Moving picture

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Bamboo dip pen and water-brush with dilute Lexington grey ink, watercolour, A5  – 20 minutes per stage

More evidence of Jim’s cleverness. He’s combined scans showing three stages of a sketch into one animated Gif image, creating a clear way to see the different qualities that line, shading and colour bring to a picture. Please let me know if you think it’s a useful way to look at a sketch, or if it just induces a migraine. I find it slightly hypnotic…

The subject is the same Hyacinth bulb that I’ve been drawing since Christmas, now in decline with leaves drooping and the shrivelled flowers losing colour.

Update: Filipe commented “Hello Ed. Although the idea is somehow visually appealing, I’d rather see the 3 stages individually. I wanted to observe more of each stage, but found it very difficult as it kept changing and I had to wait for the return of the wanted stage, take a fast peek, and then wait again for its return. It is very distracting.”

So here they are…

hya sep1hya sep2hya sep3

Posted in botany, flowers, from life, grisaille, Lexington grey, line drawing, monochrome, sequential, sketching | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Paint it black, or grey

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 Lexington grey water-brush and fountain pen, A5 – 15 minutes

Another late-night sketch of something close to hand, this time some well-worn shoes, in pen and ink. The shoes are really totally black, but I wanted the laces, soles and interiors to stand out.

Posted in clothing, Feet, from life, inks, Lexington grey, line drawing, monochrome, objects | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Ladybird, ladybird

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 Lexington grey water-brush, blue and white Uni Posca brush pens, A6 – 20 minutes each

The combination of coloured paper and isolated subjects in these pictures reminded me of old Ladybird book illustrations, particularly those from the curiously hyper-real ‘sounds and pictures’ series. So I labelled them in a similar font to complete the nostalgic hit.

Posted in coloured paper, furniture, illustration, kit, objects | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Topkapi #2

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Water-brush, dilute Lexington grey ink, watercolour, gouache, A5 – 30 minutes 

Back in the Harem section of the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul, this time looking through to the Black Eunuch’s Courtyard, with direct sun on the columns beyond. One of the times when a tiny tube of gold gouache was useful. The guard watched me sketching while guided tours streamed past, and then asked me to draw him. Here he is…

ports1…and here’s another Istanbulu who wanted me to draw him, this time while I was sketching this. Both seemed pleased with the results, signing and photographing them. I recommend keeping these sort of portraits very simple and slightly flattering…

ports2

Posted in buildings, coloured paper, from life, grisaille, inks, Istanbul, Lexington grey, museum, people, sketching, travel, urban | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Topkapi #1

Two sketches done a year apart in the ‘twin kiosk’ rooms in the Harem section of the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul. The first was done in 2012 focussing on the decorative tiles and trying to get the perspective right. The second was done last summer, and I tried to show the brilliance of the high stained glass windows. I had to really darken the room to get the relative contrast right, but at the expense of any other detail in the room. I’ll try to return and combine the best of both in a third sketch… (Or maybe someone clever could combine them through photoshop? Jim?)

UPDATE: Jim (sketchtesting.co.uk) is very clever and has combined them, below. Ta!

topkapi-blend

topkapi2Lexington grey fountain pen, watercolour, A5 – 45 mins

topkapi1

Marker pen with Carbon ink, water-brush with Lexington grey ink, white Gelly Roll pen, watercolour, A5 – 30 minutes

Posted in buildings, from life, Istanbul, marker pen, travel, urban, white marker pen | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Hyacinth revisitted

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Bamboo dip-pen pen and water-brush, dilute Lexington grey ink, watercolour, A4 – 20 minutes each

Once the hyacinth that I drew a few weeks ago was in full bloom the fragrance/smell became too much, so it went outside. It survived the recent storms intact, and as the smell’s subsided it’s back on my desk. I drew it using a bamboo dip-pen (more lovely thick grey lines), added some shading, and finally a colour wash a few days later. I think I prefer the uncoloured version…

Posted in botany, dip pen, flowers, from life, grisaille, inks, Lexington grey, line drawing, monochrome | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Rear windows

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1mm Pigma pen reloaded with Lexington grey, Lexington grey water-brush, white Gelly Roll pen, watercolour, A6 – 50 minutes

Revisiting Marlborough buildings, this time the higgledy-piggledy back, on an overcast afternoon. You can pick out some of the symmetry and order that characterises the front facade, but over two hundred years of weathering, extensions, improvements, new drain-pipes, and replaced windows has created a beautifully chaotic view. The effect is strengthened by the offset column of windows on the left of each house, lighting the many staircases needed to get up and down the seven stories.

Since starting sketching three years ago, my ideal pen/mark-maker and ink has continually changed; jet-black fine-liners, broad fountain pens, dip-pens, coloured fibre-tips, marker pens, pencils and grey brush-pens. It’s partly because I love buying and trying new pens…

But I think these changes also reflect my interest in the balance between line and form; how to delineate objects without overpowering the shading and colouring that give them substance. My latest favourite is a Pigma 1mm felt-tip refilled with Lexington grey ink, giving a broad grey line that blends well with ink-wash shading and colour washes.

Posted in Bath, buildings, from life, kit, Lexington grey, line drawing, sketching, urban, watercolour sketch | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Roll with it

kitchen3

White Gelly Roll pen, Lexington grey water-brush, White Uni Posca brush pen, A6 – 5 minutes

A quick minimalist sketch of two rolls of tissue, one slightly squashed at the top. Less is more?

Posted in brush pen, coloured paper, from life, Lexington grey, line drawing, marker pen, monochrome, objects, white marker pen | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Saucy

More foul weather so some domestic sketching in the kitchen; oils, spices and condiments on a recessed shelf, and all-sorts on a work-top. I used a broad fountain pen for the line, but loaded with dilute grey ink so it doesn’t dominate. I enjoyed drawing the collection of different jars and bottles, mistakes on individual items get lost in the overall effect…

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Both pictures done using Lamy Safari ‘B’ nib and water-brush with dilute Lexington grey, watercolour, A6 – 15 minutes

Posted in collections, food, from life, home, Lexington grey, line drawing, objects | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Marlborough light

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1mm Pigma pen, white and blue Uni Posca brush markers, Lexington grey water-brush, dilute blue and brown ink for roof and chimneys, A5 – 30 mins line drawing on location, 20 mins adding ink washes and colour at home

Wet and windy weather has meant my sketching hasn’t been very urban recently, mostly domestic and interior… During a sunny spell I walked down to Marlborough Buildings, built in the mid Eighteenth century, reputedly as a wind-break for the adjacent Royal Crescent (here’s the location in Google Streetview). I’ve drawn the typically symmetrical Bath-stone street facade, but like most of the grand terraces and crescents in Bath the most interesting view is really at the back. Here centuries of additions and extensions have created a beautifully chaotic scene, seven stories high in places. Next time I’ll sketch the rear view, seen in the 1970’s in the photograph below. 

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(Photo from Bath In Time)

Posted in Bath, buildings, coloured paper, from life, inks, Lexington grey, urban, white marker pen | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments