6/13/19 Maple Leaf neighborhood alley |
After spotting the rare (in my ‘hood) alley on Eighth Northeast a few weeks ago, I’ve been looking for them more actively, and I
found another. Walking in the early morning, I was immediately attracted to the
backlighting that made the trees shimmer on top and around the edges. An
admirer of Virginia Hein’s sketches of backlit objects (heck, I admire all
of her sketches!), I have been studying the way she captures that luminosity,
so I thought this alley would be a good subject for practicing this.
The first day I made a bicolor study (below) – using yellow/purple
this time instead of vermilion/blue – to pay attention to the tonal contrasts. A
couple of days later, I went back at about the same time so that the lighting
would be the same (at right). This time I used natural colors, and if I started getting
distracted by local hues (like those blue and green trash bins), I glanced back
at my bicolor study to remind myself of the values. Initially I had made the trash
bins much brighter, but the study reminded me that were still in shade, so I
toned them down. I think I lost a bit of the luminosity that I had exaggerated with that bright yellow in the study, but overall, I like the way the sketch
turned out. I think making the yellow/purple study first was very helpful. (I wish the garbage truck had appeared again, but it was the wrong day.)
6/11/19 |
This is great - it glows. I can see how the value study really worked.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Susan! I'm glad it shows!
DeleteGreat shading on these trees.
ReplyDelete