Same inks and pens as #133, only with the colors reversed.
The experiment here was to do the drop shadow with lines while the work was in progress rather than using markers or watercolors at the end. Seemed to work. Would do again.
Same inks and pens as #133, only with the colors reversed.
The experiment here was to do the drop shadow with lines while the work was in progress rather than using markers or watercolors at the end. Seemed to work. Would do again.
I recently saw an exhibit at the Nelson about watercolor technique. I wish they’d do more of this sort of thing, as I found it interesting and inspirational. I was particularly fond of "Italian Hills" by Arthur Bowen Davies, so I thought I’d try applying his technique to a leaf ghost.
Ghost geometry produces a much different look and feel from a landscape, but it was still a fun experiment. This is also my first time working in mixed media with both watercolor (background) and gouache (foreground).
So lots of firsts here.
The main one is the use of text as the main graphic element. Appropriately enough, the story is Poe’s “The Masque of the Red Death.” While working, I referred to the entry in It Takes Every Word, a lit anthology (complete with writing prompts) I put together and illustrated several years ago.
I used Winsor & Newton Deep Red and Black India loaded into Rapidograph tech pens (0.35 and 0.7 mm, one for each color for a total of four pens). I’ve used line width variation before, and I also used tech pens recently. But this is my first time combining colors and widths exactly this way.
Of course with the image also being a story, the only way to do it was to go line by line, copying the text and switching pens each time the hue or brightness changed. More than once I found myself wishing I was working with something less temperamental than tech pens.
This is also my first time working with pens on illustration board. I guess I could have used a sketchbook, but somehow I sensed that I might want this one to be more of a stand-alone.
One more first: I’d never used the same pen for the art and the caption at the bottom.
Fans of the leaf ghost series may recognize this color combination from #105. However, this is Koh-I-Noor Scarlet rather than Winsor & Newton Deep Red.
So this ghost is an ink test, both to see whether the color was good and also whether cleanup would be easy. Yes and no.
The color is a darker red that looks a little like dried blood, which will make it perfect for an upcoming ghost. Unfortunately it was a colossal pain to clean off the dip pen nib. Neither water nor alcohol completely removed it, so I had to resort to paint thinner. And that makes it unusable for the future project I have in mind, because I’ll use tech pens for that and they’re hard enough to clean even when the ink isn’t stubborn.
But that’s okay. The W&N ink looks pretty much the same, and it dissolves easily with water.