Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Colman Ferry Terminal is a Winter Keeper

 

11/17/24 Colman Dock ferry terminal

Some days, it doesn’t matter which sketchbook I bring. At the ferry terminal, though, I sure was happy I had a landscape-format book along!

Completely rebuilt in 2023, the Colman Dock passenger ferry terminal has been on USk Seattle’s radar as a winter-weather outing location ever since it reopened. Last Sunday was plenty wintry enough – bitterly windy and sometimes rainy. Although most of us stayed inside the terminal building, a few hardy souls sketched from the outer passageway where the view was even wider.

Not interested in freezing, I stayed indoors, where the skyline view was fantastic enough.


Choosing the “Ban Roll-on building” (formally known as the Second & Seneca Building) as my right-most starting point, I kept drawing across the top of the landscape-format Uglybook toward the left with a single line, ending with the Great Wheel. Then I spent the rest of the outing filling in the lower part of the spread with small scenes inside and outside the terminal.


To finish up the time before the throwdown, I picked a “victim” from the assortment of passengers waiting for their ferries (man on the right). Looking at the spread I started on my light rail ride, I noticed that everyone I sketched had “interesting” hair.

Light rail riders (left) and a ferry passenger

Officially, according to signage, only ticketed passengers are allowed inside the terminal building. But given the welcome we received from terminal security officers and other staff, some of whom joined us at the throwdown, I’d say we can all safely wink at the official policy. USk Seattle has a new winter mainstay!

By the way, when I say “victim,” Im not kidding. Based on the photo below, that poor, clueless guy in the ferry terminal should be very afraid. 😆

Photo by Kim Roberts

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Diary Comics from My Head

 

11/12/24

My imagination-based diary comics continue, inspired by the prompts and template I learned from Drewscape. I’ve been making these at the end of the day when I’m tired, have the lowest level of creative energy (and apparently the messiest penmanship!), and the hardest time being motivated to sketch. Given all of those potential barriers, I really need a structured format to draw from my head.

11/13/24

The Nov. 13 page (above) does not follow Drewscape’s format; it’s more of a traditional comics story arc with a linear sequence. It happened to fall into place because of the events of the day, but on an ordinary day when not much happens, coming up with this type of arc is usually much more challenging. I’ll take them when they come, and use Drew’s prompts when they don’t. In any case, I’m enjoying this process.

11/15/24

Monday, November 18, 2024

Last of the Color

 

11/15/24 Japanese maples, Maple Leaf neighborhood

11/11/24 Maple Leaf neighborhood
With all the heavy rain and wind we’ve had lately, I always set out on my walks wondering if all the color will be gone this time – and then I’m delighted when I see that it is not. I spotted one house with multiple Japanese maples still near their prime, brilliant in the welcome sunlight.

On some streets, there’s more color on the ground than in the trees. Thank you, trees, for the pavement rainbow.

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Planar Head in Positive and Negative

 

11/13/24 Gekkoso 8B graphite in Stillman & Birn Alpha sketchbook

Ching gave me a 3D-printed planar head. With all the facial and skull planes structurally delineated in plastic, it seems like it should be relatively easy to draw. On a recent wet morning, I found it to be surprisingly difficult to draw with graphite. As usual, proportions are the trickiest part.

Instead of measuring as I would with a human model, I decided to correct or adjust as needed on the fly. I resisted erasing restated lines so that I could see my mistakes and learn from them, but in some areas, it got so messy that I could barely distinguish the good lines from the bad, so I erased a bit for clarity.

11/14/24 Prismacolor in Uglybook
On the next wet morning, I tried again, this time with a white colored pencil on black paper. I thought this would be even trickier, since drawing in negative is usually a brain twister, but in fact, I found it easier. Maybe it was just that it was my second time, so my proportions were more accurate before corrections. Drawing white on black also made it easier to abstract the whole thing, which somehow helped.

Anyway, I found the exercise great practice, and I’ll likely draw Mr. Planar again with different lighting and different media. (You can see that I’m gearing up for the long, wet winter ahead.)

Saturday, November 16, 2024

Shiny! Caran d’Ache Cosmic Blue Mixed Media Metallic Set

 

Caran d'Ache's limited edition holiday gift set includes metallic Neocolor I waxed pastels and metallic colored pencils.

The Halloween pumpkins have barely begun rotting, so you know what that means: It’s time for another limited-edition holiday set of colored pencils from Caran d’Ache! [Insert starry-eyed emoji here!] After the disappointing set of Claim Your Style Bicolor Pencils that came out in late-summer, I was afraid that was going to be all we’d see from the Swiss company this year (as far as pencils go), but I was pleasantly wrong.

As part of this year’s holiday theme, Cosmic Blue, Caran d’Ache has released a set of 10 metallic colored pencils and a Mixed Media Metallic Set that includes the 10 pencils and 10 metallic Neocolor I wax pastels. Unlike the aforementioned Claim Your Style bicolor set, which came in a flimsy cardboard box, the Cosmic Blue set comes in a sturdy, sliding-drawer box that befits gift status. I still prefer the tins that were used in previous bicolor sets, but this cardboard box will do nicely.




Although the Neocolor Is are identical to the existing standard metallic set that has been around for a while, the pencils are new. That is, the dark blue barrel with no identifying color number or name is new. The cores are likely to be the same as existing metallic pencils in Caran d’Ache’s product lines. But more on that in a minute.





I swatched the pencils and the crayons in a black Uglybook, which I knew would best show off whatever metallic sparkle they would have. As usual, my scanner dulled them way down, so I also photographed them under my desk lamp, which shows the shine much better. Although the pencil colors are not identified, the palette aligns exactly with the Neocolor palette, so I’m assuming they are the same metallic colors.

Pencil swatches scanned

Neocolor swatches scanned 

Pencil swatches photographed

Neocolor swatches photographed

With all of Caran d’Ache’s special-edition pencil sets, my question is always which of its existing pencil sets the cores come from. With some bicolor sets, the European packaging was labeled “Prismalo,” so that was easy, and swatching the pencils confirmed this. With these metallics, it’s trickier. In the Prismalo line, I could find only gold and silver (which both appear in some of the bicolor sets). The Pablo line includes only gold, silver and bronze.

The only Cd’A set I could find that contains more than gold, silver and bronze is this Fancolor set (which I don’t own – WHAT?! – so I can’t compare). The small Fancolor set of non-metallic colors that I do own is water-soluble. The Cosmic Blue pencils are barely so – water only slightly dilutes the pigment. That’s similar to how the silver and gold in the bicolor sets behave.

I know it's silly, but my favorite part of the whole Cosmic Blue
theme is that lovely shooting star under "Special Edition."

So, what are they, Caran d’Ache? My guess is that they are the same as the cores in the metallic Fancolor set, except Cd’A, in its usual casual approach to product nomenclature, has disregarded the fact that the name “Fancolor” is associated with a water-soluble pencil. (Perhaps Fancolor just means “student grade” or “it’s student grade, but so is Swisscolor.”) Thanks, as always, Cd’A, for confusing consumers.

For the record, the metallic Neocolor Is do not dissolve at all. If they did, they would be Neocolor IIs (unless Caran d’Ache decided to confuse consumers about those names, too).

As soon as I saw these metallic pencils and crayons, I thought of nocturne sketching season, which begins right now with the Big Dark. To practice for it, I used the black Uglybook to sketch the scene below from a reference photo I took about a year ago (the light looked like the golden hour, but it was actually early afternoon). I used gold, dark gold and silver pencils to draw the initial shapes, then filled in large areas with the corresponding crayons. Once again, the scanner took out all the sparkle, but my phone shot shows it off well. Oooh, I like these!

11/12/24 photo reference


My current everyday-carry Uglybook is a dark Christmas green, which I’m finding difficult to use. The paper’s hue is too dark to be a midtone for my usual tonal way of sketching in these books, so I have to crank my brain to “see” both the highlights and the midtones while leaving the paper color for the darks. In the on-location comics page below, I used the silver and rose Neocolors for highlights. I think they’re especially effective as backgrounds. I’ve kept them in my bag for use with this book.

11/10/24 Metropolitan Market, Crown Hill

Although we all know I would have bought this set for no reason at all (other than my love for Caran d’Ache), I’m excited to have something new to play with during the Big Dark.

One more bit of good news about the Cosmic Blue products: While all previous holiday releases were available only from European shops, this one was being promoted by US retailers at the time of Caran d’Ache’s announcement. I bought my set from Goldspot, but a general search brings up many US retailers.

Friday, November 15, 2024

Diary Comics with Prompts

 

11/11/24 Memory and imagination (Ha-ha -- I just realized I drew the envelope wrong!
Sometimes the simplest things. . . )

As I mentioned in yesterday’s post, I’ve sometimes felt disengaged from my comics-based sketch journaling process. My single-panel, sketch-plus-words format is OK for documenting something, but it can feel static (see below; cutline contains a potential idea). One-offs have no sense of sequence or the passage of time, which is part of what defines comics (according to Scott McLeod). When they weren’t made on location, my past attempts at autobiographical comics with multiple panels have been hit-or-miss. I usually tried the traditional three-panel story arc, but often my “story” didn’t feel like it had enough of a narrative arc, and I was forcing it to fit. I didn’t know what I needed. I wanted more structure . . . but not too much!

Earlier the same day, I had made this single-panel
comics about the interaction with the leaf raker. I like
 the implied simile of the leaves and the papers I recycled,
but I had to do it with words, not images. The multi-panel
approach lacks the simile, but rearranging the panels
might put it back in. Hmmm... something to think about.

In a recent YouTube video, Drewscape
showed how he uses self-made prompts to structure his diary comics. The prompts can be changed easily to suit his subject matter for the day, so the format is not overly structured. At the same time, the prompts offer questions to respond to, so it’s easier than facing a totally blank page (or, in my case, a blank mind).

Shown at top of post is my first diary comics using Drew’s format. Using an old A5-size Moleskine sketchbook, I quickly drew a grid and chose the following six prompts: something I did; something I saw; a conversation (two middle panels); something that made me happy; something I ate. There’s no particular sequence for the events – except for the conversation, the panels could be rearranged on the page without changing the meaning – but I still have some sense of the passage of time.

Although it wasn’t necessary for the format, I also followed the spirit of Drew’s approach by drawing straight in with ink instead of planning first with pencil. I kept it simple by avoiding fussing about shading and other rendering tactics. I also avoided drawing myself, which is perhaps a comics cop-out, but it also helped me keep things moving instead of getting bogged down with how to draw myself. (Do you miss seeing me, as the narrator, in these panels? Should I draw myself more?)

I am especially pleased that I did all six panels from memory and imagination – no photo assist. That’s a big deal to me because I am always trying to practice drawing more from my head, and it’s always extremely challenging. This felt relatively effortless because I kept the drawings simple.

The only way in which I strayed from his format was that I didn’t label each panel to indicate the prompt, such as “Something that made me happy.” I didn’t have enough space in the small panels, and I think the prompts are implied anyway.

On this particular day, I had enough to fill six panels. That’s probably not always going to be the case, but then I can always choose other prompts – or make fewer panels. (Drew’s video notes include other potential prompts, and I can always make more of my own.) Of course, this six-panel page took longer to draw than my previous single panels, but I definitely found the result more satisfying and engaging. Although I probably won’t do it every day (and I give myself permission not to!), I am going to give this format a solid try for a while to see how it goes.

Thursday, November 14, 2024

Looking for a Different Format

 

10/28/24 Ballard Starbucks

11/7/24 Green Lake Village
Although I’m pleased that I’ve kept up my daily sketch journal habit for nearly a year, it’s the most satisfying when the entries take the form of diary comics (like those shown here): live, on-location recordings of a place and time. (Maybe my satisfaction is a result of being lazy, as these on-location comics require less thinking: I just draw what I see, as usual.)

On other days when I don’t go anywhere that I can document this way, I still make sketch journal entries, usually as single panels done from photos or memory (many I do not share publicly), but they often feel meh. I appreciate having the documentation, but I’m just not as engaged with the process when done after the fact, even when that’s necessary.

I’m still looking for a different format from the default single-image-with-words panel with the hope that it might engage me more. Andrew Tan (AKA Drewscape on YouTube) continues to inspire me with his approach to diary comics. In this how-to video, he draws diary comics using a format with prompts that appeal to me. Although I really enjoy both the appearance and the process of my own freeform, organic page design approach (as shown in this post), I’m also attracted to the more traditional grid that Drew uses, even when the “story” is not necessarily sequential. I’m going to give it a shot.

11/8/24 Caffe Ladro, Roosevelt neighborhood

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