Art Palette Scraper Rest Card
Example Prompts
Copy and paste one of these prompts to get started:
- "I keep losing my palette scraper in the middle of a painting session. Can you make me a parking card with dry and active zones?"
- "My studio desk is cluttered and I need a small printable rest card for my palette scraper. Index card size, portrait orientation."
- "Create a disposable palette scraper rest card with wipe reminder and discard cue for a right-handed palette setup."
Install-First Success Path
Input: "I need a rest card for my palette scraper — quarter sheet, left side of palette, bold labels."
Steps:
- Ask placement, size, orientation, and label style preferences
- Mark dry zone, active zone, wipe reminder, and rest mark
- Add palette edge arrow and discard trigger
- Format a printable card with clear zones and cut lines
- Deliver the card; user trims and places it beside the palette
Output: A printable quarter-sheet rest card with labeled zones for dry, active, wipe, rest, edge direction, and discard trigger — ready to park a scraper during a painting session.
Purpose
Use this prompt-only skill to create a small printable rest card that sits beside an art palette and gives a palette scraper a clear parking spot between color mixes. The card protects the desk routine by showing where to park the scraper, where the active mix is noted, when to wipe, and when to discard the card after it gets messy.
This is a studio desk aid only. It is not a paint handling manual, safety sheet, solvent guide, conservation guide, material compatibility chart, or cleanup chemistry reference.
Safety Boundary
Do not provide chemical, solvent, ventilation, paint composition, blade sharpening, disposal, or material compatibility advice. Do not recommend specific cleaners, media, pigments, surfaces, or scraping pressure.
Keep the output to visible desk organization: dry zone, active zone, wipe reminder, edge warning label, and discard cue. For safety data, material handling, or cleanup instructions, tell the user to follow the product label, studio policy, or qualified guidance outside this card.
Core Principles
- Give the scraper a clear parking place beside the palette.
- Keep wet and dry cues visually separate.
- Use short zone labels that are easy to read while painting.
- Make the card disposable when it becomes messy.
- Avoid all chemical and material advice.
- Keep the card small enough to fit on a crowded studio desk.
Required Inputs
Ask only for desk layout and label preferences:
- Palette side: left, right, top, bottom, or movable.
- Preferred card size: index card, quarter sheet, half sheet, or custom small card.
- Zone labels: dry, active, wipe, rest, edge, discard, or reset.
- Orientation: portrait, landscape, narrow strip, or square.
- Visibility style: bold labels, checkbox style, arrows, or simple blocks.
- Replacement trigger: end of session, when smeared, weekly, or before a new project.
Do not ask about paint chemistry, solvents, specific media formulas, health conditions, disposal methods, or material compatibility.
Workflow
- Choose placement. Put the card beside the palette where the scraper naturally lands.
- Mark the dry zone. Reserve one clean-looking area for the scraper handle or non-messy rest point.
- Mark the active zone. Add a simple area for the current mix cue without describing paint materials.
- Add wipe reminder. Include a visible prompt to wipe according to the user's normal studio practice.
- Add edge cue. Note which side points toward the palette so the card is not rotated accidentally.
- Set discard trigger. Decide when the card is too messy to keep using.
- Produce the printable card. Format a small studio desk aid with clear zones and cut lines.
Output Format
Return a printable scraper rest card with these sections:
- Card Setup
- Card size
- Palette side
- Orientation
- Replacement trigger
- Boundary line: "Desk parking aid only. Follow product labels for materials."
- Zone Layout
- Dry zone
- Active zone
- Wipe reminder
- Rest mark
- Palette edge arrow
- Discard cue
- Session Use Steps
- Place card beside palette
- Park scraper in rest zone
- Keep active mix cue visible
- Use normal studio wipe routine
- Replace card when messy
- Mini Label Set
- Dry
- Active
- Wipe
- Rest
- Edge
- Discard
- Print and Trim Notes
- Trim to desk size
- Keep clear of the working palette surface
- Replace rather than over-explain the card
Quality Bar
A strong result is a tiny, practical desk-saving card for artists who need a scraper parking spot during a session. It should be visual, disposable, and limited to organization cues, with no chemical or material guidance.