Showing posts with label art practice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art practice. Show all posts

Saturday, April 1, 2017

First Oil Painting Using Walnut Oil

By Elissa Rosenthal

Hello Everyone! Welcome to my blog! If you are interested in this blog and other things I am up to, you can find the links to my social media below this post.

Well, in all honesty, this week has been a bit of a trial because of being sick. When I mean sick, I mean hardly-got-any-sleep-because-of-coughing-fits sick. Thank you though, to those who showed support. I am starting to feel a little bit better. *knocks on wood*

For this week I decided to try out my walnut oil that arrived in a new oil painting. I figured a good place to start would be to try doing a landscape painting. For this one I have been pulling from several references to create this scene.


I have not painted that much in comparison to other forms of media, so I think it is starting to turn out well for my skill level. This image you see above is my first layer of this painting. I decided to let it dry a little and come back to even out the skyline and add some more detailing to the water.


For the water I mixed some Rembrandt: Cobalt Blue Light and Rembrandt: Phthalo Green Yellow. Plus, I took some of my Winsor & Newton Artists' Oil Color: Burnt Sienna and my Winsor & Newton Artists' Oil Color: Titanium White to even out the rock formations in the distance.

For now, I am deciding to leave the painting as is until it dries. Then I can go over it with more paint. I want to play up the colors a bit more, particularly in the water and the closer rock formations. The walnut oil sees so far to be a very slow drying medium, so I will see how long it takes for the painting to dry at this stage in my climate. I live in Seattle, so that should give you some idea of what the temperature and humidity is like here.

👉FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER @TheElissaPost: HERE

👉LIKE MY FACEBOOK FAN PAGE: HERE

👉FOLLOW ME ON INSTAGRAM: HERE

👉FOLLOW BY EMAIL BY PUTTING YOUR EMAIL INTO THE FOLLOW BY EMAIL PLUGIN.


Saturday, February 25, 2017

Working On Unfinished Projects

By Elissa Rosenthal

Hello everyone! I hope you are having a good day today!

For this week in my journey of getting back on the artistic horse, I decided to work on a project of mine that I had put to the side for quite a while. It is a depiction of the goddess Aphrodite in oil paint.

At first I wanted to exaggerate the proportions of the head and eyes, and ended up deciding against it as I did some practice sketches. To me it did not seem to align with the goddesses image, so I decided to go a little more on the traditional proportion route. Though I may do a little bit of exaggerating with some features later on.

This is one of my first sketches for the face I was planning on using for the depiction of Aphrodite. 

In my original planning stages for the piece I wanted to have the depiction of Aphrodite crossing her legs, however, due to my gained knowledge on goddess since then, I've decided to have her be a mermaid. Plus, with painting in layers I can always start over or go over particular parts that aren't  pleasing to the eye.

The photo above are sketches of mine to try to see how I want the mermaid to be posed. 

From my own experience with painting, the main thing is to make sure the canvas will not be showing through, so at this particular stage I'm not too concerned with how the background looks. It was set up for the previously decided pose for the goddess which is why it is a bit off on placement. I'm thinking of maybe doing some geometric patterns or sea life around the edges to help with the balance of the painting. This is so the tail doesn't lead your eyes off the canvas.

Here, I've started to sketch the figure on the painting itself with a charcoal pencil.

In case you wish to know, the medium I used for the paint was just simple sesame oil. The original reason why I set this painting aside was because I needed the oil to have plenty of time to dry. Then it ended up being where I knew I needed to study more to feel comfortable doing the painting at all. I hope that I can do well with this painting in the coming weeks. 

For next week I will be showing my continued progress with this painting. Hopefully it goes well! And if not, well, there is always another canvas needing paint. 

Thank you so much for reading my blog, I really do appreciate it!

Want to keep up-to-date on my blog and other things I'm up to?

👉FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER @TheElissaPost: HERE

👉LIKE MY FACEBOOK FAN PAGE:HERE

👉FOLLOW BY EMAIL BY PUTTING YOUR EMAIL INTO THE FOLLOW BY EMAIL PLUGIN.

Saturday, February 18, 2017

The Art of Eyes : Distortion and Shading Practice

By Elissa Rosenthal

Hi everyone! For this week I decided to keep up with practicing drawing the eye and while doing so I've learned some little tricks for helping to correct some errors. 

1) I found out how you can use photography to your advantage! 

This may not work in all settings since I'm drawing from a photograph, but what I found helps is while I'm drawing to take photos during some pauses in the process to see how I'm doing. This little tip helped me figure out the next one as well.

2)Try to look as straight on to your subject and your paper since, if you don't, it can end up becoming distorted. 

From my own experience this is because your eye is seeing your subject at a different angle, same as your paper. This can make it where you can end up drawing lines too long or too short, among other possible distortion issues.


I found out the distortion that was happening after I took my first photo (shown above). I saw that I had made the end of the eyelid- near the tear duct- too close to the tear duct and at a too drastic of an angle.

Then, once I took my next photo, I found out I had made the pupil a little too small to the right, so I fixed it as best as I could at the time. 
Once I had taken what I considered my last photo of this eye I had been working on, I remembered three more tricks I wanted to share. 

1) Drawing in the same direction the whole time makes the image look more natural and gives it less unnecessary texture. 

2) Blending with a paper napkin works better than blending with a piece of computer paper.

3) You can over blend.


In the picture shown above is my form study I did since I had enough time to do it this week. A way I found to help with not using guide lines in the shadow -since it's so light in value- is to lightly shade in the general area and erase what doesn't need to be there. 

Thank you for reading my blog! I really do appreciate it! If you want to ask me any questions directly related to this post you can comment in the comment section below and I will try my best to answer. 


DO YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT ELSE I'M DOING AS WELL AS KEEP UP WITH THIS BLOG?

👉FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER @TheElissaPost: HERE

👉LIKE MY FACEBOOK FAN PAGE:HERE

👉FOLLOW BY EMAIL BY PUTTING YOUR EMAIL INTO THE FOLLOW BY EMAIL PLUGIN.

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Practicing the Eye


By Elissa Rosenthal

The eyes, in my opinion, are the focal point to a character or portrait. So, I decided this week to practice drawing some eyes. Particularly my eyes for studding the structure and proper placement since, if I need a new angle, I can take another photo of the same eyes. 

I decided to take a photo instead of studying in the mirror since it's pretty difficult to understand how large the iris needs to be when your eyes are looking at your eyes. Plus, I wear glasses and I wanted the study to be focused on my eyes, not the glasses, and be able to see. 

Here is my first attempt at drawing my eyes. With this one I did the left eye first, then the right. It's very clear I learned some proportion and how to shade during the first eye since the second eye does not look nearly as flat and improperly shaped. 



I found it really interesting how different the change was between the first and second attempt. Since this was my first time drawing the same thing more than once, I haven't experienced this type of progression before. I think I'm going to continue drawing this view of the eyes for a few more times to improve. 


The hardest part for me was the sizing and shape of the eye. It wasn't until this practice I noticed I'd been drawing my pupils in self portraits way too small.

This practice helped me notice how detailed the eyes are, even when at rest. Eyes can bring the character out in a portrait and make the viewer more interested. This is similar to how the expressions of characters in stories help the reader understand them. It is possible my mind was a bit primed for drawing the personality behind the eyes because of me working on my character development for a story I'm working on. Or, perhaps that's a bit of a reach.


DO YOU LIKE WHAT I DO ON MY BLOG?👊

👉FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER @TheElissaPost: HERE

👉LIKE MY FACEBOOK FAN PAGE: HERE

👉FOLLOW BY EMAIL BY PUTTING YOUR EMAIL INTO THE FOLLOW BY EMAIL PLUGIN.