Just Playing With My New Toys

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My parents sent me a gift certificate to the Dick Blick art supply store, so today I went shopping.  I went there with the intention of buying a set of good colored pencils and few black permanent markers in varying thicknesses (including a brush tip, which I’ve never used before).

As I perused the aisles lusting after much of what I saw, I came across a Niji waterbrush.  I’ve read several blogs that espouse the wonderfulness of these things, so I grabbed one.  I wasn’t sure how well I would like it, but I figured for six bucks, how wrong could I go?

Promptly after I finished my shopping, someone in my stomach decided to stage a minor uprising — no doubt in protest over being fed a spicy burrito instead of a salad.  I was certain that I wouldn’t have a chance to play with my new toys.  But no matter how badly I feel, I couldn’t resist spending even just a few minutes playing.

This is my entry for Everyday Matters Challenge #39 — Draw your toothbrush.  I’m beginning to notice a preponderance of mouth-related subjects recently; I wonder if I should speak to someone about that.

Since I’m not feeling 100%, I didn’t spend much time at all on this.  The perspective is way off, the line is sketchy and weak, the colors are wildly inaccurate; but that wasn’t the point tonight.  Tonight was all about playing with my brush-tipped marker and my waterbrush.

I’m not sure how I feel about the brush-tipped marker yet.  Since I wasn’t fully engaged in the drawing process, I probably shouldn’t rush to judgment on the merits of this new tool.

However, I am absolutely in love with the waterbrush.  I know my work has not been particularly colorful up to this point.  That’s in large part due to me just not being able to work quickly with my watercolor set.  This little wonder is a plastic miracle.  There will still be a lot of black & white work coming from me (the foundation of a good painting is a good drawing, and I still need to develop the basics), but I guarantee you will be seeing a lot more color work in the near future.

The colored pencils are still in their tin.  They require sharpening before I can use them, and that seems like entirely too much work at the moment.  Maybe tomorrow night I’ll feel a little more energetic and will be able to do something with them.

My Palette

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Here is my palette — an entry for Everyday Matters Challenge #190. It is a Winsor & Newton Cotman travel set that I picked up at Dick Blick a couple months ago. It hasn’t seen much use yet, but I think that will change.

I’ve heard a lot of good things about Arches watercolor paper, so today I bought a watercolor block of cold-pressed 140 pound paper (7 x10 inches). That’s what I used for this painting. I really like not having to prep the paper in any way. It’s nice to do a painting without fighting with curling paper.

Candy Dish Watercolor

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Here’s that candy dish from yesterday, this time in color.

I don’t have much experience with watercolors, so this was a bit of an experiment. I’m a little disappointed in the scan… in real life, the interior of the bowl is a little easier to distinguish.

This was painted with a simple two-color pallet — Alizarin Crimson and Viridian.  Yes, I know, red and green is soooo cliche for a Christmas theme; that’s why I tried to keep the green really toned down to almost a gray.  And besides, it’s not “Christmas”, it’s “Winter”, remember?!

I certainly muddied the red in the hat, and I didn’t really achieve the 3-dimensionality of it. But I learned quite a lot, even from this simple sketch, and I’m sure I’ll figure this stuff out eventually.

First, I learned that I need to be more patient and let the paint dry before going back in to add shadow.

Second, I learned that I need to mix a lot more color than I think I’ll need. Trying to match a mixed color after-the-fact is something that is probably best left to the masters.

Third, I learned that I can counteract the page curling by getting the back of the paper wet (I’m working in a Canson spiral-bound watercolor pad, and I didn’t want to go through the whole “tape it to a board” process).

And finally, I learned that I quite enjoy watercolors; though it does add quite a bit of time to the whole process, and it seems mistakes are not exactly easy to correct.

Candy Dish

candy-dishThis is a candy dish I received from an old boss as a Christmas gift.  We leave it out all winter long, because snowmen aren’t just for Christmas, right?

Unfortunately, he has no candy.  So what’s he smiling about, then!?

Can I count this as EDM #204 (Draw Something Frosty)?

Another giant ellipse problem here, I know.   But this was just a real quick one before I head off to bed.  I may make another attempt some time when I’m not so sleepy.

4H and 4B Pencil.

My Go-Bag

timbuk20002This is my favorite messenger bag (yes, I have  more than one, shameful as that is). It is the perfect size for carrying my sketchbook and pencil bag around town.  I can get a book, my iPod, phone, and a bottle of water in there too.

I know I’ve already posted an entry for Everyday Matters Challenge #3 (Purses, Wallets, or Bags), but I’m doing this one for extra credit, OK?

Only two pencils on this one (HB and 2B). No blending, either. I wanted to keep it simple and loose.

On a side note… It’s interesting that the longer I’ve been sketching, the bigger my sketches have gotten. When I look back at the first few pages of my sketchbook, most of my work was tiny. I could have fit a half dozen of these bags on a single page. Today, I ran out of room. Now, I know that running out of room is just the result of poor planning on my part. No secret there. But the fact remains that, for some reason, I’m drawing bigger.

Shell Disaster

shellsWe keep a nice little jar of shells on the counter in our guest bathroom. I probably should have left well enough alone on this one.

Where do I begin?

Well, let’s start with the perspective. Or lack thereof. I clearly was not standing still, or I wasn’t paying attention to what I was doing. Or both.

There is very little definition within the jar between the shells. My wife looked at this and said, “looks like there’s a dead perch in there.” Oh my God, she’s exactly right! Oh my, what have I done?

The background/foreground is just a mess. Just shear sloppiness. Sometimes that works out OK for me, but tonight… well, it didn’t.

Sometimes you can save a sketch. Sometimes you can’t. This one, I’m not even going to try. [Sigh]

Funny. I was just talking with a friend of mine today, saying that I need to learn to take the bad days with the good. So, here’s to Karma, I suppose…

Oh yeah, and even though this one ain’t so hot, I’m still counting it against the Everyday Matters Challenge #207 – Draw a Shell.

Now then… move along.  Nothing more to see here.

Can of Soda

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I belong to an online group called ‘Everyday Matters‘. It’s a group of artists dedicated to drawing/painting/sketching everyday items: shoes, wallets, food, etc. If you are an artist who struggles with picking a subject, or if you just want to hang out online with a great bunch of people, check them out.

Each week there is a different challenge. This is my entry for challenge #205 — Draw a Soda Can.

We don’t normally keep soda in the house. So I had to go buy one just for this. And since I paid good money for it, might as well drink it, right? Now I’m going to be awake all night… should have bought something without caffeine.

I was looking forward to this challenge, because I often shy away from lettering. There was no away around it with this challenge; every can of soda has a distinct logo with distinct lettering. Nobody is going to recognize a Dr. Pepper can without its logo. The lettering is a little sloppy, but the overall placement is fairly accurate; so let’s call that a wash.

I must admit, though, laziness got the best of me on this one. There were a number of really interesting reflections that I didn’t fully capture (I got some of them, but I ignored a bunch more). And I probably should have pushed the darks a little more. As it is, though, this took me a lot longer than I expected it to.

My ellipses are much better than in the past (if still a little lopsided); so score 1 for that.

Pencil (4H, HB, 4B) in Strathmore sketchbook.

Toothpaste

toothpaste0001My tube of toothpaste caught my eye this morning as I was getting dressed.

I had several false starts with this one.  First, the straight part of the tube was too long compared to the rolled part.  Then the cap was entirely too small.  Then the rolled part of the tube was ginormous in comparison to the straight part of the tube.  Good thing I have an eraser!

Finally, I remembered the advice I keep giving myself… do a 30-second gesture drawing.  That did the trick.  In less than a minute, I had all my major proportional problems knocked out.  Must remember that trick for next time.

Once I got over that initial hump, I had a lot of fun with this one and am pretty happy with the way it turned out.  I kind of wish I’d done it on proper drawing paper instead of in my sketchbook.

Pencils in Strathmore sketchbook: 6H, 4H, HB, B, 4B.  Lots of blending with a stump and chamois.  1.5 hours  (kind of a long time to spend in the bathroom, huh?).  That hard gray fade and hard edge on the right are scanner anomolies.

Teapot

teapotHere’s a twenty minute sketch of the teapot that sits on our stove.

I’ve been wanting to draw this guy for a while, but have been putting it off for some reason.  There’s lots of interesting shapes and varying textures.

I sort of messed up the symmetry on it.  Probably a result of my leg falling asleep partway through, so I wasn’t able to sit perfectly still.  Although a 30 second gesture drawing probably would have helped with that.

I took the opportunity to play with a chamois and a blending stump to help differentiate the plastic handle from the rest of the body and to help convey the smoothness of the teapot itself.

On this one, I used only a B pencil.  In retrospect, pulling in something from the H range probably would have been a good idea for the plain metal parts, and something much softer to deepen the shadows.  But, being tired and just trying to squeeze a few minutes of sketching in doesn’t lend itself to really putting in all that extra work.

Ellipses are Hard

potI really thought I was doing a good job with this one.  That is, until I finished, took a few steps back, and looked at critically.

The top opening of the pot is massively crooked.  So, a couple of lessons out of this one…

1.  I need to do an overall gesture sketch before diving into the details.  Ellipses are especially hard for me to get right, so I need to focus on this.

2.  I need to spend more time looking.  Looking and comparing.  And when I see discrepancies, I need to be OK with making adjustments.

Still, I like what I did on the handle, and I think I did a decent job capturing the varying textures.

Boxes

boxesBoxes are surprisingly hard to draw accurately.  Their simplicity is, I think, half the difficulty.  It becomes easy to fall into the trap of drawing what you think a box should look like instead of what it actually looks like.

The individual boxes look OK.  But I think I’ve got the perspective a little messed up.

Messy, Messy

unmade-bedOK.  I admit it.  I didn’t make the bed today.

But I did draw.

I’ve felt that my drawing style has been too stiff, and I wanted to do something very loose — almost scribbling.  As it turns out, this technique is called “scumbling”; and it was a favorite technique of mine back in the day.

I had forgotten about it until it just came out of my pencil today.  It more or less “just happened”.  I was getting tired of smudging my drawings, so I decided to hold my pencils more like a paint brush.  The result was a very loose, almost out-of-control sketch.  I really had fun with this.

Once again, my perspective and proportion are off.  The bed is a queen-size, but you’d never know from this rendering.  And it looks like the footboard is narrower than the headboard. Still, I feel like I’m making progress.

My Cordless Phone

phoneThis is a thirty-minute sketch of one of the cordless phones we have.

Once again, my perspective is off.  It looks like the phone is being twisted in a strange way.  Also, the buttons are not positioned exactly right.

On the plus side, I’m really happy with how the faceplate came out.  I think I captured the look of the different materials on the phone.

My Wallet

walletJust messing around with a watercolor set.

The drawing was done with a Pilot G2 gel pen and the color was applied using Cotman watercolors from Winsor & Newton.

The starburst effect is an artifact from the scanner in conjunction with the fact that my sketchbook is not exactly compatible with water media.  I guess I’ll have to buy a watercolor pad for this kind of thing.

I’ve got a lot of work to do yet on my drawing though.  A good painting starts with a good drawing, so I will stay focused on the drawing for the near future.

Taking the First Step

The shoe my kitty puked in

Our kitty has a shoe fetish.  She loves to rub her head on them, and we often find her sitting amongst the shoes in our entry way; keeping guard.  She also has a sensitive stomach.  Never before have the two mixed, until one morning in November when I woke to find cat vomit in one of my walking shoes.  Gross, but it does make for an interesting story around this sketch of the shoe in question.

This was drawn in my sketchbook with a fountain pen.  Some of the ink was pushed around with a watercolor brush loaded with clean water.