Friday, September 26, 2014

Back to the drawing board

Landon Bay Bridge, St. Lawrence Island National Park, Onatrio - Conté crayon on paper
Yes, I know... I'm "back again". Well, truth is I never left. Just allowed certain circumstances to get in the way of drawing. Not anymore.

Going to draw for drawings sake, practice, and just the joy of creating.

What's funny is the conté crayon I used for this is from when I was in college... over 18 years ago! That, together with the charcoal and graphite sticks I have, they were just begging to be used. The drawing may look unfinished, but that is as far as I wanted to take it. And at the size I was drawing, conté crayon was not the best choice. But I wanted to use it, and it worked OK. The only thing that bothers me is the rock lines on the right. They should be angled up a bit more for proper perspective. But, I digress. I enjoyed drawing again.

Neat story behind this bridge. Click here to see how it was built.

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Still here...

Yes, though it may seem that I have once again left the blog-o-sphere, I am still here. I have recently found the time and will to begin working on some art, albeit small and quick and a bit messy. I say messy as I did not stretch or tape the watercolor paper prior to working on it, which makes it a bit difficult to work on the more it curls!

Watercolor has always been my favorite medium, both to admire and work in. The pieces below are examples of my efforts to mimic techniques I have viewed online. The other piece is a sketch of my house from a photo I took.

I can already tell a difference in my attitude since I started back, so I am looking forward to doing more.





Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Little girl

Inspired by a photo I found online. Quickly colored in Photoshop.


Saturday, April 19, 2014

Where did you come from?


Have you ever drawn something, and wondered where it came from? That's this little guy above. I doubt my abilities so much sometimes that I am shocked at the end results. This isn't me boasting, but sharing in my amazement. Perhaps there is hope for me yet! :)

Friday, April 4, 2014

Thoughts on digital illustration/art



For the longest time, I had a love/hate relationship with digital illustration. Much of the illustration I saw looked, well... digital. Coming from a mostly traditional art background, I expected the digital stuff to look like the traditionally painted/drawn artwork of others. Much of what I was seeing looked plastic or shiny, which I—regardless of how well it was drawn—automatically dismissed as inferior.

After a while I came across some much better examples of what was possible in digital illustration. I was absolutely amazed. I had to try this...

Once I began to embrace digital, I did all I could to make my digital artwork look as much like traditional art as possible. I would watch videos on how others did it (mostly with brushes they created), try to create my own brushes, uses free brushes, etc, etc. This, in the end, was an exercise in futility. Nothing I did came out like I wanted. I continued to play around with it every now and then, but never got the results I wanted.

Only recently did I begin to see digital illustration as a medium in and of itself. Not as a means to create faux watercolor, but an actual artistic medium, new and different, capable of creating textures unlike that possible in traditional mediums, but artwork just as awesome—and with the added bonus of layers and undos! How cool! This also gave me a new appreciation of and respect for the art done digitally.

My latest foray into digital is the above peach illustration. Not an illustration I set out to do for art's sake, but mostly as an experiment in working in Photoshop with a brush I created to look like—of all things—pencil!

Lastly, one of my favorite things to do is watch others create their artwork. I wish every artist would do a video of their process. It is quite enlightening and encouraging. A couple weeks ago, I figured out how to record my activity on my Mac using QuickTime. While this video is not an end all to who I create my drawings, I thought it might be neat to share anyway.


Wednesday, April 2, 2014

First steps


Hair has always been my Achilles heal when it comes to drawing, but then, I never really practiced drawing just hair. So, I took on the task of doing some quick drawings focusing on the hair. I think they came out pretty well. And I really like each kid as a whole. I was quite surprised when I finished the little girl in the top right (the first one I did).

One thing you might notice is that many of my drawings have a slight lean to the right. I never really noticed it until I started doing my comic strip and turning the drawings backwards while inking them. Not sure how to fix that issue; will have to work on it.

The images below are some drawings I did recently when the pull to draw came back to me.

Amelia Island Lighthouse (from photo)




I continue to be encouraged and excited as I pick up where I left off. I plan to challenge myself here soon with 30 drawings in 30 days or something similar. I got a book from the library on learning the basics of the Bible in 30 days, so I'd like to correlate my drawing with that. Check back to see what happens.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

My first love...


I love to draw. Let me say it again... I love to draw. As you can see from the photo above, I have a decent stack of would-be illustrations from the 2+ years I dedicated to becoming a children's illustrator. Every time I look at them, as small voice inside me screams, and I wonder where I would be had I not stopped. But, I digress.

Without getting too long and drawn out (no pun intended), let me say that I know who I am now. I am an artist--not a bookstore owner, or a baker, or a pastor, or a teacher, etc, etc... I am an artist. I have sat too long thinking that my calling was something else, and whatever I was meant to do would happen soon. But the truth is, anything worth doing takes practice; it takes time! I could never get that through my head for a long time. No creative person is born ready to paint the Mona Lisa. Stuff like that comes after much practice, and failure. Failure is one of the best tools for improvement. My problem was I kept comparing my work to others, getting discouraged, and then losing the confidence I had when I started. No more...

My goal in returning to my first love and to this blog is not the pursuit of childrens illustration, but to just draw. Dust of my tools, and just draw. I miss it.
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That is my goal for the next year. Just draw. No agenda, no portfolio, no rules.What happens on March 27, 2015. God only knows that.