Monday, January 21, 2013
Celebrating the Small Stuff...
...like bangers and eggs! I had to work fast before it got cold, so added the color from memory.
Our trip to the city the other day included a stop by Sheehan's Irish Imports for real Irish sausage, known as bangers. They're delicious!
Journal Page Tutorial
This was the view we looked upon. There was a small group of Buffleheads feeding in the water. I loved how their dives caused the olive green water to shimmer with the blue of the sky.
Viewing the scene for a few minutes is a great way to narrow down what really catches my eye, helping me to decide what to record in the journal.
The next page in my Stillman and Birn journal, that I've devoted to water scenes, was the right side of a spread. I didn't want to fill the entire page with a sketch so decided upon a smaller vertical image.
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| Click to enlarge |
The first thing I did was to secure a piece of foam core to the right side of the back of the journal. This made a great surface to hold the palette and less of a balancing act for me.
Next, I drew the vertical shape that would hold the watercolor sketch. Then added pertinent information for the day: date, time, temperature, where we were, and around the edge of the box, I started adding notes about any wildlife that crossed our path.
To me, the lightest color in the scene was the blue of the sky and water.
I knew that if I let most of the paper show through on the lower right corner, I'd stand half a chance at keeping the true color to the foreground grasses.
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| click to enlarge |
Hopefully you can see the first layer of blue!
Now you can see the first layers of green water and the brown of the far shore's bank. While painting, the Buffleheads were diving away, always changing what the water looked like.
When painting plein air, light and water are ever changing. Once I've laid down the initial frame work of colors, I take a good look at the direction of the shadows. I will have to paint from memory in order to make the painting read true.
All that was left to do was to add notes of any other wildlife that we saw after heading over to the other side of the pond.
Final page, scanned.....
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Referencing all those journals - the lazy way
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| An 8 1/2 x 11 page of thumbnails from one of my journals |
Letting the journal lead US...
...because really, I've found that the format, style, and even the kind of paper make a huge difference in how I use my journals--at least some of them, and to a certain extent.
I'm playing with lighter, smoother paper in the journal above--Strathmore's multi-media paper I recently bound into a book. It's lighter and smoother than my normal hand-bound journal papers, so not quite as much juicy watercolor work (it does buckle slightly), and more writing--because it's a pleasure to write on! The pen glides...
I've found the same thing with my Stillman & Birn Epsilon journals, with very smooth paper--in fact that one has become my must-have daily writing journal, where I might do several pages of written meditations or observations, THEN add a sketch, either related or not. (I'm looking forward to the upcoming Zeta journal, which will have heavier paper but still this gorgeously smooth stuff!)
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| This robin caught my eye as I was journaling...so he ended up in my lovely Epsilon journal. The pen skates lightly over the paper, and the watercolor goes on crisp and puddly. |
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| I often add toned paper to my handmade journals...so of course I'm moved to add gouache or utilize light and dark colored pencils or inks... |
| This was a quick sketch with ink and colored pencil in the hardbound Strathmore journal. |
Of course many people work only on loose sheets, in an online journal, or even with an app so their work is only on paper if they print it out...
SO--how do YOU feel about paper and format? Does a ringbound book feel more ephemeral? Or is it just me...
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Sharing our work online
| Photographed, light tweaking |
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| Scanned, no tweaking |
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| Scanned with black paper behind the page, minimal tweaking |
This is often a problem for those of us who share our work--how to get a decent image without too much tweaking! Photographing is often fastest, for me...that's the top image, which would require more tweaking to get rid of the gray/blue cast, (I did some, but still some tint there...)
The middle image is a straight scan--my paper's rather thin, and the writing on the back side showed right up in the scan, though not in the photo.
And finally, my brilliant husband suggested putting a piece of BLACK paper behind the page--that's what you see in the third scan. It required only a tiny bit of tweaking, and I'm pretty happy with it! It's clean and crisp...
I use Photoshop Elements for more serious tweaking, but for sharing online I often use Picasa 3, a free program I downloaded from the net. It's fast and plenty powerful enough for most uses. I can resize a bunch of images at once, too...good for those with limited time and not a lot of tech skills!
Oh, yes, and this little white-throated sparrow is part of a demo for my upcoming ink & watercolor mini-class!
Sunday, January 6, 2013
Artists' Journal Workshop: My big fat black journal
Thought this might be of interest... again ;D. I posted this in 2011 and it is on the very topic under discussion now. I wanted to repost the whole thing, but I can't figure out how to do that on Blogger!
If you missed it then, here's another look!
Artists' Journal Workshop: My big fat black journal: I’ve long been a fan of the kind of beautiful illustrated journal that Kate Johnson and others, like Roz Stendahl, Pam Johnson Brickell, a...
If you missed it then, here's another look!
Artists' Journal Workshop: My big fat black journal: I’ve long been a fan of the kind of beautiful illustrated journal that Kate Johnson and others, like Roz Stendahl, Pam Johnson Brickell, a...
Friday, January 4, 2013
Journal Pages Don't Have to be Precious!
| A page of squiggles--I usually try to make a note of just WHAT I'm testing, because I forget rather too quickly...the guy at the bottom was sketched with my Namiki Falcon, though, I think... |
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| Aquacolor tests... |
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| Playing with paint... |
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| Ink testing in my journal... |
Your journal doesn't have to full of beautifully designed pages, with arrangements worthy of publication and calligraphy worth of Denis Brown.
It can be a place to play, to explore, to test--materials, techniques, or yourself! I do a lot of that, testing out a new pen, seeing how transparent my watercolor are...it can be a recognizable image, or just lines and spirals.
I often fill whole pages with tests from various inks or pens...at the top of the page I threw in pencils for good measure. (And as noted that page would be a LOT more useful if I'd written down what I was using!)
Some of us have a fear of white paper, but I love this E.B.White quote from late in his life: "Even now, this late in the day, a blank sheet of paper holds the greatest excitement there is for me--more promising than a silver cloud, and prettier than a red wagon."
If the first page of a new journal intimidates you, skip it! Start working several pages in and come back to it. Or use that page for a traditional beginning--a favorite quote, a hand-drawn map, a list of intentions or goals, or a sketch of your current watercolor or sketch kit, as Liz Steel and Vicky Williamson often do!
Whatever you do, relax, trust yourself, enjoy your journal, and have fun.
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