mixes with anything water based These are quite cheap to get hold
of. Emulsion and masonry paint are quite easy to tat, from scrap
stores or people who have been redecorating. Masonry paint is
more expensive to buy than emulsion, twenty quid for five litres
ish.

Brush paint is especially
good for big areas. Costs less and pollutes less. This piece is
all done with brush paint.
Gloss:
lasts fucking ages and you can use it in the rain - but you can't
spray over it till it dries (3 hours ish - come back tomorrow
night) and you have to use white spirit to get rid of it / wash
brushes. Beware, it can be very runny. Gloss is expensive if you
buy it (six quid a litre ish? not sure) but easily tattable.
Spray cans:
Make these plan B, coz they are
seriously toxic and totally unrecycleable. But, if you are painting
in a busy place they are extremely quick (speshly if you are using
stencils) and come in super sexy colours. They are also very clean,
speshly if you wear gloves. Most car spray paints are crap. But,
there are bitumen based blacks and a few other colours designed
to cover bodywork chips that cover well and the blacks do not
come off. There is one particular make called stonechip that
you can get in black and white that is very shexy. With
a New York fat cap (see next section) it comes out nice and slow,
never drips, covers everything and is perfect for outlines. Art
sprays are hard-ish to get hold of and cost about £3.50
for a 400 ml can. You can get em in most large (UK) cities in
record shops. Maybe its obvious, but spraying inside stinks.
Nozzles (caps): Before you go out,
make sure you've got the caps you need. Not having the right cap
renders your spraycan useless. Fiddly little buggers. There are
basically two types. Fat and skinny. Keep a few of each on you
when you're out. Unfortunately all the makes of spray fit different
caps. Working out which fits what is just trial and error. When
you buy cans, get say five of each type that they sell (they're
usually about 20p each) and experiment. When you buy art sprays,
the nozzle they come with is usually fine, with car / plasticote
sprays (not recommended anyway coz they're shit and really seriously
poisonous to our planet) the nozzles are often crap. After using
the can, either turn it upside down (so paint doesn't come out)
and spray propellant through the cap to clear it, or take the
cap off and blow through it. I prefer blowing coz it gives you
multicoloured hard wearing lipstick. Some caps, for instance the
New York skinny cap, don't fit on many cans because of a ridge
of plastic about half way up the tube. You can shave this off
with a craft knife to make 'em fit.

mmm. Rollers...
It
is our mission to bring on roller use to the masses.
Rollers
are fucking cool.
You can get 3/4 inch ones that
are really good for smaller funky writing. Big ones are good for
massive pieces. You don't really need a tray. Overalls are
good though if you don't want to travel home covered in paint.
Look after the rollers well, coz once they go hard you can't really
use em.
Brushes:
are slow, so I don't use them so much (fiddly things, outlining,
or alongside rollers if the surface is super uneven.) But there
is one pixi who only ever uses a brush and it works fine anywhere
thats not too on-top. Wicked for legal walls. Brushed graffiti
looks super-cool I reckon. Fuck spray-paint snobs. Brushes are
where its at.
Gloves:
You can get latex ones from car part shops. You can nick not latex
ones from hospitals. Remember to take them off after you've finished.
I guess they're used to it, but if you forget you'll get funny
looks when you're buying milk off the milkman at five in the morning.
Stencils:
Easy to make from photocopies. Use acetate, card or lino, even
thick paper and have some kind of folder to put them in (plastic
folders are best as card sticks and rips easy). You'll need to
gaffa them to the wall if you are on your own. Mind they don't
stick to the folder when the paint is wet.
Pens:
You can get wet chalk pens for writing on shop windows and black
boards. They don't come of when they dry unless you scrubb 'em.
We got them from friends working in offies. You can get them in
motorists shops. They don't work at all in the wet, or on porous
surfaces. Good for the inside of bus stops, sitex, that sort of
thing. Worth carrying one around with you. Permanent markers work
too, but they're small and generally black.
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Surface / Location:
You can paint on virtually anything,
don't restrict yourself to walls and trains.. Knowing which paint
to use on which surface is trial and error. As a general guide
tho:
concrete - good. Its
butt ugly anyway so you can't go wrong. Its also about the right
smoothness and porousness. Spray paint will soak into very porous
surfaces, so it is good to put a layer of emulsion on first as
a primer. Metal (trains, buses, sitex) - good. Watch
for serious drippage though. Same with the shiny subway surfaces.

Looking into Campsfield Immigration Detention
Centre.
So far as locations go, be as imaginative
and cheeky as possible. You might wanna do a quick piece where
loads of people will see it, like a motorway bridge, or a more
detailed piece where people will stop and have a look, like down
an alley / carpark / river bridge. Try bus stops, cash points,
bins, walls, pavements, garage doors, roofs, billboards, the cenotaph,
10 Downing street, Fur shops, Posh hotels, Embassies, Mc Donald's,
etc. etc. The more you have to pretend to be a ninja, the more
fun it is. For example...some pixies snuck, (all the time
pretending to be ninjas..) inside Campsfield
Immigration Detention Centre and wrote FREEDOM
on an inner wall facing the inmates sleeping quarters, some more
wrote anti-nuke stuff all around the Aldermarston
Military base.

Glimpse of hope from inside.
www.closecampsfield.org.uk
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Hints:
Take a mate. Its more fun, and then
you have a lookout. Know what you're going to paint before you
get there; you don't want to be hanging around trying to think
of something. Sometimes it helps to carry a drawing around with
you. If in doubt, have a few quickies in the back of your mind
incase of mental block. Anti-war slogans, local campaigns, web
addresses (URL's) are good. Organise yo'self, make sure you got
all the nozzles, colour etc. and you know where they are. Remember
something to open paint tins with. Don't paint too much stuff
near your house. it'll make you paranoid.
It'll be dark when you're out..
so write in big letters on your paint cans what colour it is.
Saves lighter fuel.
Booze...get
the mixture right - too much alkeehol and your piece
will look shit. Whether or not you remember doing it, it'll still
be there in the morning (in the busiest, CCTV'd, most on-top spot
next to the cop shop on the high street..) and all your mates
will know it was you. Live with the shame, or risk community service
and go and paint over it tomorrow night...Too little booze
is just as dodgy if you are as gutless as I am, coz you'll hardly
ever paint anywhere really cheeky..If you are twatted, then just
take a stencil and one can and you can't go too far wrong.
One Crime at a time I reckon
is a good guide, you don't wanna get pulled over for having no
lights on yer bike when your covered from head to foot in paint
carrying all your stencils and wearing latex housebreaking gloves.
Might as well leave your drugs at home aswell. Also its a good
idea to keep your house free of incriminating stuff, even sketches.
Especially if your house is likely to get busted anyway. May sound
paranoid, but people do get seriously nicked for painting sometimes.
Years in a few cases. Even if you don't get charged you don't
want the hassle of having the police kicking your door in at three
in the morning.
Back to the
TOP (Fairplay. You read the whole lot.)
>>INDEX
I know all that crap. I just wanna look
at the >>PICTURES
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