Left: My character was sketching Richard again. You can click on the image and read the side notes in an enlargement.
Today I have two images in the post because besides the finished piece my character likes to make correction notes. I thought it would be fun to show the overlay she did after the final sketch to make reminders for herself on where she would make corrections in a final painting.
Left: Overlay with some ink thoughts for corrections. I think she needs to go a lot further and correct the slop as well as the distances. Click on the image to view an enlargement.
Notes and Ramblings About the April Celebration of this Event
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Saturday, April 30, 2016
Friday, April 29, 2016
April 11 Entry in Roz's 2016 Fake Journal
Thursday, April 28, 2016
April 10 Entry in Roz's 2016 Fake Journal
Above: 16 x 10 inch cold press watercolor board, with
watercolors, rubberstamp inks, Montana Acrylic Markers,
and a portrait made with Distress Crayons (red) and
Payne's Gray Watercolor, collaged onto the board.
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
April 9 Entry in Roz's 2016 Fake Journal
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
April 8 Entry in Roz's 2016 Fake Journal
Left: Even my fake character gets to sketch Dick. 10 x 16 inch cold press watercolor board with pencil and watercolor. Click on the image to view an enlargement.
I think today's post is pretty self explanatory. If you read the text you'll understand what my character is thinking.
I think today's post is pretty self explanatory. If you read the text you'll understand what my character is thinking.
Monday, April 25, 2016
April 7 Entry in Roz's 2016 Fake Journal
Above: 16 x 10 inch watercolor and brush pen sketch on Arches Watercolor Board, with rubberstamp text. Click on the image to view an enlargement. |
I'm using up the last of my non-floral Brilliance. I'm sick at heart that they decided to add a fragrance to my favorite rubberstamp ink.
Sunday, April 24, 2016
April 6 Entry in Roz's 2016 Fake Journal
Above: 16 x 10 inch Cold Press Arches Watercolor Board,
pencil (warm up sketches) and solid paint marker and watercolor.
Above: Detail of the main sketch. You can see the red broken lines of the solid paint marker at the top of the beak and in some of the other areas. |
I made the main sketch using life drawings I'd done at previous Fairs for my source material. I was hoping the combination of the crude line tool and the drawings of drawings would get to a looser state for the final sketch. A sort of reduction of a reduction. (Or at least that is what my character was thinking.)
Additional Note on the Sakura Solid Marker: I really like working with these for loose sketching, HOWEVER, they have a chemical smell that is relatively slight, but too much for me. I found that sketching with one for about an hour on another occasion gave me a headache. I also found that it didn't air out right away so I wouldn't be able to use in my regular journal. On single boards used for this project it was no problem, because I could put the board in a separate room to air out. The good news is if odors don't bother you this is a fun pen for life drawing, gesture sketching, great for adding quick washes or layers of glazing over. It goes on dry and I noticed little pick up of color when washing over it. It's also a finer point (as you can see from the product photos at the above link) than solid paint markers made for kids. This makes it easier to do fine detail.
Saturday, April 23, 2016
April 5 Entry in Roz's 2016 Fake Journal
Above: 10 x 16 inch cold press watercolor board. Click on the image to view an enlargement. |
My character sketched these from sketches made from life for positions with photo references for color reminders. I think she has a project but she still wasn't talking. She likes to do lots of studies. Lots of studies.
Friday, April 22, 2016
April 4 Entry in Roz's 2016 Fake JournalT
The finished page: 10 x 16 inch watercolor board (cold press) with warm up sketches at the bottom. See the rest of the post for other views. |
This is the board masked off during the drawing process. |
The mask was in place as she drew with the PPBP and then she painted only the exposed area of the board as you can see in the second image. Later she removed the mask and she added it to the back of the board as shown in one of the photos.
Here's the mask saved on the back of the board. |
Thursday, April 21, 2016
April 3 in Roz's 2016 Fake Journal
Just a head's up, the Turner paper used on the right is too soft (and something HE would NEVER USE). Tape used on the edges pulled up and it was only there for less than an hour. (Lots of people talked to me during this outing so I had to go in and out of character.)
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
April 2, 2016 in Roz's Fake Journal
Above: 16 x 10 inch Cold Press Watercolor board. Various watercolors and rubber stamp ink. Click on the image to view an enlargement. |
As I mentioned in yesterday’s introduction to this project my character loves frisket! I guess on day 2 the real Roz wasn’t quite ready to give up backgrounds yet.
The character was working with Payne’s Gray Watercolor and sketching pigeons from an aviary in different ways to work with that paint. She painted over a direct brush version on the right, but frankly I think that was the real Roz saying let’s go in closer because I’m frustrated with all this glazing.
We’ll never really know.
As I said, I was pretty grumpy (even when sketching birds) the first week.
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
The April First Entry in My 2016 Fake Journal
The finished April 1, 2016 entry. |
While I was able to start my fake journal for 2016 on April 1, and continue it, I’ve yet to post about it. Life has been very packed. Finding time to squeeze the project in has been goal one.
Click on any image to see an enlargement.
Today I’d like to start posting the images from the project. I’ve been torn as to whether I should post explanations about my pieces here or on my regular blog—by explanations I mean some step-by-step process discussion. I’m still not sure and at this point I simply want to get some posts up. I think there will be a little bit here and a little bit on my regular blog. We’ll see.
Keeping with this year’s theme of “Shift in Place” and my suggestion that people not do any prep, or do minimal prep (take stock of what supplies they have on hand for example) I waited to jump in on April 1. I did buy and cut boards and I knew my character would be working mostly with pencil and watercolor on cold press watercolor board.
Stage 1: the background with the pencil sketch clearly visible. |
We are now 19 days into the project and frankly I still can’t tell you much about my character. I didn’t shift a whole lot from myself. She has similar interests—particularly in sketching portraits (people or animals).
What I can tell you is different is that she is good at setting time aside for painting in her life. The project is about taking time. I think I needed that in my life right now.
This brings up a lot of discomfort for me. I like to work in the bits of time I can find. I push myself too hard. I don’t make time for projects that require a lot of extended work because I’m too busy with other things (as we all are). But in recent months my attitudes have been shifting as I look at how I’ll be spending my free time going forward. And also as I look at how teaching online is working with the rest of my life.
Stage 2: Light Washes of Watercolor and some background adjustments. |
Knowing the why or how of something doesn’t always lessen the discomfort. The first week of this project I was pretty grumpy. I think that came from the realization that there wasn’t enough time in the world to give me the time I needed or WANTED to spend on the project I wanted to do. That made me grumpy.
But Dick pointed out I’m always grumpy at first, until I start to settle into the character, to hear the character in any odd moments. Then things start to feel more “normal” and I grumble less. I even get excited about various pieces. Right now in week 3 territory there’s the inevitable shifting of boundaries and testing whether something needs to evolve, we’ll see how that goes.
Stage 3: I start to put in light washes of watercolor. |
I laugh about the early weeks now. But I still don’t know this character at all because she doesn’t keep a journal like I do, she simply paints. She likes to play with space, and she is a really big fan of masking tape and frisket.
I know I struggled a couple days over whether to use ink or not but then I realized when my friend Tom came over to sit for a portrait for this project that there was no question that my character would have used the PPBP with watercolor because she uses what’s efficient and works to the scale she wants to do and the time frame she has. So except for the fact she sometimes uses pencil and that she glazes and glazes and glazes, we aren’t that different.
We’ll see how it all pans out.
Stage 4: I have to do something about the background color in the hair so I use some white gouache. |
In this post I’ve started with the final image which is Derwent Drawing Terra Cotta pencil on Arches Cold Press watercolor board, with watercolor, and then corrections in that Terra Cotta pencil. (The light blue in the image is Montana Acrylic Marker.)
I thought you might enjoy seeing the steps as I moved along.
The REAL ROZ is a bit perturbed at how the likeness got lost from the pencil to the painting. And so my editing eye had to have a little chat with her editing eye, and so it goes. This will need to be an ongoing discussion.
Stage 5: More glazes. |
What follows are the remaining stages that I took photos of. I wasn't great at stopping at set points to take a photo. I just took them when I remembered.
I did realize that working on painted backgrounds as I did in my regular journals wasn't going to work for this project as it created too many issues with the watercolor. I have been more careful going forward.
The images show a color shift because I didn't have the best of lighting conditions to shoot them under. The final image, appearing at the top of this column is an accurate scan.
I'm unclear why Blogger is arranging images with the text the way it is, but I don't use this blog enough to know the ins and outs. I hope you'll bear with me.
Friday, April 1, 2016
2016 International Fake Journal Month Begins Today
I am wishing every 2016 participant the best of luck as you begin your project today. I hope that you have fun, that you push yourself, that you learn a ton, and that you gain insights that you can use in your regular journaling and creative life.
Remember to let me know if you want to be in the Facebook group in order to share your images. Or if you are sharing your images publicly on a dedicated blog or Flickr or a website send me a direct line after you have five entries up and I'll add you to the Participants list in the right-hand column.
Have a great celebration.
Remember to let me know if you want to be in the Facebook group in order to share your images. Or if you are sharing your images publicly on a dedicated blog or Flickr or a website send me a direct line after you have five entries up and I'll add you to the Participants list in the right-hand column.
Have a great celebration.