So here’s the deal: I’d rather you know how to draw to get your image onto your canvas, but not everyone feels that way. And let’s face it—some images are just too hard or time consuming to draw by hand. My hope is that you’ve already gone through all the drawing section and you’re just here because you’re so excited to start painting. With that said, I’ll share some quick and dirty secrets to getting your image on canvas without having to actually draw (much).
First—some art history!
During the Renaissance (and a little before…and a little after), artists would paint large frescoes on walls. They didn’t have high tech equipment to help them get their small drawing into a large fresco, so they would copy their drawing onto a large piece of thick, heavy paper the same size as the wall where the fresco was to go. When the drawing (called a “Cartoon”) was complete, the artist would poke holes along the outlines, hold the drawing up to the fresco wall and, using a bag of soot, would “pounce” over the holes. When they were finished and pulled the cartoon away from the wall, they would have a perfect outline of their drawing. Most cartoons were covered up by frescoes, but some were never completed and can still be seen today, like the Raphael Cartoons in London.
Check out the Raphael Cartoons: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raphael_Cartoons
http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/t/raphael-cartoons-history-of-the-cartoons/
There are a lot of reports that artists like Vermeer and Caravaggio used a camera obscura to get their images onto canvas. Two centuries before the invention of the modern camera, Caravaggio turned his studio into a giant camera obscura by making a small hole in one wall of his studio.
When light entered through that hole, whatever was on the other side of the wall was projected into the studio and while the image was upside down, color and proportion were preserved perfectly. I know you’re thinking that’s more like a projector than a camera, since cameras record things.
Well, some of Caravaggio’s paintings have recently been found to contain mercury salt, a light-sensitive chemical that’s used in film. That means that the image that was being projected onto his canvas was also being recorded. Unfortunately, the image didn’t record indefinitely, so Caravaggio had to sketch the image as it was being projected. The image was only visible when the studio was in complete darkness, so in order to see his paint, Caravaggio mixed barium sulfate into his lead white paint to make it luminous enough to see in the darkened studio. Genius!
Read the article here: Was Caravaggio The First Photographer?
If you haven’t seen the movie Tim’s Vermeer, I highly recommend it. In it, they talk extensively about Vermeer and his purported use of the camera obscura. Go rent it!
Transfer Paper
This is sold at just about any art store and is a sheet of paper with graphite (like pencil lead) on one side. It comes in white and black (or dark grey, really) and can be purchased in a roll like saran wrap or in a sheet. It is reusable, so you can use the same piece over and over again until there’s not enough graphite on it to leave a good mark (you’ll be able to tell).
With graphite transfer paper, you’ll set your canvas on your easel, then put the graphite paper with the graphite side facing the canvas and tape it in place. Then take a printed copy of the image you want on your canvas (be sure to size it correctly when you print it) and place the image on top of the graphite paper. Tape it in place also—you don’t want things sliding around as you’re working. Then using a pencil (HB works fine), trace over the printed image. When you’ve finished tracing everything on the paper, remove everything from the canvas. The image will be transferred onto the canvas.
If you’re using oil paints, you’ll want to spray the lines lightly with a little workable fixative. Graphite will leak through oil paint and eventually show through your paint.
Charcoal Transfer
This works in the same manner as graphite transfers, only with charcoal instead of graphite. If you’re anything like me, you buy transfer paper then forget where you put it or use it up and are too excited to get started to go back to the art store and buy more (yes, I did just admit to using it). What I do in a pinch is make a copy of the drawing or print out the image then rub charcoal all over the backside of it. Blow off any excess charcoal dust (this can get messy) and tape the drawing to your canvas, charcoal facing the canvas. Trace the lines just like you would with the graphite transfer paper and you’ll get a copy of your drawing on your canvas. You can spray this with a little fixative to keep the lines in place as you’re painting or just dilute your paint (with acrylics, add water; with oils, use thinner) and trace over the charcoal lines. It will make whatever paint color you use the color of muddy charcoal, so just something light enough that can be easily covered over but dark enough that you can still see it. When the paint has dried, use a clean rag and flick off the excess charcoal so it doesn’t muddy the rest of your paint.
I just did this myself a few days ago. Here you can see my toned canvas with the charcoal transfer on top:
I’m working with oil paint, so now I’ll go in with a diluted (with turpentine) raw sienna and trace the lines again.
Projecting
Much like Caravaggio did, you can project your image onto canvas. For between $50 and $300, you can get an art projector.
Lots of artists love their projectors.
Some work off hard copy images (a printed version of your image) and some projectors connect to your computer so you can select an image from there. If you have a projector, you will load your image into it according to manufacturer instructions. Set your canvas up in front of it and adjust the projector’s lens until the image is in focus (the size of the image can be adjusted either by moving your canvas or with a “zoom” feature on the lens). When it’s all set up, turn out the lights and use a pencil to trace the image onto the canvas.
The woman pictured above is using a projector to put something on a wall, but it works the same way with canvas.
Gridding
Another way to transfer your image is by using the gridding method. This one does involve some drawing, but it’s much easier than trying to copy directly from observation. Make a copy of your image and starting in the lower left corner, use a ruler to mark out one-inch sections along the bottom edge of your image. Then do the same thing along the sides and top of the image. Use your ruler to connect these lines horizontally and vertically so you end up with a bunch of one-inch squares on top of your image.
Next, you’ll scale up the drawing to your canvas size. If your image is 8” x 10” and you want to get it twice that size on your 16” x 20” canvas, you’ll mark out two-inch squares on your canvas. Once you’ve finished that, you’ll start drawing the elements of the image one square at a time. This may sound intimidating, but actually when you look at the squares individually, they’re much easier to draw.
Drawing this:
is a lot scarier than drawing this:
Lightbox/Window
This won’t help you get your image onto your canvas, but it will help you trace your image if you don’t have access to a copier. A lightbox is basically a box with a translucent pane of plexiglass on top and a light inside. You place your image on top of the lightbox, turn it on, put another piece of paper over the top and voila—you can see the image through the blank piece of paper.
If you don’t have a lightbox, you can use a window. Tape your image onto a window and tape your blank piece of paper on top of it. Then trace the outlines of the image coming through!

Image source: http://squirrellyminds.com/2013/06/10/give-it-away-with-kate-j-diy-canadian-animals-nursery-art/
Check out our recommended products for getting your image onto canvas here.
Could somebody tell me: I oil painted a background onto my canvas, I plan on tracing a pattern onto it but the oil is taking forever to dry, what do I do ? Should I do backgrounds in acrylic, trace the pattern then continue to oil paint my picture ?
Hi Camille,
Yes, you can paint the background in with acrylics then oil paint on top of it if you want to have a faster drying ground or underpainting. Just remember that you can’t do it the other way around! Acrylic paint on top of oil will crack.
If you want to use only oils, you can thin out the first layer of paint with a lot of OMS or Gamsol and it will dry much faster.
Hope this helps!
I am wondering if I am violating copyright laws if I cut a photo from NYTimes and put it in my painting??
Hi Cynthia,
This is an excellent question. The short answer is yes. Copyright law in art is a very tricky subject! You should definitely credit the photographer if you use a reference image, especially from such a recognizable place like the NY Times. I am not a lawyer and this is in no way legal advice. I would say that if you’re just practicing painting and it stays in your home with little exposure to the public, you’re probably okay to use the photo for reference. If you plan on showing the piece in a gallery or selling it, you should obtain permission from the photographer before using the image. There are some instances in which you do not need to obtain permission that fall under “fair use” (see here: https://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/fair-use/what-is-fair-use/) but even that can be a slippery slope. Proceed with caution and use your best judgment. Remember, whatever the medium, we are all artists and we should respect each other’s work.
Hope this helps!
I am wanting to transfer a sketch onto a canvas, using transfer paper, after which I want to paint in oil. I gather from this article I can spray some workable fixative on the transferred sketch and proceed with applying oil mediums and paints without worry of the graphite bleeding thru?
will you email your response, or do I need to check back onto your website? Thanks,
Mike Allen
Hi Mike,
I wrote you an email, but I’ll respond here too in case anyone else is looking for the same answer!
Yes, you can transfer a drawing onto the canvas with the graphite transfer paper and then use a fixative to keep it from bleeding through your oil paint. Just make sure you don’t tone your canvas with oil paint before you apply the fixative or it will cause cracks to occur in subsequent layers (because the fixative is acrylic-based, it needs to go down on the plain canvas first before any oil-based mediums, thinners, or paints).
Hope this helps!
I just discovered your website and am glad I found you. I’ve been trying to put an 8 x 10 size photo onto a 16 x 20 canvas and didn’t know how. Your gridding to transfer I’ve used already, but couldn’t figure out how to get it onto a larger canvas from what I’ve used up until now. So thank you for explaining about the 2″ -markings!
You’re very welcome! We’re glad you found our advice helpful. 🙂
Happy creating!
I hope someone can help me, ive painted my canvas in acrylic paint so its quite a dark background, i want to transfer a drawing onto the canvas but ive tried tracing it with the transfer paper, ive tried using ink to see if it would show up on the canvas but nothing is working and its really frustrating as i cant move forward with this. Any advice welcome please
Hi Sammi,
It sounds like your best bet would be to buy some white graphite transfer paper and try transferring the drawing again using that. Here’s a link to that paper on DickBlick.com: https://www.dickblick.com/items/12917-1012/
In the future, try starting with a medium-toned background (not too light, not too dark) that way you can still see your drawing and have the opportunity to add darks and lights as you work on your painting!
Hope this helps. 🙂
Thanks for your advice, ive already got the transfer paper, i have no idea how people get a picture onto a dark background im at such a loss but I’ll keep trying, thanks again 🙂
Are you using light colored transfer paper? If you’re using regular, dark graphite transfer paper it won’t work but white or even red might work better.
You can also try repainting your background with a lighter color then try your transfer again with dark transfer paper. Paint your dark background in as you go–not at the very beginning! It will not only help you to see your drawing, but also help you gauge your light and dark values better as you continue to paint.
Best of luck!
Use white pastel type chalk…
I’m considering buying a basic led projector to transfer images on to canvas as the art ones are very expensive. They can project up to 8 feet wide but can they project an image about 2 feet wide without distortion
That’s a great tip, thank you! Let us know how it works out. 🙂
Hello! I need to enlarge an image to fit a 30×40 canvas. It’s a college football stadium, so should be relatively simple but I’m having a hard time with the scale. Can you offer some suggestions on the best way to accomplish this? Ultimately I plan on painting with acrylics. Thank you in advance!
Hi Kelly,
Excellent question! There are a few ways you can go about doing this.
1) If you have a printer or if you can get to a print shop, try scaling the image you’re using to the size of the canvas (30×40) and print it in tiles, meaning that each piece of paper would have a different section of the image on it. You can tape them together to make one large 30×40 image that will fit your canvas. To transfer the image, use graphite paper under the image (shiny graphite side facing the canvas), and using a pencil, trace over the printed image to transfer it onto your canvas.
2) Use the gridding method mentioned in this article. You’ll need some minor math skills to do this. Let’s say your image is printed and it measures 8″ x 10″. To scale this up for a 30″ x 40″ drawing, you’d want to make horizontal and vertical lines every inch along both the x and y-axis of your printed image. Then, on your canvas, make vertical lines every 3.75″ and horizontal lines every 4″ to scale up from that 1″ of your printed piece (are you still following?). Then you’ll freehand draw what’s in each box working from left to right until you have your image transferred. This takes a lot more patience, but it will work out! You may even learn a bit more about your painting before you’ve started painting it by using this method. It helps your brain disassociate from “oh this is a person/bench/football” to “this is a squiggly line that goes this way” and will help in the overall painting process.
3) If you have access to a projector, you can also project the image onto your canvas. You’ll want to have your image on your computer then connect the projector to your computer and pull up the image then draw with a pencil directly onto your canvas, tracing the image being projected. Remember to place the canvas straight up and down (on a wall is best–easels tend to want canvases to lean back at the top, which will cause distortion in your drawing). The room should be dark so your image is clearly visible and that, along with not getting your hand/body in the way of the light from the projector, is the most difficult part of this process.
Personally, I think option #1 is the easiest way to do this and I use all these methods fairly frequently. 🙂 Whichever method you use, be sure to use a final fixative over your graphite drawing to ensure the lines stay in place for when you start applying paint. ALWAYS spray fixative outdoors–it’s not pleasant (or healthy!) to use indoors.
I hope this helps! Reach out if you have more questions and let me know how your painting turns out!
Happy painting! 🙂
Ashleigh
The Beginner’s School
Hi, I am looking for some free software to scale me image to bigger size and print in tiles. Can you please recommend any such softwares ??
I don’t know of any free software that will do that, unfortunately. You might be able to go to a local print shop like a Kinko’s or Office Depot and see if they can help. If you’re doing this for the purpose of painting/drawing, I would recommend gridding the image and re-drawing it at the larger size. Best of luck!
Good morning- I am so ecstatic to know you and thank you for all your information.
Hello,
I’m very happy to have stumbled on this page , you answered my question about how to best get an image onto an acrylic painted canvas background; I have not read through all questions on here, maybe you’ve already answered but when using acrylic paint, does the graphite or pencil lines show through after going over them with the paint? Also, what’s the best fixative to use to set the graphite before applying my acrylic paint? And lastly, if I wanted to free hand draw a general outline on top of an acrylic background, what’s the best pencil or sketching tool to use that will be covered by paint and not bleed through the finished painting? Is there a way to erase lines if the sketch goes poorly? In the end, I don’t want to be able to see any pencil marks, which I’ve had issues with before. Thank you so much!!
Hi Sylvia,
These are great questions! Graphite tends to seep through oil paint, but shouldn’t with acrylic. If you’ve had problems with the pencil lines showing through, it could be that your paint isn’t thick enough (maybe you’ve added too much water or thinning solution) or the quality of paint isn’t great, which means there’s less pigment/more binder and could be lessening the opacity of your paint. For example, craft paint is cheap because it has a very low pigment to binder ratio (it has a lot of filler and not much pigment) and it’s very difficult to cover pencil lines with for that very reason. Golden acrylic paints are excellent quality and I would recommend using them if you’re able to do so.
As for fixative, I like Grumbacher Final Fixative. Now, you SHOULD use a workable fixative, as it’s designed to be painted over. I have not had great experiences with workable fixative–I’ve found my pencil lines smudge when I go over the top of them with paint. I’ve never had a problem using final fixative on a painting, though there is a potential for your paint to bead up when applied to final fixative. You can also try using Acrylic Matte Medium, but you have to apply it very gently to keep it from smudging your pencil lines. Again, I think final fixative is the best way to go, but do a test first! I don’t want to be responsible for ruining a work of art!
A harder lead pencil will make lighter lines that are less likely to show through paint. Try using a 3H pencil. You can erase with a normal eraser, just make sure it’s clean otherwise it can make smudges. Vinyl erasers like this one work great on canvas. Another option, if you’re feeling bold, is to complete your drawing with watered down acrylic or watercolor paint! This definitely ensures you will not have any graphite or pencil lines showing through your paint. It can be a little nerve-wracking to make your drawing with paint, but you can do it! Remember that if you make a mistake, you can always paint over it and no one will ever know but you. 😉
I hope I answered all your questions! Good luck with your painting and feel free to share your work and let me know how it’s going!
-Ashleigh
Beginner’s School Instructor
I have a 4 by 6 inch photo that I want to enlarge and then copy onto watercolour paper.What percentages shd I enlarge it to and what size of watercolour paper shd I use?
Thanks for your help.
Hi Anise!
The percentage you enlarge the photo will depend on how big of a painting you’d like to make. I would recommend staying in the same proportions to keep it simple and avoid cropping, so for example, your 4″ x 6″ photo could be scaled up to an 8″ x 12″, 12″ x 16″, or 16″ x 24″ painting easily. Watercolor paper doesn’t usually come in those exact sizes but it does come in large sheets so you could purchase a large sheet then cut it down to whatever size you want. The size of your painting will depend largely on your work area and personal preference, but I think a medium sized painting would be easiest to work on (12″ x 16″ maybe). That way you’re not needing to use tiny brushes to get details (too small of a painting) but you also don’t have huge areas to fill with paint either (too large of a painting).
I hope this helps!
Ashleigh
Beginner’s School Instructor
I found this inspiring and have a few photos from recent travel that I will transfer to canvases to paint. I am also curious how I can paint right on my photographs. For example, I have zebras in the grass and I would like to paint only the grasses a sepia or light green color. Do I have to apply anything to the Matt photograph before I paint it with acrylics or watercolors? Thanks
Hi Sharon,
Excellent question! I don’t have personal experience with painting on photographs (though now that you’ve brought it up, I might have to try it). I did some research on it and it seems like you should first spray the photograph with a spray fixative to keep the ink from running when you add wet media on top of it. A matte finish will hold paint better than a glossy finish will, and if you’re printing the photos from your home printer, you can print them on watercolor paper to give the final piece a more “artistic” look. Just be sure to change the paper setting on your printer to “heavy duty” or “photo paper” before running watercolor paper through so it doesn’t get jammed! Here’s a link to the website I read on this subject: http://www.alternativephotography.com/handcoloring-and-painting-photographs/
Hope this helps! Enjoy!