Tuesday, May 29, 2018

MANY STARTS AND THEN WHAT?



Fluid acrylic on Strathmore Mixed Media 400 Series.  I'll be adding greens to this next because everyone knows purple and green are a great pair :)



Sunday, May 27, 2018

SPRING GREENS



Another fluid acrylic start on Strathmore Mixed Media 400 Series paper.



















And I had the start of a nest-shaped thing on a small scrap of YUPO so I coninued to work on it using alcohol inks.







I scraped into it with a sharp needle tool, then added more alcohol ink colors.  I then lifted some of the middle color with plain rubbing alcohol, and finally painted in the eggs with alcohol inks.

  
I think it turned out okay.  Small enough to fit in a card (or use as a card sometime).


Friday, May 25, 2018

MIXED MEDIA PAPER AND ACRYLIC STARTS



Stopped in at Michael's art store and picked up a pad of Strathmore Mixed Media paper.  It's heavy enough (400 series) to use acrylic and other things on it without it tearing.
















Made some acrylic starts - we'll see where these go and what they turn out to be later.

Sticking with a couple of colors and stamping on the paint while it's wet.  















Didn't see it until I posted it, but this has a wooded look to it.  Sunlight and spring light after a rainy day?



















A slightly creepy puppet/doll in my sketchbook.  I tend to doodle and sketch while watching t.v.



I ordered a pad of 500 Series Strathmore (even heavier paper to use with acrylics, inks, etc.) and a new small bottle of Pebeo Drawing gum as my bottle was getting awfully gummy.  It doesn't last forever but I really prefer to Pebeo drawing gum as it's thinner than other masking fluids/miskit.

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

SKETCHBOOK STUFF


Sketchbook stuff:

Not sure where this guy came from but he looks like a friendly ogre so don't be afraid.  Perhaps he guards the town as it sleeps?













After a very colorful sketch, I like to return to graphite with just a touch of color.



Then back to some colored scribbles.



































Monday, May 21, 2018

LAST ENTRIES FOR SKETCHBOOK REVIVAL


Sketchbook Revival has come to an end, but I hope to continue playing in my various sketchbooks this year.  


Artist Whitney Freya took us back to our heavier sketchbooks to use acrylic layering and stenciling as an underpainting/start to a finished piece.  I didn't get any farther than this underpainting, but she suggests you do a lot of these at a time and have them ready for use when the muse arrives.  It would be a good way to just put down color when you're not sure what you want to paint or draw.  I used only 3 acrylic colors and ended up with the southwestern-type background to add stencils to as a first layer.  Who knows what will show up later?





After a few days of this one sitting, I thought more about the southwestern motif and came up with some pictographs/petroglyphs on stone walls and it's done :)  (Sorry but it looks like I got a bit of glare from the lights which faded out some of the color - it's really vibrant and bright like in the top painting with the hunters added on in acrylic.)












This was a freebie demo given to the participants of the Sketchbook Revival course - by Val Webb.  My colored pencil is rough because I did this on my Strathmore Visual Journal #90 (she did her demo on copy paper, which I didn't realize until later).  So...better to do this on smooth paper to get a better look.  I could go in with watercolor pencils and wet that, too, to smooth things out, or just leave it rough like this.  My eggs didn't get light enough, either (I am limited with my set of colored pencils).  Enough excuses!  I could work on this a lot longer, if I chose.









Saturday, May 19, 2018

TIFFANY AND TWISTED EXHIBITS AT THE TAFT MUSEUM OF ART



On Wednesday of this week, my brother-in-law, Mac, treated me to breakfast out and then a trip to the Taft Museum of Art to see the Tiffany glass exhibit (and the willow branch installation by sculptor, Patrick Dougherty - called Twisted).

It was a fun day and I had already painted this for Mac and my sister to commemorate the day.  They both loved it and that made me happy.  It is a copy (kind of) of one of the Tiffany windows called River of Life.  

If you are in the Cincinnati area and get a chance, go by and see it SOON because it will be gone May 27th - and the willow tree saplings (6 tons of material which took 150 volunteers to help produce into the swirling, hobbit home-like shapes) is amazing!!!  It is on the front lawn of the museum and you feel like you've stepped into a "Willow Wonderland" (Mac's words for it) as you walk through and around, touching the entwining saplings and marvelling at what imagination and teamwork can do.   Right now, the peonies are in full gorgeous bloom and set off the willow dwellings perfectly.  Check it the information here.




I also did this little doodle in my sketchbook (thin paper for dry media only) - I am trying to follow through and work in my sketchbook even if it's doodles and lines and scribbles for now.  I put the sticker on there after our visit to commemorate the day.  

Of course, we are getting rain but maybe you can get there in between showers today or tomorrow?  Tomorrow is a free day, I think?







Thursday, May 17, 2018

STRATHMORE VISUAL JOURNAL #90



Painting in the Strathmore Visual Journal #90 (it holds up well to collaging and to using acrylics and stamping.




Painting a pretty girl from imagination, along with
Tamara LaPorte.  Using watercolor paint and markers of all kinds (the kinds that bleed and run).











This little clown showed up the next day as I took out the paints and markers again.
















And children's book illustrator, Nina Rycroft, showed us how she creates her characters from reference materials, drawing shapes, reshaping things to make them more human, and so on.  Pretty cool!  I did all mine with a blue erasable pencil for no other reason than that I picked that one up.


The fox shapes become little girls = Florence Foxx :)





































Tuesday, May 15, 2018

USING ACRYLICS IN THE STRATHMORE 90# VISUAL JOURNAL


Continuing to work in my various sketchbooks (Strathmore Visual Journals, both 140# and 90#, as well as a plain paper sketchbook 6 x 9 inches using light-weight paper).  Some of the videos from the Sketchbook Revival are sooo inspiring and interesting and others don't move me much, but it's still interesting to see other artist's sketchbooks (and see how many some artists have created over the years)!

These are in the 90# sketchbook using acrylics to lay down color on the pages - from the video by Anna Maricle.  She does this as a way of priming the pump of her creativity and it takes little thinking effort at the time - just pick some colors and put them down, then you can always go back and paint, collage, draw, etc. over the base colors.  I liked painting the bottom layer in black acrylic paint and, before it dried completely, going back in with marking tools and scratching into it for designs = kind of like a sgriffito?






Interference Blue (acrylic heavy body paint) over black acrylic (after it dried).  This is just a start and could lead to other things...or not! ha ha















Caran d'Ache crayons and water only.  Playing in the 90# Strathmore Visual Journal.  Although only 90# paper, it holds up pretty well to wet media.













I hope, if you are following along with the course, that you, too, share some of your work!  And are you getting your freebies along the way?  I'm looking forward to delving more into those, too - but not right now as I would be overwhelmed with artwork!!  The Sketchbook Revival is available until May 18th (then, maybe the links are gone?).  I have one more to finish and then some other freebies to get into.



Sunday, May 13, 2018

BOTANICAL PAINTING/DRAWING IN THE SKETCHBOOK REVIVAL COURSE


Botanical artist, Wendy Hollander, led us through her steps to create volume and 3D effect using nothing but graphite, colored pencil and watercolor pencil.  


Botanical artists don't put in shadows (why is that - does anyone know?), but I put in the shadows for my little acorns.  


I didn't finish the leaf yet, but I will.  This on ~ a fourth sheet of Arches 140# hotpress paper.

I really enjoyed doing this as I rarely work with colored pencils - and have a lot to learn from them as to layering lightly to get into the darks slowly (I tend to rush the color and value).



Happy Mother's Day!





Friday, May 11, 2018

SKETCHBOOKING CONTINUES

More from the Sketchbook Revival online course hosted by Karen Abend:

The top two were done (in a 6 x 9 inch sketchbook made from light-weight paper) while watching and working along with Amanda Grace as she talked to us about the importance of scribbles and using them as more than warmups - and what you can add to scribbles.  I like the bottom right = scribble all over your page with Caran d'Ache watersoluble crayons, then paint white gesso over that and, before the gesso dries, scrape into it, allowing the colors underneath to show = pretty cool.  The top is just scribbles and then collage bits on top (I didn't get my materials together ahead of time so just rushed to pull out some bits for collage).

This silly bird was something I'd begun in the same 6 x 9 sketchbook but never did more than a light pencil drawing.  So, I got out the colored pencils and colored him in, making him very colorful, indeed!  He's perched on top of the ice waiting for a fish.


Wednesday, May 9, 2018

MORE SKETCHBOOK REVIVAL WORK



This one began with some heart work in one of the videos (I think it was the Shelly Klammer session).  

It began as this heart, some lines, and then tracing a leaf pattern from a sketchbook I had (I cut out the sketch from the thin paper and just taped it down and traced around it, then painted inside).

It was probably done, but Sketchbook Revival is all about the process - so do more and see what happens...










And this happened :)


More Caran d'Ache water soluble crayons, more linework, and more color.

Sometimes you have to know when to stop!




There are SO MANY videos shared on the course, it's hard to "keep up" but I'm trying not to pressure myself about it.

We have the videos available until May 18 - plus, each sketchbook artist in the course is offering freebies that could take you to more play and fun, too.



This one was done while watching Val Webb (LOVE HER!!) sharing her ink technique for a great blue heron = fun and interesting shapes using an old chip brush (from the hardware store) and India ink only.  I've taken 2 online courses from Val and she shares to much information, holding nothing back - it's worth checking out if you like painting birds or plants.

I'm looking forward to the botanical artist videos, too.

So...more to come!  

If you want to join in, you still can - just look for 
Sketchbook Revival (Karen Abend - the host), and you'll find it.

Monday, May 7, 2018

SKETCHBOOK REVIVAL WORK




More sketches/paintings in my Strathmore Visual Journal while following along with the videos in the Sketchbook Revival course...fun!!










I have a lot of sketching materials, including Tombow pens in 3 shades of black-grey (these have a pen nib and a brush nib and are beautiful when you wet the lines you put down, bleeding a bit).  I have a set of Pitt Artist pens, too, all in black and various sizes.  I have conte crayons (chalk), oil pastels, dry pastels, etc.  So why don't I sketch more often and use them?





I may not want to show all of the Sketchbook Revival stuff, as some will be personal and/or just junk!




This one was done by just making shapes on the paper with a marker, then filling in those shapes with watercolor and marker, then painting around the edges with India ink.  See the bird in the top left that just showed up?  Sometimes you get things that surprise you.



Saturday, May 5, 2018

STRATHMORE VISUAL JOURNAL


I like the texture and the way the paint sits on the paper in this journal.  I bought 2 of the 140# Strathmore journals (for wet media) and 1 of the 90# (for sketching/drawing only).  

The following are all in my Strathmore Visual Journal, 140# watercolor paper (9 x 12 inches).  Some of the sketches/drawings/
paintings were done when I was taking a Val Webb class in painting birds.  The others are from the Sketchbook Revival course hosted by Karen Abend.

I'll share more sketches as I go along in the course.  So far, I'm enjoying it and it's getting me to pick these up again and go for it.





Both of these were done when I was working in the Val Webb online course in painting birds.  (Val does one of the videos for the Sketchbook Revival course but I haven't watched it yet - she is great, though, so I'm looking forward to that one).

This is how I work = like a house on fire to start and then fizzle out!!




This one was just done as a way to do something - I have so many sketchbooks laying around, unused!  I seem to think I have to do an almost finished painting in them instead of letting them be repositories for thoughts, words, ideas, doodles, etc.


I'll share the actual work done while watching the videos soon - nothing finished or a work of art but just doodling, creating, doing, and filling up the pages as warm-ups, getting in touch with feelings, etc.  





The first video in the series is from an artist who will teach us how to make our own sketchbooks, but I have to admit, I skipped that one because all of these purchased sketchbooks are going to waste and I certainly don't need to make my own.  But if you're interested in that, watch the first video through and get your materials and make your own :)

If you cannot hook up to the course, let me know and I may be able to send you a link from my links - I'm sure it won't be a problem as it's all free.




Thursday, May 3, 2018

CHARCOAL AND CHALK


Can't See the Forest for the Trees


Started another one on cream Mi-Tientes paper, using charcoal and conte crayons (colored chalks).  I am using vine charcoal, which is really messy, but it's fun to use...soft and blurry and dusty.



I used to hate getting messy with charcoal and chalk, but I find myself not minding so much now.  Wonder what that means?  

This one will be worked on as it's definitely not finished yet.



Tuesday, May 1, 2018

WHAT A CLOWN



The inspiration for this one was a grackle with a bit of suet/seed on it's beak, as if it was balanced there.  I immediately thought about a bird balancing a big, red ball = a circus bird!

You can't tell well in the photo, but I used some irridescent pigment mixed in with the regular pigment for the purple areas.


What a Clown!





Happy May!