Showing posts with label Halloween House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween House. Show all posts
Friday, October 25, 2013
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Peacock kurbisshaus
Just another day at the art table. Nothing like some color to highlight my mushy pumpkin drawing skills. But since these are just fantasy punkinhouse if they start a little mushy thats fine. The real ones end up mushy anyway.
It was a six hour project. I finally when the light disappeared for the day. Winter is gonna kill me with the light being utterly useless at 3 pm.
At anyrate... HOW COOL!!!!!!!!!!!! I was a little scared that this was not going to work out the way I wanted to since the paint mixing was such an excruciating process. It is going to need the whole night to dry out thoroughly so that I can see the true color values. Bristol board makes the dry time so much shorter. And maybe by morning I will have figured out what I want to do with the first floor body. I have figured out that the downstairs windows will be dark. The two towers and the balcony lights will be on for the evening. But downstairs all is quiet.
The real test is the top storey windows. They need something... perhaps a curtain in there? Something purple for certain though.
All in all... love the start of this. Can't wait to see how it turns out.
It was a six hour project. I finally when the light disappeared for the day. Winter is gonna kill me with the light being utterly useless at 3 pm.
At anyrate... HOW COOL!!!!!!!!!!!! I was a little scared that this was not going to work out the way I wanted to since the paint mixing was such an excruciating process. It is going to need the whole night to dry out thoroughly so that I can see the true color values. Bristol board makes the dry time so much shorter. And maybe by morning I will have figured out what I want to do with the first floor body. I have figured out that the downstairs windows will be dark. The two towers and the balcony lights will be on for the evening. But downstairs all is quiet.
The real test is the top storey windows. They need something... perhaps a curtain in there? Something purple for certain though.
All in all... love the start of this. Can't wait to see how it turns out.
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Preliminary
or drafting is not my thing.
I love architecture of all kinds especially Baroque and the more organic work of my current muse Antoni Guadi. Rocco had its place. Traditional Greek design and the gothic megaworks of Europe boggle my mind. The scope of those projects....
And then I remember all the math and drawing involved before a sculptor ever gets a chisel to marble or an iron smith gets to crafting the mould. And it is the drawing that gets me every time. Rather the draftwork involved.
There are special considerations for vertices and arches. How do you support a dome without taking up all the interior space? How do you make a straight line intersect with a curves and not have the building fall down.
I am, perhaps, being too hard on myself since these things are never going to be real buildings that anyone could walk into. Nor are they going to be "real" buildings to the wee creatures I imagine would carve their own Halloween house with tooth and nail. And that really is where the idea for these came from. Imagining a pumpkin field as a city for mice, shrews and the other things we don't want living in our houses. They are fantasy.
And I think that my type A persona should leave well enough alone. Except that I can see my iron peacock over the front door is off center. And the peacock vane on top isn't really sitting on the ball for the domw too well. A cat goes stomping through that neighborhood and there goes the weather vane! I've already started editing this on paper. As with the last one; a photograph gets you some good distance so you can evaluate how solid your drawing is.
It is essential to do this no matter what you are working on. But in this instance, because I may turn these into rubber stamps, it is more important than color. My fingers are so twitchy to get a brush in hand that I feel I really want to skip over the edits and improvements. If I do that it won't really be my best work. And that will make me feel worse than the compulsion to get the drafting right and the frustration that I am not as much a draftsman as a person who appreciates fine lines.
from the skethcbook |
And then I remember all the math and drawing involved before a sculptor ever gets a chisel to marble or an iron smith gets to crafting the mould. And it is the drawing that gets me every time. Rather the draftwork involved.
There are special considerations for vertices and arches. How do you support a dome without taking up all the interior space? How do you make a straight line intersect with a curves and not have the building fall down.
I am, perhaps, being too hard on myself since these things are never going to be real buildings that anyone could walk into. Nor are they going to be "real" buildings to the wee creatures I imagine would carve their own Halloween house with tooth and nail. And that really is where the idea for these came from. Imagining a pumpkin field as a city for mice, shrews and the other things we don't want living in our houses. They are fantasy.
And I think that my type A persona should leave well enough alone. Except that I can see my iron peacock over the front door is off center. And the peacock vane on top isn't really sitting on the ball for the domw too well. A cat goes stomping through that neighborhood and there goes the weather vane! I've already started editing this on paper. As with the last one; a photograph gets you some good distance so you can evaluate how solid your drawing is.
It is essential to do this no matter what you are working on. But in this instance, because I may turn these into rubber stamps, it is more important than color. My fingers are so twitchy to get a brush in hand that I feel I really want to skip over the edits and improvements. If I do that it won't really be my best work. And that will make me feel worse than the compulsion to get the drafting right and the frustration that I am not as much a draftsman as a person who appreciates fine lines.
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Edits
wash of Hookers Green over the original gourd color |
India ink detail above the green base |
And what I like about how this turned out is that it now more closely resembles the spiny ornamental gourds you see out for the holidays. I also enjoy the fact that the lines are more serpentine and less abrupt than my hand usually draws. Not sure if that is fatigue in my hands or just the nature of being heavy handed with the pencil. Though... now that I am blogging and only looking at the picture on the right instead of the whole thing I see that the spires in the valley are not as smoothly transitioned as I would like. And I could join the eaves to the doorframe...
You'll also notice that at this stage I have removed all of the masking fluid and the formerly white spots now have an eerie green appearance. Later in this session the top of the gourd got a good dose of Indian Yellow that really makes everything pop. And that sloppy swash of green is now fully integrated. I have an idea of how this is all going to work out so that I have a great holiday ornament for a desk or childs dresser that uses my rubber stamping techiniques.
cut from the background with more details added though that bat on the door is still giving me fits of pique. I may have the problem solved, but it is going to require some trickery. |
A bit.
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