Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Easy and Fun Watercolor Project



Stuck for Something Creative?
Bring out all your paints, papers, brushes and water and get ready to loosen up with this fun idea that will super charge your creativity!

Crush a sheet of acid free paper into a tight crumple (try different weights).

Smooth it out and then crumple it again. Repeat one more time and then do a final smoothing.

Dilute some watercolor(s) and add it to the surface.
     • Try washing the whole sheet with color -or-
     • Try letting it run and drip (or do both!)

You will see that the folds and crumples take the color differently and create a wonderful texture that is awesome for collage, card making or creating a background for a finished painting or drawing.

Glue your collages and cards together using rice glue.

Or... Mount this crumpled watercolor onto acid free heavier card stock using the rice glue. Place a flat, heavy object on top and allow it to dry. Then play! Add more paint or draw with chalks, inks, graphite, color pencils etc, and create your own unique masterpiece.

Note: Rice Glue is excellent for paper conservation work. It's a type of paste prepared by boiling rice starch in water, is white in color and dries to a film that's almost transparent.


~ You can buy rice glue - you don't have to make your own ~

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Tips To Add Dimension to Your Drawings

Flat-lining
Using a flat, solid line, especially around the outside of a shape, tends to flatten the shape.


Create line variation by adding thicker or darker line 'segments' to your lightly worked drawing.

Using this technique will help to suggest volume and creates more dimension and interest to your work.

Thin and broken lines will give an illusion of light striking your subject. Use this on the top edges of your subject (where light would normally be landing on it).

Thicker and darker lines will give the feeling of weight and shadow. Use this on the undersides and bottom edges to anchor your subject to the ground. You can also use this technique where one area overlaps another - this will give the illusion of a cast shadow and adds a 3-dimensional quality to your work.

Pear Exercise
Do a drawing of a simple subject, say a pear. Then erase small spots on some of the upper lines (where the light would hit it). Your goal is to make the line work look broken. Even one or two breaks will accomplish this.


Next, thicken up the bottom line work of the pear (where it sits upon a table or counter). This does not have to be one solid thick line. Try going from thin to thick to broken and then back to thick and finish with the line thinning.

Practice adding this to some areas of your work where you are sure it would go (where the light strikes the subject and where the subject sits upon a surface).

Observe other Artwork (especially animation, cartooning and caricature work - these styles often demonstrate this technique with great mastery).

Thursday, March 27, 2014

7 Keys to Achieve Aerial Perspective

Bac Son Valley, Vietnam

What is Aerial Perspective?
As far as an Artist is concerned, Aerial Perspective is the illusion of depth and atmosphere created by the Artist in their painting or drawing.


We look through our earth's atmosphere all the time. When we look straight up, we are looking through less atmosphere than when we look towards the horizon. The more dust and water in the air, the more 'atmosphere' we are looking through. The 'thicker' the atmosphere is, the more the following 7 Keys of Aerial Perspective apply (especially 3 through 7). 

7 Keys to Achieve Aerial Perspective
1 - Make sure that objects closer to the viewer overlap those that are farther away.


2 - As objects move farther back into space, they are placed higher on the paper/canvas.

3 - Keep your colors warmer and purer in objects that are closer to the viewer.

4 - Make sure that your colors are cooler and more neutral in objects that are farther away from the viewer - the farther back an object is, the more cool and neutral the color should become.

5 - Keep in mind that as things recede into the distance, they become grayer and smaller.

6 - The closer an object is, the more detail you (and your viewer) will see.

7 - The farther an object is, the less detail you will see. Place less and less detail into objects as they recede farther back into space.

The next time you take a walk, look into the distance and you will see that the above keys come from keen observation of our world.

Are you a Artist of Photorealism?
Does aerial perspective apply to or belong in photorealism? Please share your view.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Free Painting!

Will Paint for Free!!

An Atlanta-based photographer posted a humorous Craigslist ad highlighting the fact that people often assume that photographers will be happy to do work for free.

I'm sure you will agree that this ad could easily have been posted by an artist!

     "I am a photographer and since people are always looking for free shoots I assume that they must also do their job, or provide their services, for free.

     I am looking to hire all types of people to do all sorts of jobs for me, as long as I do not have to pay anything.

     Just think, you will gain more experience, and I will put the word out for you and let everyone know what wonderful work you do. This opportunity will bring you a ton of unpaid work, but everyone will love you.

    So if you have a job or service you provide, and will do it for free, please let me know, because I am sure I have work for you and will hire you in a second.

     Feel free to email me with the service you can provide, when you can start, and please include references.

     I look forward to your free service."

       Thanks,
:)

Monday, March 10, 2014

How to Improve Your Drawing Skills in 5 Easy Steps

1. Keep it Light & Loose
When you begin a drawing, always keep your initial line work light and the lines relatively thin (so that it is easier to make adjustments later). This way you don't have to keep erasing. When you spend time erasing, you aren't spending time seeing and drawing.

2. Guidelines
By keeping your line work light and leaving the "incorrect" ones it in place, you give yourself guidelines for where your correct lines should be placed. (Later, you can darken the correct lines and the lighter lines will seem to disappear to the viewer - trust me on this!)

Study your subject and decide where each element will be placed. Begin by lightly laying down general contour lines.

3. DO NOT ERASE!
Adjust the lines lightly by adding other lines next to them. This will make the contours more pleasing to the eye.


4. Think in Layers
The first layer of your drawing should be light and loose. Cover "each area" of your subject but, (now this is important) LEAVE OUT THE DETAILS - for now.


With the second layer, begin to focus on those lines you wish to emphasize (still drawing lightly, go over the lines you like and ignore the ones you don't).

On the third layer, continue to adjust and "tighten-up" your drawing to more accurately reflect the image. You will find yourself naturally darkening the lines you wish to keep (this is why the lines you don't wish to emphasize seem to disappear).

5. To the Details
Yipee! Now you finally get to start adding those delicious details! Waiting to add details until you get all of the basic structure of your drawing down, allows you to add all this lusciousness in the correct places!


FEAR FACTOR
There isn't so much a fear factor here as there is the urgent desire to get right to the details. Oh how we LOVE those details! However.....


SOLUTION
As stated above, waiting until you have your structure in place will allow you a GREAT FEELING of FREEDOM when you do get to those details. It is really painful to have spent an hour creating wonderful details and then realize that all that work was placed in the wrong area or is crooked! (Who can relate to this? Raise your hands - hey! Mine is up!)


AIM FOR
Working the entire drawing within each layer before moving to the next layer. By keeping your lines light, you will eliminate the need to erase which will save you time and give the drawing a more 3-dimensional look.


You can do this, and when you do - it's FUN!

ENJOY!

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

How to Price Your Artwork to Make More Sales

Original article re-posted with permission from from OC Designer Source Blog

Written by Michele Preston and Tien Frogget

When it comes to your art, figuring out a price that works for each market can sometimes feel like walking a tightrope. You don't want to sell your work for peanuts, but at the same time you don't want to price yourself out of a sale. How much should you charge and how much is acceptable when someone offers to sell your work for you and give you a commission?

First, you need to remember that every kind of sale is unique in its profit structure. A fine art sale has more than one way that it is priced depending on where you are marketing it. For instance, if you are selling it yourself at a show vs. selling it through a gallery, it will be structured differently in your profit margin. This is also the same with licensing which you can spend the money and time out of your creative process or you can work with a professional who does this on your behalf and keeps you creating.

Let's start with setting your own prices. For an original, the first thing to think about is how much it costs you for the materials needed to create the piece and the amount of time you spend on it. For a reproduction, you'll need to take into consideration how much it costs for the paper or canvas and the printer to do the work. Then you figure out how much is a reasonable markup, usually around 25% if you are selling to another party or having an agent market it for you. This will set a price that you know you cannot sell below when it is a direct sale to end user. You know you can't sell it for less than that, otherwise you'll only be losing money. If you are selling it yourself and are establishing a base of clientele the margin can be anything from cost plus 25% to 50% depending on what your market would see as a value. Sometimes for followers of your work, it would be a good idea to have a survey on what they think of your prices vs. value. Do not be afraid to ask your audience. Other businesses do it all the time to help them understand their market. You should as well.

Remember what your goals are when you are selling your art. Are you the affordable artist that makes a profit because you sell a large number of pieces to different people, or are you the in-demand artist who makes a profit when you sell one expensive piece every so often? It is normal to be the latter artist, but being practical in your evaluation of your market and clients is important for this assessment of value to price. This depends on the kind of name that you want to make for yourself and this takes a lot of time and relationship building. The real key to success in the industry is diversity. It keeps you in your creating. That is the key to success as an artist.

There can be a benefit to setting your prices really high at the right time, but if you are not a known artist this can be a very hard hill to climb. Saying that your work is worth the large price tag and making yourself only available to a certain clientele can give collectors a sense of exclusivity but if this potential clientele does not see the value it can mean failure. Setting your prices high right off the bat when no one knows who you are yet can make it difficult to get your career going for a while, if ever. You'll want to set your prices based on your buyers and work from there to your goals.


On the other hand, being affordable makes your work more accessible especially when starting or promoting a new look or entering different types of sales like licensing. If you find that people frequently ooh and ahh over your art and then shrink away from your prices, you might want to consider bringing your prices down or offering special promotions to move pieces. You are already creative, so use your same creative skills in marketing yourself as well. Maybe you have a buy one get the next one for 50% off. Think about it this way: would you rather have originals and reproductions laying around collecting dust because you don't want to sell them for less, or would you rather sell them at prices that people can afford, still make a profit, and have happy collectors that see your piece every day and love to share it with others? The value is still high, but you give more people the chance to enjoy your work which showcases your art to others and creates a larger following.

So what do you do when you have an agent who is selling your work for you? Or a company contacts you and wants to license your work? When it comes to making these kinds of deals, it can feel really disappointing when you realize that you won't be making nearly as large of a profit on every licensing deal. In fact, when it comes to reproductions and licensing, it isn't uncommon for an artist to make as little as $5-$150 per piece, depending on what is being sold and if the job is a volume deal. The more volume the less the offer per image, but lucrative if your image is a contract for 100-1000’s. Getting your work seen is still a goal every time you sell the right. The more you are seen the better your increase in audience.

In some instances you may be working with someone to promote your work. This is also a process of events that takes time and is of benefit to you in creating diversity. The agent has used their time, money and effort promoting you, therefore to engage a price that is less than expected is understandable for certain instances. Remember, it is a sale in which your providing an image only to make it happen. The agent does not always make a commission on these sales. They sometimes are fitting a number into a job that fits the budget for a client to make you a sale. Finishing a job within budget for the customer, which in turn brings repeat business and spreads the word of your work to their colleagues for future sales.

When it comes to these situations, you have the ultimate say. You can decide that the profit is too small and you don't like making those kinds of deals. Or you can realize that these entities of value and work hard for you -- they are using their connections and knowledge to sell your work and simply paying you for your talent. Sure, it might not be as big of a profit as you wanted to make, but what's better: making a sale or not? Especially when you didn't have to do any of the foot work, and it leaves you with more time to create in the studio. Not to mention that the sale might lead to more sales depending on where it was placed. – For instance, a piece hanging in a doctor's office or real estate office sees hundreds of potential audience a month. Someone might see it and fall in love with your work.

When it comes to pricing and selling your art, you should do what keeps you painting and creating. Along the way, it's good to be flexible and willing to try different ideas and price points for different situations. After all, being a successful artist doesn't just mean making sales – it is also creating beauty that makes others' lives more enjoyable. It's about sharing what is in your heart with those who appreciate it.

Original article re-posted with permission from from OC Designer Source Blog

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Best 3 Artist Magazines to Subscribe To And Why

I frequently get asked by students, "what art magazines should I be subscribing to that will keep me up-to-date on things happening in the art world and give great inspiration and tips that will help me create better art at the same time?"

So, after a lot of thought and careful comparison, I have narrowed it down to my three favorite artist magazines that I personally subscribe to and what I like about them. All are full of inspiration, instructional guidance, excellent art, quality publications, good images, great articles, cover all mediums and subject matter.



1. Southwest Art Magazine


Southwest Art Magazine began as a western art magazine but has become much more and offers a wider variety of art. I love this since so many other magazines don't offer the quality of both art and articles anymore. Too many magazines focus on just one art style; this one has so much more to offer and is available in both digital and print format!

You'll want to keep every issue for their excellent variety of articles on different paint styles including oil, watercolor, pastel, mixed media, acrylics, etc. as well as their how-to articles on painting, drawing, collecting, and art techniques and trends. They also visit studios and interview the artists on their work, studio set up, and creation process. The featured artists are usually high caliber, accomplished artists with excellent technique and good advice. Regardless of your level of skill, this magazine is an excellent learning and reference tool.

Art styles you will see in this magazine: wildlife, figurative, landscape, cityscapes, florals, seascapes, still life, sculpture, contemporary, Native American, abstract, etc.



2. The Artist's Magazine (USA)


Artist's Magazine offers excellent how-to articles on a broad spectrum of media, including graphite, charcoal, colored pencil, watercolor, oils, acrylics and more. They have exhibition information, workshop listings, yearly competitions, and more! This magazine is a great learning and reference tool, regardless of whether you are a beginner, intermediate, or advanced.

Art styles you will see in this magazine: portraiture, wildlife, figurative, landscape, still life, floral, abstract, etc.





3. International Artist Magazine


International Artist is unique in that they continually showcase practicing artists around the world on a diverse number of media, including drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture, abstract and more. They have a lot of step-by-step demonstrations in which the artists describe their working process so that you can gain inspiration and learn from them.


This magazine offers bi-monthly issues but because is large, it's more like a book than a magazine. Each issue features a self-study painting lesson, more articles that most magazines, and each issue showcases a themed competition. Regardless of your skill level, it is an excellent reference tool and offers something for every artist.

Some of the competitions featured in this magazine: wildlife, people and figures, landscape, still life, florals and gardens, abstract / experimental art, etc.




Friday, January 3, 2014

Photos Lie - Yes They Do!

Globe In Pitcher © Tien Frogget
During my last Drawing Workshop, we were discussing how photos lie. Newbies to the art world often use photos as research believing that they show the truth.

Photographers know that if you expose a scene for a long period of time, people can walk in and out of the camera shot - yet the final photo won't show anyone - yet they were there.

We use wide angle lenses, filters, special effects and Photoshop. Portrait photographers employ so many light sources that a portrait will show no shadows, lines, creases - AND DEPTH! Yet we will still insist that what we 'see' is true.

This actually isn't the case. I often paint from photographs that don't capture the truth of a subject. In this way, it makes it much more important to understand to paint more than just what you see. This is especially true when painting people or animals -- understanding the bone and muscle systems in the body will help you to accurately reproduce it on paper and canvas. Working from photographs will always help improve your art -- but in the end, the knowledge needs to be there, too.