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1/20/23 Maple Leaf neighborhood (on location) |
After practicing the color “grisaille” from photos, I
wanted to give it a try on location. (After all, that’s my main motivation for
anything I practice – I want to eventually apply what I learn to drawing from
life.) Rain and cold temps haven’t made it easy, but on-and-off sunshine helps.
On a cold morning neighborhood walk, the low sun (when isn’t the
sun low in the winter?) illuminated the side of a tree and the house behind it (at right).
I used a purple Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Brush Pen for the darkest tone
and filled in the midtones with colored pencils. Typically I would leave the lightest
tone paper-white, but because I was using a coolish, pale green Uglybook,
I tried warming the bright side of the house with yellow pencil. (The
composition feels a little unbalanced since I left the other side of the tree
empty.)
That same day, I had to pick up my car that was being
serviced in the neighborhood during the golden hour – an unusual time for me to
be walking in winter. The light was spectacular, but I knew it would be brief,
so I snapped several photos quickly. I regretted not sketching on the spot, but
that low, late light is the one circumstance when even this fast sketcher can’t keep up: The best part of the golden “hour” lasts about five minutes.
I knew the photos would make great studies later, though (below).
Using Pitt pens in only blue and yellow, I made the “grisaille” for two compositions.
Then I used a pale orange pencil and a blue pencil to add a little more color
and to round out the gradation on the water tower.
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1/22/23 Two studies from photos |
A few days later, I had another rare experience: I sketched from life the same scene at Green Lake Village that I had sketched from a photo previously (below). I didn’t have the benefit of those nice reflections on the wet pavement when I sketched from life, and I think the composition was a bit better from the photo. Of course, I enjoyed the experience of sketching on location more, but I noticed that making a study first from a photo took away some of the freshness of my experience on location. Maybe if I had waited longer between the two, it wouldn’t have affected me that way.
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1/19/23 Study from photo |
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1/23/23 Green Lake Village (on location) |
Other observations:
- Although I’ve come to realize that this color “grisaille”
technique is no different from what opaque media painters do, my roundabout way
of arriving here with colored pencils – one underpainting idea leading (or
misleading) me to the next – has been an interesting process of self-study. I’m
enjoying the exploration.
- Using Pitt brush markers has reminded me of something I
realized years ago when I was using gray-tone Pitt markers as an actual grisaille: I don’t care for the look of making the initial contour drawing
with markers – the lines are too thick and solid. I’m going back to doing that
task with a colored pencil, then filling in afterwards with markers.
- Although Pitt brush markers come in something like 90
colors, and I have a lot of them, the palette is missing a blue-violet that I
often want. I’m trying to find no more than two colors that work for most
scenes because I don’t want to carry around a huge fistful of bulky markers.