Showing posts with label surface. Show all posts
Showing posts with label surface. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Sketchbook ideas

Water, Paper, Paint by Heather Smith Jones

More printing materials...

  • Kitchen roll & toilet roll
  • Thread! For the wood grain
  • Styrofoam... Plain and marked.
Try monotype (page 109)

Use contact paper to mask areas (page 83)

Sketchbook ideas...

Ideas from Sketchbook Challenge By Sue Bleiweiss

Adding background colour

  • After painting something, offload any extra paint onto blank sketchbook pages...
  • ...embellish further with bubblewrap, cling film, tissue papers or indeed printing that paper onto another sheet.
  • Look into spray inks and use them with stencils
  • Paint papers using a brayer. Squeeze paint onto a surface in squiggles place paper on top and roll over with a brayer. Lift off and let it dry. Repeat with more paper.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Grain

I've taken some rubbings of the platform. And I wanted to explore the lines of the wood grain further.

 
A simple back stitch would be effective here.
 
I also experimented with masking fluid...

 

I think I'd like to explore this further... Maybe take more time to apply the masking fluid more finely.

 

Grass

I've started an exploration of the grass beneath the platform...

This includes trying to cut a stamp... This needs extra work!

 

Tried some paper weaving...

 

These papers were cut from a gardening magazine. This provided lots of texture.

 

I love this manipulated photo using grunge filters in my editing software.

 

The colours now look very dramatic and the surface texture very interesting... Holes, crinkles and an almost burnt effect.

I think I'd like to try applying paint to grass and taking a print of that... Need a dry day though!

 

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Printing 1


 

Took some time to make some small stamps of the screw heads and printed some papers using them and black ink...

The one on the left is blu tac pressed into a raised screw head. The one on the right is cut from an eraser.

 
Blu Tac - the holes from screw driver did not print clearly, just the centre point printed. An interesting print but no connection with the original surface despite the stamp being an actual screw head impression.

 

carved eraser - love this one, especially the texture from the combined smooth eraser and the spongy ink pad. A more abstract representation of a screw head.

For both prints I really like the bold graphic pattern and the variation in ink intensity

I'm going to doodle around this...

 

Rubbings 2


 

I took a rubbing of the screw heads on the wooden platform. This is the other side of the paper.

 

Monday, August 20, 2012

Rubbings 1

I started my exploration by taking some rubbings of the surface using wax crayon, pencil and charcoal.
 
The grain of wooden surface was quite rough in parts... Knots in the wood and the rusty screw heads added extra interest. I also liked the void created between the planks. This was not immediately obvious in the original photo as the grass beneath it made it seem quite flat and 2 dimensional.
 
 
 

Some patterns emerged within the grain... Some undulating others thick and thin.

 

I like the boldness of the charcoal rubbing. And the wax resist worked quite well too.


 
 
 
 
This background was created using the edge of board dipped in black paint and stamped across the pages. The spots were a happy accident... Like screw heads.
 
 

Repeated rubbings over the screw heads was interesting too...

 

 

And led to this bubble wrap print... A background for further work in my sketchbook.

 

 

Some wax crayon rubbings of the knots.... interesting shapes to stitch.

 

Wooden platform

I have decided to use the wooden platform as my surface...

 

I like the regular shapes, the texture of the wood and screws. I like the vibrancy of the green peaking through the neutral washed out planks of wood.

 

 

 

I couldn't resist some photoshopping of the image.... Black and white and a negative image.

I think these show the graphic quality of the shapes and the texture of the grain very well.

On the negative image the grass looks like its been made by printing with crumpled paper, the screw heads like sparkling stars...


 

Friday, August 10, 2012

Surface 2


This is part of the garden wall.

I love the foliage growing between the bricks and the contrast between the green and the reddy bricks.

The foliage looks delicate but is obviously persistent and strong to force its way through the mortar of the brick wall

If I had taken a photo of the climbing platform two weeks ago the grass would have been forcing its way through the wooden slats...

Surface 1


The platform from Elizabeth's climbing frame.

It's quite worn and the wood is untreated.

I like the wood grain, rusty nails and the green grass peeping through.

 

It may be too limited in colour and in shapes. Lots of lines though!