Showing posts with label drawing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drawing. Show all posts

Tuesday, 24 February 2015

Oil Pastel Scrimshaw - Brief Introduction and How-To


I like oil pastels—they’re a real challenge, and I love that. I also rediscovered a love for the scrimshaw technique when I was undertaking an art unit for my Bachelor of Teaching.








So, when I was thinking of a cover for Anna and the Rock Dragons, I thought I’d see what this art form would produce.

As with any picture, you need to have a vague idea of what you want the picture to look like. I have had these images in my head for over twenty years.





















But I wanted the rock dragons in to look a little different—somehow less than dragon-perfect, a little lumpy like the rocks from where they drew their names—so the dragons in my head weren’t quite a perfect match.

And then there was the drawing medium to consider. I have a little trouble doing fine detail with the pastels themselves, but add in the scrimshawing and it’s possible to do quite fine lines. Also, scrimshaw into pastel is unforgiving. Once the line is made, it stays, so you have to live with your mistakes or start over. Anyway, enough chatter. Here’s how I do it:

  • Rough out the design. You can do this in pencil, or you can draw straight down in pastel. Just sketch out the main colour blocks. 



  • Darken the colour areas, until you’ve got the effect you’re after. Do this fairly lightly so that any mistakes can be overridden in the next phase. 


NOTE: Looking back, I think I should have had this picture to refer to while I was working the scrimshaw. It would have helped me remember some of the lines I wanted to make, as well as approximately where the colour blocks started and ended. Ah well, a note for next time.

  • Once you have the colour areas about where you want them, go over them in the colours you want to uncover. Make sure this layer is quite heavily coloured to provide a base of colour. 


  • Now, make a light shading of black over the rest. Work in one direction. I have started with horizontal lines.



  • Darken the layer. 


  • Working in another direction, add a second layer of black. You will notice that the black covers some colours more easily than it covers others.


  • Work a third layer of black in another direction, until the picture below is as completely obscured as possible.


NOTE: This process can be quite messy. Make sure you can clean the surface you are working on, or put a protective cover down first. Do not expect to keep your hands clean. 











  • The next thing you need is something sharp to draw with. Pencils and pens are not suited to this work as you want to use something that does not leave a mark of its own. This time ’round, I used bamboo skewers.


  • Pressing lightly with the skewer, draw your picture through the layer of black, pressing only hard enough to reveal the colours beneath.


NOTE: If you press too hard, you will either hole the paper, or remove both the black and the coloured layer leaving a white line. This is a problem if you want colour, not so much if you’re after white.

NOTE: It really helps to have a reference picture for the underlayers and outlines. I drew this stage from memory.

  • As you work, you will notice that the oil pastels peel up in little curls. It is important to remove these curls, before you lean on them and grind them back into the picture.


NOTE: I do this by picking them up with the tip of the skewer and then wiping the tip clean on a tissue or piece of cloth.

  • When you’re done, you’re picture should have no loose pieces of pastel on its surface. It is now ready for scanning or preparing for presentation.

NOTE: Regardless of whether you photograph the oil pastels with a flash, or using natural light, you will get some sort of reflection.

flash photo
daylight - no flash
flash dimmed by tissue paper

And that is the basic process for oil pastel scrimshaw. I will play a bit more with this medium and update the results on the blog.

Wednesday, 21 January 2015

Where I'm up to - Taking Stock

So, the last year got a bit busy and then ended... poorly. Not much arting got done. Except for a couple of covers, and I have yet to post on the how-tos of those. So, to start the new year, I took stock of where I'd been with my drawing and my picture-taking and so forth, and this year I vowed I would do better.

So, I took stock by looking back over what I had done last year, and identifying areas that needed improvement, and then I decided on a couple of projects.

  • Refamiliarise with materials: I'm so out of touch with the whole painting and drawing thing that I've lost touch with what all that painting and drawing stuff can do. So, I found a book to help me along the way. Now, just doing prescribed activities probably isn't going to be enough, just as doing targeted writing activities wouldn't be enough to improve my writing. I also need to work on something that I really want to work on. Problem was, I didn't know what that was, so I fell back to a familiar theme and something that interests me at the moment.


  • Dragons: Work on my dragons. Just keep drawing line drawings until I felt confident enough to move into other materials, such as coloured pencil, pastels (oil and chalk), and maybe... just maybe, watercolours or gouache. Maybe by the end of the year, I'll be seeing an improvement. In the meantime, here is last night's dragon sketch - unedited.

  • Beetles: I had a few photographs that inspired this one, and I'd been pursuing these big 'Christmas' beetles for weeks until I'd worked out which trees I could find them on. And then I took photographs, and now I'm ready to draw. Not exactly sure what genre or style or whatever, but I'll figure it out.


  • Spiders: They're an on-going fascination, but the beetles take precedence. 

  • Problem Areas: highlighted by this picture. As you can see, I need to work on a lot of things: perspective, colour, plant shape and form, lizard anatomy, weapons and proportion. I'll start small and work bigger. Again, we'll see where it takes me.
First steps will just be to play within the themes above, and to start to enjoy drawing and the process of making pictures again - it has been a long time, since I did this, and I've missed it, but been too busy to get back to it. I figure it will take me a year before I can start thinking bigger projects. Baby steps, but it's time to get back into it.

Monday, 10 March 2014

Art Journal: Rosebuds - Applying Green (Day 2)

I don't get to play with my art as often as I'd like, but I was able to add more green on Friday, March 7. I am still working in Gimp, and I'm still using a mouse and computer, rather than the bamboo tablet sitting on my shelf. Here's what came out.


It's not quite right, but that's what this journal is for - to record the journey. As time goes by, I will get better. In the meantime, here's where I'm at - and I think I need to do more with the pink.