Schoolwork Accomplished:
Jacob:
*Layers: Early Medieval Art-metalworking and Sutton Hoo Helmet-1 hour, 30 min.
*Algebra-30 min.
*Silent Reading-T & E-30 min.
*Beowulf-30 min.
*Health: 30 min.
*Viking pages-30 min.
*Layers American revolution videos-35 min.
*Duolingo-5 min.
Daily Totals: English: 1 hour; Math: 30 min.; World History: 30 min. American History: 35 min.; Art: 1 hour, 30 min; Health: 30 min.; German: 5 min. Total Hours: 4 hours, 40 min.
Lorelei:
*Walk to Walgreens- 40 minutes
*Layers: Early Medieval Art- metalworking and Sutton Hoo Helmet- 1 hour, 40 minutes
*elf page- 30 minutes
*gym- 40 minutes
*sketching- 1 hour
*crochet- 20 minutes
*writing- 1 hour, 40 minutes
*math- 40 minutes
Daily Totals: English: 1 hour, 40 min.; Math: 40 min.; Art: 3 hours, 30 min.; Gym: 1 hour, 20 min. Total Hours: 7 hours, 10 min.
Option 1: Use acrylic paint (best, easiest substitute)
Why: Closest match in texture, opacity, and durability.
How:
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Paint directly on the wood — it’ll adhere fine.
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If the wood is very raw or rough, you can brush on a thin layer of watered-down white acrylic first as a primer.
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Acrylic dries quickly and cleans up with water.
✅ Result: Looks nearly identical to tempera, safe, and school-appropriate.
Option 2: Make egg tempera (historical but perfectly usable)
Why: This is actually the original form of tempera used in art history.
How:
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Crack one egg and separate the yolk.
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Pierce the yolk’s membrane and drain the liquid yolk into a small cup.
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Mix with equal parts water.
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Stir in powdered pigment, watercolor paint, or even acrylic paint until you get a creamy consistency.
✅ Result: Very smooth, matte, fast-drying, permanent paint that bonds beautifully to wood.
Option 3: Homemade “school tempera”
Why: Works if you want a non-egg, washable version.
How:
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Mix 1 tablespoon cornstarch or flour with a small splash of cold water to make a paste.
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Slowly add ½ cup hot water, stirring until it thickens slightly.
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Divide into small cups and tint with watercolor, food coloring, or even a dab of acrylic.
✅ Result: Matte, opaque color similar to classroom tempera; not as durable, but totally fine for assignments.
For your project:
Since you’re gold leafing a photo on it, the idea is probably to:
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Print or tape a photo underneath the transparency.
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Then apply gold leaf on the surface of the clear sheet in specific areas (like highlights or halos).
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The transparency lets light through, so the gold stands out against the image behind it.
If you don’t have one on hand, you can substitute with:
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A page protector cut open and laid flat.
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Clear plastic packaging (like from a toy box or baked goods container) as long as it’s clean and smooth.
✅ If you tape or mount the photo behind the sheet protector
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Light will still come through the clear areas of the plastic, and your gold leaf will shine nicely.
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This is the closest effect to what’s intended with a transparency sheet.
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You can secure the photo with a few small bits of tape on the back or edges so it’s not fully glued down.
⚠️ If you glue or print the photo onto the sheet protector
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Light will not pass through wherever the ink or photo paper covers the plastic — only around it.
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You’d lose the “transparency” effect, though the gold will still look metallic.
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Most glues also cloud the plastic a little, so it might look hazy.
🔧 Best compromise (if you only have sheet protectors):
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Cut one open so you have a single clear sheet.
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Slide your photo underneath it or tape it lightly from the back.
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Apply the gold leaf to the top surface of the plastic.
That
gives you the same result as using true transparency film — crisp,
reflective gold that can catch light through or around the image.
1️⃣ Gather your materials
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Gold leaf sheets (imitation or real)
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Adhesive — you have two main options:
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Special gilding adhesive (“size”) — best option, stays tacky until you apply the leaf.
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OR a thin coat of slightly watered-down Mod Podge or clear acrylic medium (works fine for school projects).
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Soft brush (for applying adhesive)
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Dry, soft paintbrush (for pressing down and brushing away excess leaf)
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Optional: Cotton gloves or tissue to handle the gold leaf (it tears easily)
2️⃣ Prep the surface
3️⃣ Apply adhesive
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Use a small brush to paint adhesive only on the areas you want gold.
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Keep it thin — too much and it’ll smudge.
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Wait about 30 seconds to 1 minute (or per label) until it feels tacky, not wet.
4️⃣ Apply the gold leaf
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Lay the gold leaf gently over the tacky spots.
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Use your dry brush to press it down softly and brush off the excess.
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Don’t breathe too close — the leaf is extremely light and floats away easily.
5️⃣ Clean up and seal (optional)
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Once the gold is adhered, you can gently brush or rub the surface with a soft cloth to smooth it out.
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If you want to protect it from flaking, apply a very light coat of Mod Podge or spray sealer over the top once it’s fully dry.
Tip:
If you’re layering the gold over a printed photo beneath the plastic,
try leaving a few clear areas around it — light shining through will
make the gold look more luminous.