Every so often we are welcomed into a world of delight! This beautiful play day was organised by some homeschooling wonderwomen & shared with me. It’s got craft, dress ups, and role playing – what an adventure!
The schedule for activities is one which I have found generally works, and you can shake up the order as needed, to keep kids attention and make sure they are well fed & happy:
Offering: Have a romp around and play while the guests drift in, and once all are assembled have an offering to Krishna and all chant. It’s very encouraging to round up all the little ones for this, and give them different instruments to shake bash bang or play. Even the youngest can take part if they can shake a tamborine.
Storytime:After a kirtan, relaxed and fun, tell or read a Krishna story. Kids relate much better to something which is a lively and animated retelling, and enjoy a group story-telling session where the storyteller interacts with them and gets them involved by asking questions. We don’t have a video of this part, but we are working on a collection of Krishna storytelling videos! Stay posted.
Some jewellery ideas you can buy ready made and use or adapt to ornament your sweet Lords.
There are lots of differently sized deities, my Lord Chaitanya & Lord Nityananda deities are a glorious 53cm base to tip of arms, and I admit I was eager for this size, after years of making fiddly garments for my parents Gaura Nitai deities, who are only around 20cm.
It’s no secret that Krsna is our hero… He’s just so all-attractive! When I was lucky enough to be asked to paint this beautiful Krsna deity hand carved by an incredibly talented artist it was pretty exciting.
this isn’t an amazing diy tutorial, more of a rough process documentation!
Because, you know, like all artists I’m also insecure it took me a while and Krishna had some repaints.. I canvassed the opinion of every visitor while being coy about the progress on my personal online diary (ok I mean instagram).
There’s nothing quite as exciting as painting a Krsna statue or Deity. I don’t know if there’s anything else as daunting either!
So from the start (no I didn’t prime – why? Coz the paint dries faster and first off I was planning to leave all that beautiful wood showing through.. I soon decided against that, and there was a scary dark blue stage (not shared) which got painted over…
“What do you think of this? Does He look good?”
Well I kinda had a lovely friend over, and we decided I need to improve him. You must be crazy! Agreed. Totally bonkers.
He was pretty much perfect except a tiny detail of his eyes…
So of course when I repainted him I did one thing and another and ended up with a full repaint virtually.
When you blend your own skin color it’s probably a good idea to save some of that paint blend (for acrylics you can put plastic wrap over it & refrigerate to save it).
Painting deities is a huge commitment, a really big deal undertaking. Personally I love painting Krsna deities so much as a meditation on Krsna that all the time and tears are forgotten afterwards.
Start painting a wooden statue of Krsna straight away:
Acrylic paints
tiniest paint brushes you can. Buy. Order them online if you can’t find them small enough. It’s critical to get tiny eye details. As a note on paintbrushes quality matters. I have found Windsor newton brushes the most reliable because the paintbrush hairs don’t split off. You pay about $10 per brush so you really don’t want it to fray on you after a week of use.
Lots of time
Reference picture of Krsna is always a plus! I had a beautiful picture of murli I was looking at but then really that beautiful pic of Krsna bringing water to his devotee.. I’ll try & find a pic to show.
If necessary you can lightly sand the wood. The nicest surface will be completely smooth. You may have the opposite problem and need to actually strip a clear varnish off the wood, if you have bought a Krsna deity who has been heavily varnished. “forget perfection just aim for the best you can do” Seriously you could do this for years if you chase the dream of perfection. Krsna is so sweet He is a delight to look at, even if you’re not the worlds most talented artist (or anywhere close).
Decide if you are going to completely paint the wooden Krsna deity/ statue or if you are going to leave some of the wood shining through (I do really like that look, it’s beautiful, you see it in a lot of Christmas natural carved statues).
Lay down the base skin coat first. You may need a couple of layers to acheive the depth and brilliance you like. My favorite shade of blue (coastal blue) is so watery and thin I think it takes about 5 coats before it looks good.
Allow decent drying times!
If you’re antsy like me you can use a heat gun. Pure genius.
Next work on your eyes, for me I feel like painting Krishna’s eyes is super important to get them done asap, it informs everything else, the angle of His smile, the cheek coloration, etc etc.
Then it’s open slater anything goes do whatever area you like.
After that I would start laying in any shading or colors you want, I love to make Krsna look all fresh and youthfully innocent, like He’s just about to run off and play with the cowherd boys or girls.
Next paint in his lips/ features/ hair.
Once dry and you have made any required corrections lacquer using a polyurethane varnish but be careful!Two coats might cause him to have a sheen. I wasn’t thrilled when this Krsna developed a glossy look after two coats of lacquer, totally my fault for not testing enough. I have three bottles of Jo Sonja lacquer and I always forget which does what. Think I’d better label them with notes!
*I am not an expert I’m an enthusiast! I still learn as I go (ergo the total repaint which all to often occurs!) So please, use common sense and if you can think of a better way to do something, or a step I’ve missed in the process, then you should do that.