Monday, January 19, 2015

Airborne - Step by Step



Okay.

It all starts with a drawing.  When I begin I have only a vague idea of what I want and do my best to find it and get it down.  I am improvising as I go and curious to see where it will end up.  I am not thinking in colour when I am drawing but rather in misty monochromatic tones such as Arthur Rackham might have used - nondescript sepia and paynes grey.  The colour choices come later.


I now take this drawing and with the aid of a light box trace it onto, in this case, a sheet of 140lb cold pressed watercolour paper which I have taped to a piece of Masonite - watercolour palette close to hand and ready to go.  I have already begun to lay in a few tentative washes as a way of tip toeing into the picture.  Blue for sky and shadows and yellow for trees.



At this stage I am working in watercolour and just laying in the broad washes in order to get a general feel for the picture I want to make.  I am thinking the light will be coming from the right in a late afternoon warm sunset kind of atmosphere.  I am still being very careful - no bold or gutsy displays of artistic gusto.  Often when I get to this point in a picture I rather like it and think it looks fine just as it is and I should stop.  However I know I must soldier on.


I now have the picture more or less established in watercolour and it is time to switch to gouache which is a much more robust water media.  Both watercolour and gouache are from the Winsor Newton brand and are colour matched perfectly.  Now that I have a reasonably good idea of where I want to go, gouache is going to get me there faster.  I am not yet utilizing the opaque potential of the gouache, that will come later, at the end of the process.  For now I am just putting unmixed colour on the board.



This is where I commit to the painting and continue to add gouache and really get the picture established.  The colour scheme is presenting itself.  The feeling now is that the train has left the station and it is up to me to not run it into the ditch.


Here is where I start to use the gouache in it's opaque form and begin over painting the way you might if you were using oil or acrylic - light colour over dark.  We do this by mixing white into whichever colour you want to make opaque and lay one over another.  In this way I can bring things forward and have them stand out or push them back and let them recede into the background.



The final stage is one I really enjoy.  The painting is mostly finished and I now can go in and refine details and clean up edges.  This is where gouache really shines because I can make all the little corrections and adjustments that finish off an image.  I also like to get in there with colour pencils and make little scratch marks and blur any areas that seem to tight or dark.  I may yet go back in and fiddle with it some more, but for now I think this one is finished.


While I was working on this picture I had the "My Neighbour Totoro"  art book out and occasionally leafed through it for inspiration.  I did not want my picture to look like that movie but I was hoping to tap into a bit of that spirit.

I will be more than happy to field any questions you might have.

Thanks for stopping by.  More soon.

19 comments:

  1. Your process is lovely, Larry, with consistent lovely results. Your characters and renderings are all like they are from neighboring areas of the same fabulous realm that Gwelf resides.

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  2. Well - no question for now, Larry, just pure thanks for this article and all your beautiful work ;)

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  3. You're quite welcome Karel and thanks for stopping by. :)

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  4. Thanks for the step by step of your process. I love seeing how other artists work. Love your whimsical style, btw!

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  5. Thanks Bliss or should I say Necron99 ?

    :)

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  6. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  7. I've heard of flying foxes, but never ones with such a lovely house. This is a gorgeous painting.

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  8. Ooh, an in depth step by step process, I like those! It looks so fresh and spring like. I'm working more in gouache too and it's such a great medium. So relaxing to use, it doesnt feel as restrictive as watercolour!

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  9. Rosie - Thanks for stopping by and leaving a comment. I very much appreciate it.

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  10. You are very talented, congratulations!!
    I just love this kind of illustrations, the kid in me mustn't be far!! LOL!

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  11. fantastic. Are you never afraid to screw it up?

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  12. Tessa - I am always afraid to screw it up, and so I go slowly and carefully. Also, I have a few tricks for correcting mistakes, but sometimes you have to start over, and when you start over your first version is called a colour study. :)

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  13. Hi Larry,

    This is beautiful! Thank you for sharing your process. When you start in with the gouache and say you're "just putting unmixed colour on the board," do you mean that you're using the color straight from the tubes and getting the colors you want by glazing?

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  14. Hi Emily - yes I did mean partly that but there is a little mixing happening also. What I really meant was that I am still using the gouache like watercolour, painting light to dark and when I say straight from the tube what I should have said was "without mixing in white paint to make it opaque." That is the next and last step, using the gouache like oil paint, mixing white or other opaque colours (naples yellow) in and finishing the work with opaque effects - like the leaves on trees or the little flowers, sharpening edges etc. I see that I have cunningly left you in the dark with my vague and poorly thought out descriptions, sorry about that. I hope I have perhaps clarified things somewhat. Thanks for asking. :)

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  15. Hi Larry–
    Thanks for the clarification. I know some people hardly mix color at all and rely on glazes to create the colors they want. I guess I do a little of both.

    It's interesting the many different "rules" regarding gouache painting. One of my instructors at art school was dismayed when I first started experimenting with gouache and kept using it more like watercolor. He stressed that it should be used opaquely right from the start. I guess it's a pretty good medium for artists to use however we want!

    Thanks again for the discussion.

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  16. And there it is, a lovely painting. But what then? How do you digitalize it? Home-scanning or photographing it, always makes colours less vibrant or the whole thing yellow. Retouching in photoshop doesn't give the right effect, does it?

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