Well they are together at least . . . I made so many mistakes while adding covers to these Coptic-bound book blocks! I
had originally planned on different colors of book-cloth for contrast
spines. But I'm still dealing with some vertigo/dizziness, so I kept it
as simple as possible. I may add some small bit of embellishment to the
front of each as I use them --- that helps to easily tell the front from
the back. I may shorten those ribbon bookmarks a bit as well.
The
first two covers were glued on before I remembered end papers . . .
they seem to work fine with just the first and last pages of the book
block used as end papers. Another one has a major folded ripple in one
end paper . . . pure carelessness. One book's spine board was too wide.
Oh, well . . . .
Most of my previous sketchbooks are
the size reached when simply folding/tearing down from the original
full-size paper -- ending with 5.5 x 7.5" book blocks. These are a bit
bigger this time, about 7 x 9". Three are Kilimanjaro 140 lb cold-press
watercolor paper from Cheap Joe's, one is Fabriano Artistico 140 #
hot-press, and the last one is a combination of Fabriano Artistico 90
lb. soft-press and Mi Tientes toned papers. Oh . . . and making my own bookcloth worked great! Cotton fabric and white tissue paper put together with Heat & Bond iron-on adhesive.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Indigo blue
I've recently discovered Sennelier ink, and Indigo is my new favourite. Found this totally chaotic art shop in Mallorca when I was there recently, full of beautiful paints and paper and packing boxes and mess, but spent ages exploring it, and even longer salivating over the Sennelier ink selection. Could only afford one, so a huge selection was narrowed down to one. Though my lovely sister bought me one more for my birthday - happiness! Unfortunately I dropped my nearly new Indigo bottle so now the studio floor a much nicer shade. Manged to save some of it but it meant going online and ordering more and spending a fortune in more art supplies that I'm sure I really didn't need...
A lot of fingers and nails and ends of brushes were used in these drawings, just trying to get a feel for the ink and how it works. Been reading some comments about how they last in light, some good, some bad, so I guess its just a case of wait and see and leave some in the window to see what happens. In the meantime, I've ordered six new colours which I couldn't resist, so watch this space. Unless they all end up on the floor....
A lot of fingers and nails and ends of brushes were used in these drawings, just trying to get a feel for the ink and how it works. Been reading some comments about how they last in light, some good, some bad, so I guess its just a case of wait and see and leave some in the window to see what happens. In the meantime, I've ordered six new colours which I couldn't resist, so watch this space. Unless they all end up on the floor....
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Playing with Gray and Blue
Great Blue Heron's have such lovely subtle shades of blue, gray and peach. I also love studying the shapes of bird eyes. Concentrating on a few little details really can make an unfinished study believable.
I was playing with a small Prang watercolor set before I popped the colors out to refill with my Hobein tube paints. You can see a formula written in the upper left corner of the page. Another note in the upper right is a reference to Spartina... the name of marsh grass, but in this case it's a reminder of the local company that makes wonderful handbags, tablet cases, wallets..... Ladies, check out Spartina449 :)
Don't you just love the information you can find in a journal?
I was playing with a small Prang watercolor set before I popped the colors out to refill with my Hobein tube paints. You can see a formula written in the upper left corner of the page. Another note in the upper right is a reference to Spartina... the name of marsh grass, but in this case it's a reminder of the local company that makes wonderful handbags, tablet cases, wallets..... Ladies, check out Spartina449 :)
Don't you just love the information you can find in a journal?
Monday, June 25, 2012
I Need a Hero...
OK, I've got one, really, but BESIDES my husband, I am really enjoying playing with my Hero pens...
Like the Duke that Laure Ferlita featured in this video, the Sailor pen mentioned in this post,
and a number of others, the Hero calligraphy pens are Japanese (oops, I meant Chinese, I knew that! Duh...), and have a different configuration than Western calligraphy pens. They have a bent nib that makes a wonderfully brush-like mark, depending on the angle you hold the pen...
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| Depending on the angle you hold the pen, you can get very fine to quite broad, bold lines... |
They also range from very inexpensive to rather more...I've bought a couple of Hero pens on eBay for under $10. It's the luck of the draw on really inexpensive pens, but they ARE fun to play with! I'm looking forward to getting a bent-nib pen of somewhat better quality, though I don't think I'll be getting one from a Living National Treasure like the Sailor pen described here: http://www.sailorpen.com/nagahara-story.html
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| Bent-nib pens are nice for quick sketches like this one of my cat, Merlin...they really have a brush-like quality, here. |
| Notice the varied lines, here... |
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| Introducing my mini-video! |
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| Of course you can use them alone, under a watercolor wash, or into a damp wash as I did in this super-quick sketch...I couldn't resist adding a sketch of the pen itself, sketching! |
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Testing different camera...
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Super quick journal page
Last Sketch of the Day
I had been out sketching the other day and on the way home stopped just on a whim at Rocky Hollow Lake...I was tired and it was time to be home, but I loved the image of these two guys out fishing in the late afternoon...I had time for a quick pencil sketch, surely...When I got home I splashed in wet-in-wet washes in the far shore and the trees at right, then tried for a narrow edge of clean paper at the bank.
When I laid in the lake wash, I encouraged it to flow down the page with a spritz of clear water. I added spatter while it was still wet, and when it lost its shine scraped through the damp wash for those lighter lines that suggest water. (When you don't have much time, wet-in-wet is a good--if a bit scary--solution...)
After that dried I added more spatter and painted in the men in the boat very simply.
A suggestion of their reflection and a touch of color on the boat on the right, plus my notes and I was done!
Friday, June 15, 2012
Book giveaway winner!
We have a winner!
MaryO, it's all yours, and congratulations! Please write me at kate (at) cathyjohnson.info with your mailing address, and we'll get this off to you ASAP!
Thanks so much to all who entered--I'm astounded at the numbers here and on my Cathy Johnson Fine Art blog (I put everyone together in the same folder, to make it easier)...
Some of you mentioned you'd still like to have the book, even if you didn't win...it's available in my website catalog, and I'll be happy to sign it for you however you like!
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