DIY Abstract Art and a New Table

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Learn how to make DIY Abstract Art on canvas with just a few simple supplies for less than $25!

The ocean stirs the heart, inspires the imagination and brings eternal joy to the soul.
                                                                           

Robert Wyland

I fell in love with the color turquoise at the ocean. The various ebbing and flowing of gorgeous color in the vastness of God’s creation is truly my happy place.

Gorgeous blue waters have the makings of an expensive abstract art piece, but it's not! It's a quick DIY project with just paint and a canvas! Less then $22 for custom, gorgeous art in your home. | Tutorial at TheTurquoiseHome.com

So, it’s fitting that I now have this pretty blue art piece sitting in my living room.

Let me back up a bit.

Maybe two years ago I fell in love with this console table. I mean, loved it. We already had a table for this spot under our gallery wall.

It was Coach’s table when we got married and his parents had bought it for their home years before. It was a lovely table and served us well, but it just wasn’t my style and didn’t seem to be a perfect fit for this space.

The beloved Everett Foyer Table - swoon!

I spotted the Everett Foyer Table on a few blogs and thought it looked beautiful. I looked it up on World Market and measured out the dimensions. It fit my space perfectly. The length was just right and it was more narrow than the table we had.

Gorgeous blue waters have the makings of an expensive abstract art piece, but it's not! It's a quick DIY project with just paint and a canvas! Less then $22 for custom, gorgeous art in your home. | Tutorial at TheTurquoiseHome.com

Fast forward a couple of years. I decided to save up my birthday money to buy the World Market table. I saved up enough to combine with what I made from selling the old table and it came in the mail about a month ago. (PS – if you want it too and it’s out of stock, just sign up to be alerted when it comes back in stock and be ready to buy it ASAP. It is super popular!)

Spring Gallery Wall | TheTurquoiseHome.com

I had already been toying with the idea of taking down the gallery wall. I arranged it soon after we moved into this house with just the frames I had on hand, when I didn’t have matching frames.

It was a hodge podge of white, black, wood, plastic, clipped frames and I’ve been wanting to do something a little more cohesive for a while. I also have been wanting to put up some new pictures. Best thing to do? Just take it all down and start over.

Gorgeous blue waters have the makings of an expensive abstract art piece, but it's not! It's a quick DIY project with just paint and a canvas! Less then $22 for custom, gorgeous art in your home. | Tutorial at TheTurquoiseHome.com

I toyed with the idea of putting a mirror on the new table. But I have the huge mirror in the entry way just next to this space. And I don’t have much in the way of artwork, especially not big artwork. I didn’t have much to spend, but I remembered seeing this tutorial by my friend Sarah at Life on Virginia Street.

For this total project I spent around $22 with the paint and the canvas. The paint was 30% off and I used a 40% off coupon for the canvas – all at Hobby Lobby. I haven’t decided whether or not I’m going to frame it yet. I painted the sides of the canvas, so it looks fine for now, but I think it will look more professional if I frame it.

Miss A went back to preschool yesterday, so while Baby G was napping, I pulled out my paints and got to work.

What You’ll Need to Make DIY Abstract Art

  1. Paint (I copied Sarah and used almost the exact same paint colors from this paint line: #485 Raw Umber, #407 Kelly Green, #427 Ivory White, #2499 Skyline, #442 Baby Blue, #320 Jamaican Sea and Sea Breeze from this other paint line)
  2. Paper plate
  3. Brush – I used a 3/4″ fine painting brush, but you could use any brush, really.
  4. Canvas – mine is 24″ x 36″

That’s it!

How to Make DIY Abstract Art

Gorgeous blue waters have the makings of an expensive abstract art piece, but it's not! It's a quick DIY project with just paint and a canvas! Less then $22 for custom, gorgeous art in your home. | Tutorial at TheTurquoiseHome.com

I made a mistake right off the bat. I was trying to figure out where to kind of start and stop each color. And so I painted a little of each color on the canvas first. You don’t want to do that.

Gorgeous blue waters have the makings of an expensive abstract art piece, but it's not! It's a quick DIY project with just paint and a canvas! Less then $22 for custom, gorgeous art in your home. | Tutorial at TheTurquoiseHome.com

Start from the top or the bottom and work your way up or down, one color at a time. Sometimes I mixed the colors on the paper plate and other times I mixed them directly on the canvas. But the trick here is the keep painting while the paint is wet so that you can blend them. If they dry just a little bit it makes it difficult to blend the colors.

Gorgeous blue waters have the makings of an expensive abstract art piece, but it's not! It's a quick DIY project with just paint and a canvas! Less then $22 for custom, gorgeous art in your home. | Tutorial at TheTurquoiseHome.com

My artwork went through multiple phases. At first I went heavy on the white and really did a light and bright painting. Then I went over that with a whitewash effect (watered down white paint). But that was too washed out for the space.

Gorgeous blue waters have the makings of an expensive abstract art piece, but it's not! It's a quick DIY project with just paint and a canvas! Less then $22 for custom, gorgeous art in your home. | Tutorial at TheTurquoiseHome.com

So, I started over. And this time I worked my way from the bottom to the top and used a lot less white. I still used some, but wanted more of the color to shine through.

The beauty of a piece like this is that you can keep working with it until you get it right. There’s no timer that says you have to be done in a certain time, or that it has to look exactly a certain way.

Get creative, be free. And if you don’t like part of it, start over or paint over that one spot. I will say that you should use caution when going back over a spot that’s already dried. I did that a few times, and it totally is noticeable to me. But it gives it uniqueness, so I’m good with it. Just be aware!

Gorgeous blue waters have the makings of an expensive abstract art piece, but it's not! It's a quick DIY project with just paint and a canvas! Less then $22 for custom, gorgeous art in your home. | Tutorial at TheTurquoiseHome.com

And that’s all! I painted the whole canvas. Even the white part is painted in white paint with a touch of blue/green.

I love the colors and how they invoke the waves of the ocean. Just gorgeous. I can’t wait to style the rest of the table and figure out what I’m doing with that wall!

Have you ever tried to create some DIY art? How did it go?

Now check out how I framed it for super cheap!

Gorgeous blue waters have the makings of an expensive abstract art piece, but it's not! It's a quick DIY project with just paint and a canvas! Less then $22 for custom, gorgeous art in your home. | Tutorial at TheTurquoiseHome.com

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12 Comments

  1. Hi Laura, I am hoping to create something similar but am not very confident in my artistic abilities. Do you mind sharing your technique? Thank you!

    1. Hi Lauren, I just brushed the paints on back and forth horizontally until I liked the look. I’m not a real artist, so I’m not sure if there’s a better way to explain it! Just play around with it until you like it! At least that’s what I do! 🙂

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  3. Laura, your artwork is so beautiful, and it pairs perfectly with that table! I love abstract painting like this because it’s so hard to screw up, especially with these lovely turquoise colors!

  4. Your painting is lovely. As for the mix matched frames on the gallery wall, just take them apart and spray paint them. I think white would look good on your gray walls. I have done that with plastic frames and it turned out well.

    1. Yes, I thought about doing that, but I seriously needed to get rid of some of them (dated back to the college years). And I think I want a more cohesive look with maybe 5-6 photos. We’ll see how it turns out!! 🙂

  5. Wow, I am impressed with your painting! Makes me think even I could do that. The table is fabulous. Can’t wait to see it “dressed”. P.S. I follow another blogger who loves turquoise. She even had her PT Cruiser painted turquoise. Her blog is theglamoroushousewife.com.

    1. You totally could do it!!! I’m serious. Anyone can do this. Because of it’s abstractness, it’s almost impossible to mess it up!

    1. Thanks for the input! I did paint the sides, so I’ll live with it for a while and see how I love it (or want to change it). 🙂

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