24 April 05
Sundancing
Numenius and I took another class today, this one five minutes from home rather than two hours. Robert Regis Dvorak led a full-day workshop on travel sketching. Rather than have us wander around Davis, sketchbooks in hand, he encouraged us to try a full range of techniques in the classroom—pen, watercolor, dry brush—in a specially-made drawing pad. The subject was mostly Greece.
This pad contains 80 lb Sundance text paper. It works well with all the above media and takes a calligraphic line very well despite the texture. I’m thinking of getting larger sheets and binding my own sketchbooks so they open flat (it’s a bit of a gripe of mine when they don’t).
Here’s my first attempt at dry brush (the wash is laid in afterwards).
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Have you ever tried the water color method where you lay down a wash in the shape of the object you’re painting, let it dry partly so that the edges form a line, and then blot the remaining wet paint with toilet paper? It makes for amazing texture-forming work. Still one of my favorite water color techniques.
I’ve finally gotten around to writing to you and Numenius my first handwritten letter in literally years. Tomorrow I will be downtown around the area of my favorite art store and I will pick up the last of the things I want to get for both of you, namely two small sketchbooks (the one with the Kent paper I wrote about above). And then, FINALLY, I’ll get the package off! (how many months has it been??!!??)
By the way, you should try D’Arches cold-pressed etching paper for doing water color. It takes ink lines and water color like a dream.
I pulled up your blog here at work during a lull. First thing I saw was Robert Dvorak’s exercise from the Travel Sketching class. Your attempt turned out a lot better than mine. Great class, though, as are his others. Happy New Year!