Sunday, June 28, 2015

I'm Done!

I finished this last tile project for my online class today and am completely hooked.  I asked Sheryl when she will be offering an intermediate class and she will have it ready to go in late July.  She let me see an overview and I will definitely be taking it.  I learned so much in her beginner's class.

I showed this to Butch a little while ago.  The camera just cannot catch the purity and clarity of the different colors of the alcohol inks, but this is a pretty good shot.  It just doesn't pick up all the different blues and greens.


All I need to do is sign this one.  It is a keeper.  And it is a convincer.  I know there is no such word, but it convinced me that this is something I really want to pursue.

Really.

It makes my heart happy.

My First Poppy

After I completed the tile I posted yesterday, I began the next lesson which is an exercise in controlling the ink for more realism in my image -- which, as most of my friends know, is my preferred style of painting.  I have a second one I am in the midst of doing now with a different background.

I still need to improve on my brush strokes but, overall, I am happy with the outcome.  Primarily, I think, because of the beautiful background effects and vibrant colors of the alcohol ink.


I'll finish the second one today and start the third lesson in this last group in the beginner's class.

There will eventually be an "intermediate" online class for alcohol inks.

I plan to be the first person to sign up.

I am sooooo loving this medium.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Alcohol Inks

The more I work with alcohol inks, the more I love them.  Though I have a long way to go before I become proficient.  Today the final week of the online beginner's class downloaded and I just completed the first lesson which was to pour a "Dreamscape" -- a process trademarked by June Rollins -- on tile and to use a coffee stirrer or old credit card to create texture.  This last week is called "Putting it all together."  These two techniques were taught in the first week.

I selected Salmon, Citrus and Mermaid as my colors for pouring the dreamscape and decided on the credit card for creating texture. I poured along all four sides of the tile and let the colors flow.  The result was a dreamscape that looks like blades of grass in the foreground and I'm not sure what in the background. ;-)


Whatever it is, I really like it.

Almost like looking through aquarium grass?

Monday, June 15, 2015

Getting the Hang of It

I am much happier with this second piece and still may rework parts of it after tomorrow's watercolor class.  That's the beauty of the Yupo paper.  It does not absorb paint the way watercolor paper does, and sections -- or the whole thing, for that matter -- can be reworked as the artist feels the need to do it.  I may end up reworking some of the water and rocks.  I'm pretty happy with the tree.  This painting is based on a photo I took in the little village of Keanae on Maui when we were stopping along the road to Hana.  I'll sign it after I am completely done with it.


Tomorrow's lesson will be painting water and seascapes.    I'm looking forward to it!

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Alcohol Ink and Compressed Air

One of today's lessons in my online class was applying alcohol inks to a 6 x 6 inch tile.  This was so much fun that I may decide to buy a little compressor for my art studio.  My husband offered me the use of his but we both believe the compressor he has would blow the tile away even if I was coordinated enough to manage the hose and nozzle and my wet tile -- and I didn't particularly relish painting in the garage -- especially in 95 degree weather!

So I played with the texture tools for awhile and made a chart of the different effects:


I used alcohol on cotton balls, felt, Q-Tips. an old toothbrush for spatter effect, a mister, and a fan brush as well as a coffee stirrer and old credit card.  I had done a number of these with creating texture in my acrylic paintings over the years and it was interesting to see how they worked with the inks.

I did the same thing with wet ink on tile.

And, THEN, I got a fresh tile and my can of compressed air (the type you use to clean computer screens and keyboards of dust) and started applying ink and then blowing it.  I loved the effect and know I will be doing more of that.  I will keep this one and do something with it in the future.


Fun.

That's what all of this is.

Just. Plain. Fun.


Saturday, June 13, 2015

Loving Summertime

There are lots of things I love about summer here.  It's not as crowded because the winter residents have left for the most part and, Glory Hallelujah!, school is out and all that neighborhood traffic is gone until mid August.  Living smack dab in the middle of a triangle where the elementary, high, and middle schools form it's angles has its drawbacks between 7 and 9 in the morning and almost every hour on the half hour in the afternoon has some major drawbacks.

But most of all, it's a nice change of pace in my volunteer activities.  Especially this year as I have promised myself and my husband that I am going to take more time for myself and both of us are spending more time with each other.  He loves it when I spend time in my studio -- and so do I.  I find it relaxing and energizing at the same time.  Because I really need to get back into my painting, I enrolled in a 6-week watercolor class at the Dunedin Fine Arts Center.  It is a unique class taught by artist, Taylor Ikin, who is teaching watercolor painting on non-porous substrates, Yupo and Terraskin.  Both are papers made from recycled products.  Yupo is like a plastic and Terraskin is made from rock.

Both of which have presented me challenges and I figured I needed expert help.

Taylor is wonderful.  She's happy, flexible, talented (extremely), and so much fun.  My classmates are happy, flexible, also talented and a barrel of fun.  Tuesdays are my new favorite day of the week. I'm not very good at it yet, but here is my first attempt.



I am finishing up my second painting this weekend and I already like it a lot better.  I'll put it in my next post.

In addition to this class, I am also doing an online class with artist Sheryl Williams who is teaching through a series of videos.  That started today and I can work it at my own pace.  I worked on that a good portion of today and really enjoyed the exercises that demonstrate how the inks flow and meld with other colors.  I did the following:

Applied in Drops

Just drops of three colors, watermelon, citrus and sailboat blue and a few drops of blending solution.

I tried a different set of colors for the next exercise:  Bottle, Rust and Denim

Applied in Streams

I have mixed feelings about that color combo.  I will probably use it again but with a different application technique.

Next up -- Circles.  This was like applying in drops, but you touch the tip of the ink bottle to the Yupo paper to make circles as opposed to drops which spread differently on the surface.

I went back to the first set of colors which I really, really like.  I also added a couple of blending solution "circles" which lightened it in several places.

But my favorite and the most fun?  Applying a drop of color and then blowing on it with a drinking straw. Loved this exercise.  Fun to watch the the different shapes and colors that formed.

Drops blown with a drinking straw:

I truly love that last one.  Same 3 colors but so many new colors that formed as the inks melded.

It will end up on some one's birthday, get well, or thinking of you card some day.

That was Week One, Lesson 2.  I just did a color chart in Lesson 3.  Looking forward to learning more in Lesson 4 tonight.

This summer is mine.  All mine.  And time with Butch (#40 coming up soon.) Except for my Fridays in the library.  But that's for me, too.  A few happy hours in one of my favorite places with some of my favorite people.  ;-)