Friday, October 26, 2012
My Usual Colors...sort of...
This is what I was using last year for my usual palette in my old repurposed Prang box. I'm moving away from the Cadmiums now, and I don't use Transparent Yellow as much as I did...the sap green is gone, too, but everything else is pretty much standard, when I'm NOT using the limited primaries palette!
My color-challenge continues...
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| Down in the Ozarks this past week, I knew I'd have a REAL challenge, with all the fall colors. This one was done on the spot... |
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| Still, it was fun to try to capture the effect of fire in this small sketch that was on one corner of a journal page... |
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| I kept it simple with this one...and liked the effect. |
I also found myself reaching for my original little Altoids kit with the primaries instead of the newer kit...but basically it's the same primaries, a warm yellow, Quin Red, and Phthalo Blue, plus B.S. and P.G. It's light and handy and slips into my purse.
I'm enjoying the challenge, but don't consider myself tied...it's a choice, not a geas!
Thursday, October 25, 2012
The Self Imposed Ink and Exercise Challenge
I'm trying out yet another Stillman and Birn Journal.... this time the Epsilon Series that has paper suited for pen and ink.
This is my first entry and I've got to say writing on this paper with a Micron pen is dreamy. The greys were created with grey and black Pentel Sign Pens that I hit the tip of with a waterbrush, then added the ink to the page. The water/ink combo spread like butter.
One thing I really like about using a waterbrush is that it dispenses just enough water to get the job done. This is very useful when the paper being used is not necessarily meant for washes.
This journal has two purposes. The first being to get me off of my desk chair and moving about. That's a challenge in itself as I get lost in my work and time goes sailing by. The second, and most fun, is to explore ink.
I'm glad the journal has many pages as there are so many inks waiting to be tried :) Which leads me to the back of my journal where I create color test pages......
I'm keeping this journal in my desk drawer, easily at hand. I've been sitting too long again... time to catch lunch and take a stroll with my journal and pens :)
This is my first entry and I've got to say writing on this paper with a Micron pen is dreamy. The greys were created with grey and black Pentel Sign Pens that I hit the tip of with a waterbrush, then added the ink to the page. The water/ink combo spread like butter.
One thing I really like about using a waterbrush is that it dispenses just enough water to get the job done. This is very useful when the paper being used is not necessarily meant for washes.
This journal has two purposes. The first being to get me off of my desk chair and moving about. That's a challenge in itself as I get lost in my work and time goes sailing by. The second, and most fun, is to explore ink.
I'm glad the journal has many pages as there are so many inks waiting to be tried :) Which leads me to the back of my journal where I create color test pages......
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| click to enlarge |
Friday, October 19, 2012
The color challenge continues--join me?
I'm continuing to play with a very limited palette...join me? I'm using Hansa Yellow Light, though a Cadmium would so for the yellow, Permanent Rose (or Quinacridone Rose or Quin Red) and Phthalo Blue (or similar would do). I've added Burnt Sienna and Payne's Grey for convenience colors....Indigo would work, too.
And look at all the colors possible. I've used the Burnt Sienna and Payne's Grey in the mixes, for variety. Above, yellows, reds, blues and convenience colors, reds ditto, and blues ditto! (Click on the image for a larger version.)
Even more colors are possible, if you add a bit of one of the other primary colors so you're using a triad in various strengths, as you can see below. Even a deep neutral that's very close to black. It all depends on how intense your mixtures are...
Of course the effects can be quite subtle, too...I only used the primaries in my painting of my little cat, Rags, asleep on my computer.
So give it a try, and post what you've done on our Artist's Journal Workshop Flickr group, here: http://www.flickr.com/groups/artists-journal-workshop/! Mark what you've done as primaries only, or primaries and convenience colors...and let's play!
And look at all the colors possible. I've used the Burnt Sienna and Payne's Grey in the mixes, for variety. Above, yellows, reds, blues and convenience colors, reds ditto, and blues ditto! (Click on the image for a larger version.)
Even more colors are possible, if you add a bit of one of the other primary colors so you're using a triad in various strengths, as you can see below. Even a deep neutral that's very close to black. It all depends on how intense your mixtures are...
Of course the effects can be quite subtle, too...I only used the primaries in my painting of my little cat, Rags, asleep on my computer.
So give it a try, and post what you've done on our Artist's Journal Workshop Flickr group, here: http://www.flickr.com/groups/artists-journal-workshop/! Mark what you've done as primaries only, or primaries and convenience colors...and let's play!
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Trying new things, challenging ourselves
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| A new brand, for me--well relatively, anyway. |
Liz wrote recently about trying new materials and approaches; Alissa is pushing herself to discover more about travel sketching. Laura travels to some amazing places to sketch, and has also challenged herself by painting a single subject (trees, faces) or using one color as dominant for a month, in the past--I think we learned almost as much as she did.
Right now, I'm exploring watercolor. Again. Still. Different brands, like the Russian Sonnet watercolors above...I found them on eBay and put some of the little pans into an old metal Talens paint box. (They're a less expensive version of Yarka St. Petersburg/White Nights watercolors, but so far they've passed all my tests with flying colors. Literally! )
I've used Winsor & Newton for decades, and over the years I've also tried Daniel Smith, Schmincke, Maimeri Blu, Kremer and others...but people kept raving about the Russian paints, doing such gorgeous work (like Pat Southern-Pearce!) that I just had to explore with them.
I'm doing a long-range fade test on them, which I'll report on later, but so far--yep, these are gorgeous, lift well, and mix beautifully, and I can't detect any fading over the months they've been exposed.
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| Going simpler...with room for brushes, drawing sticks and lots of mixing area. |
And in my ongoing attempt to simplify my life and lighten my load, I've set up one of my vintage Prang boxes with the primaries with two convenience colors--Burnt Sienna and Payne's Gray. (On the left, here, you can see color tests with the Sonnet paints, and on the right my "new" old primary box.
Funny, when I first started painting with watercolors, Prang used to make a box that was just the primaries and black. I LOVED it. That's all I'd use, for years...I feel like I've come full circle!
I found out when I made my first little home made Altoids box a few years ago that I didn't need a billion colors--I just stumbled onto this combination, and recently I've been reading many resources that explain why they work! If you choose Phthalo Blue or similar, cool, clean Quinacridone Red or Rose (or Permanent Rose) as your red, and a good clear yellow, you can mix about anything--as you can see above. I started out my painting career with a warm red and a cool one, a warm blue and a cool one...but if I add a touch of rose to my Phthalo, I get something very like Ultramarine Blue. A little yellow in that nice clean rose gives me a good orange. Nifty!
Sure it takes a moment more to mix (hence my two convenience colors!)...but I'm balancing weight and simplicy against convenience and liking how it's coming out!
| You can tell how light THIS kit would be. I took the lid off a second box to double my mixing area--it friction-fits on the bottom of the box. |
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| Here are some of my explorations...and how I got where I am now. |
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| Here's today's play...sorry the scan's a bit gray, the art definitely isn't! |
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Sketchbook vs Journal
A quick update... I am still markering and using a moleskine cahier... Have just started my second one.

Today I just had a light bulb moment (like all light bulb moment they seem very obvious afterwards...)
As much as I loved working through the first moleskine- drawing only on one side of the page – I never fully bonded with the book. (getting severe water damage didn’t help much either!)
It is because I wasn’t working across the spread that it feels more like a sketchbook (each page a separate image that don’t connect) rather than a journal (a record of my life) Even though I did do a few journal type pages the flow between the pages wasn’t there. What is interesting is that a single page of this sketchbook at A4 size is the same size as what I am used to with my normal A5 sketchbook working across the spread. It is not the size but this ‘book-like quality’ to turning pages that obviously is so important to me.

The second moleskine cahier, that I using now, I am going to work every second spread (little I did with the smaller sketchbook in my last post) and I am immediately excited by the feel. Excited that I am now back to journal style but even more excited but the possibilities of working larger size. So even when I write a heap of text like I regularly do, I can still tie it together with an image on the next page. Also combining various images on a page (even over a few days...yet to do this) makes it feel more like a travel journal (ah! That is always a nice feeling isn’t it?) And just in case you are wondering, I am ALWAYS thinking about my next trip (whenever and wherever it might be and thinking about what I will do next time- very much like Alissa’s project recently)
This concept follows on from a discussion recently on facebook when someone asked why we don’t sketch on single pages... I replied
it is very important for me to work in a sketchbook since my sketching is all about the process of recording a moment and telling the story of my life. Individual sheets of paper is too disjointed for me- sure I could bind them later but I like seeing the narrative evolve through a book. I find that there is a lot more pressure to produce a perfect 'image' when all I really want to do is have fun and record the moment.
but since then I have realised that just being in a sketchbook isn’t enough – there has to be a narrative!

So, I think that by next adventure will be to try a large moleskine watercolour book (A4 landscape) I got one in the mail today. ... a little worried about whether it will fit on small cafe tables but excited by new adventures to come.
(the other sketchbook is the one I am currently using- my moleskine cahier with a cover by Paul Wang from Singapore) Ok... That's even rambling from me for today!!!

Today I just had a light bulb moment (like all light bulb moment they seem very obvious afterwards...)
As much as I loved working through the first moleskine- drawing only on one side of the page – I never fully bonded with the book. (getting severe water damage didn’t help much either!)
It is because I wasn’t working across the spread that it feels more like a sketchbook (each page a separate image that don’t connect) rather than a journal (a record of my life) Even though I did do a few journal type pages the flow between the pages wasn’t there. What is interesting is that a single page of this sketchbook at A4 size is the same size as what I am used to with my normal A5 sketchbook working across the spread. It is not the size but this ‘book-like quality’ to turning pages that obviously is so important to me.

The second moleskine cahier, that I using now, I am going to work every second spread (little I did with the smaller sketchbook in my last post) and I am immediately excited by the feel. Excited that I am now back to journal style but even more excited but the possibilities of working larger size. So even when I write a heap of text like I regularly do, I can still tie it together with an image on the next page. Also combining various images on a page (even over a few days...yet to do this) makes it feel more like a travel journal (ah! That is always a nice feeling isn’t it?) And just in case you are wondering, I am ALWAYS thinking about my next trip (whenever and wherever it might be and thinking about what I will do next time- very much like Alissa’s project recently)
This concept follows on from a discussion recently on facebook when someone asked why we don’t sketch on single pages... I replied
it is very important for me to work in a sketchbook since my sketching is all about the process of recording a moment and telling the story of my life. Individual sheets of paper is too disjointed for me- sure I could bind them later but I like seeing the narrative evolve through a book. I find that there is a lot more pressure to produce a perfect 'image' when all I really want to do is have fun and record the moment.
but since then I have realised that just being in a sketchbook isn’t enough – there has to be a narrative!

So, I think that by next adventure will be to try a large moleskine watercolour book (A4 landscape) I got one in the mail today. ... a little worried about whether it will fit on small cafe tables but excited by new adventures to come.
(the other sketchbook is the one I am currently using- my moleskine cahier with a cover by Paul Wang from Singapore) Ok... That's even rambling from me for today!!!
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Ups and Downs
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| The gift of a soft, rainy day, and the gift of a new journal...life IS good. |
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| But not without its challenges... |
One of the most important things about my journal is that it's a place to record the days--which was part of what the root word meant--the daily-ness of it. We remember more fully, we deal with adversity, we celebrate, we find a sense of humor when we need it. We play. We express gratitude. We explore.
I can't imagine doing without this...
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