 |
| Slightly exaggerated smiles for Bug and the first cat below. |
As with all art challenges, it was rewarding to participate
in Pencilvember again, but I’m happy and relieved to be done! For my
final week, I used my favorite watercolor pencils, Caran d’Ache Museum Aquarelles.
Even in their dry state, their ultra-softness and thick cores were ideal for
the fast and loose quality I was going for with these 20-minute sketches. I
thought adding light washes to intensify values would help me in my quest for
speed. However, as much as I like using watercolor pencils for foliage and
urban scenes, I don’t like the way applying water takes away the texture of fur
when I’m drawing animals (unless I have time to wait for the water to dry so
that additional dry layers can be added on top). I ended up using water very
sparingly.


This is a good time to talk about the Bee mixed media sketchbook I used throughout Pencilvember. It has a lovely tooth that takes
colored pencils beautifully. Although I didn’t use enough water to really test
it, the paper had no problem taking the light washes that I did apply. I also appreciated
the 8-by-8-inch square format, which was ideal for pet portraits.
It’s too bad the paper seems to come only with a wire
binding, which is my least favorite to use (this book was given to me by ArtSpot
of Edmonds when I participated in the store’s benefit for PAWS last
summer). At my desk, it was fine, but I don’t like carrying a wire binding on
location or the way the pages rub against each other (especially with pencil
usage).
On the other hand, a wirebound sketchbook has one benefit that I hadn’t thought of when Pencilvember began: Several of my subjects were pets of friends. If I had made the portraits in my usual hardbound sketchbooks (or even a staplebound Uglybook), I would have been reluctant to tear pages out. The spiral binding made it easy to pull sketches out and send them to those friends as a surprise (and it always makes me happy to imagine the recipient’s delight).
 |
| Mona Lisa smile for Whiski |
 |
| See notes below on how I experimented with color to help me sketch the raccoon's black fur. |
Here are a few more things I learned toward the end of
Pencilvember and in my final week:
- While still using photos as my main references, I tried giving
imaginary touches to some of these. I used to think drawing from imagination
meant that I had to pull everything directly out of my head; I now know that’s
nonsense. Pros use lots of reference images, and so can I.
- One of the challenges of mixing imagination with realism is
maintaining light logic. When I used multiple reference photos with varying
light sources, I had to choose a single light source and imagine how it would
light the imagined part so that it would be consistent with the rest of the image.
- The raccoon (my own reference photo of a visitor to our back deck a couple of years ago) gave me an opportunity to try an experiment on
the fly. One of my challenges with black fur is showing the distinction between
the local dark color and shading on that fur. As a quick shorthand, both in
execution and in helping me identify the distinctions quickly, I used green
first to quickly indicate the local color. Then I used dark blue to shade the
black fur. I like both the effect and the ease of thinking this through in a
limited time. I know I could also do this by varying the values of plain ol’
black, but somehow that requires more thinking! (Besides, a green and blue
raccoon is just more fun, don’t you think?)
 |
I deliberately used unnatural colors for this challenge to keep myself from getting fixated on trying to "match" reality, but in Mookie's case, she really did have pink ears! |
I can always use more practice, but these two solid months of drawing animals during InkTober and Pencilvember have given me the confidence to get back into commissioned pet portraiture much more quickly and efficiently – and that was my ultimate goal with both challenges. Win!
Although my intention was to show the pencils I used each
week, I kept forgetting. So here they all are. It always feels so good to have
pencils in hand! Thank you, colored pencils, for an enjoyable and instructive
Pencilvember!
 |
| Derwent Lightfast |
 |
| Caran d'Ache Luminance |
 |
| Caran d'Ache Museum Aquarelle |
 |
| Faber-Castell Polychromos |
 |
| Vintage and contemporary Prismacolor |