Back to the figure drawing with the inktense pencils today. Ā I've been doing a lot…

KylieB
I have a new model today. Ā This is KylieB. I thought she looked cold in the source photo, so I thought I’d make the photo cold too and avoid all my reds.
So for colours, I started with willow in the darkest areas, then leaf green, then mustard. Ā I thought at this point I needed some more dark areas that weren’t green, so I brought in baked Earth. Ā Then I filled in the background with iris blue and sea blue, which looked like the two coolest blues in my set. Ā I marked in edges and creases with willow, Ā I also threw in some mustard in the foreground just for the hell of it. Ā I decided at this point I needed some blue in the figure, so I spotted in some little bits. Ā I also wanted something in the figure fighting back against the cold and didn’t want to use reds, Ā heād for the purple and added this in the darkest places.
I then added the water and realised that the purple was a mistake. Ā So, after letting it dry, I added some bark to all the darkest areas and added the water. Ā This improved things slightly.
Still, it goes down as a marginal failure. Ā There’s some great mixing and cauliflowering going on in places but the background is too uneven and pencilly and the darkest bits don’t blend well enough into the lighter bits – they have sharp borders and look too much like outlines. Ā I’ve also realised that I’ve dropped a good habit that I need to bring back again. Ā In my best figure drawings, my water strikes have been following the curves of the body, adding volume. Ā But for some reason I’ve stopped doing this. Ā My water strikes have all been applied with a colouring in mindset rather than a sculpting mindset. Ā I need to stop doing this. Ā I’ve written an instruction to myself on a piece of paper that I’ve put in with my pencils. Ā My next figure painting will be much better.
Anyway, yes, this is a flop and doesn’t go in the shop window,
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