Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Experimenting with Inktense

This is just the beginning of my journey with Inktense. I am just starting to see  the possibilites of what can be done with this material. I had bought a set a few years back, looked at the limited colors in the 12 pack and played a little bit with it before setting it aside. I substitute teach so I have different times with no students so I wanted to have something small that I could bring with to work on. I had taken acrylics in a small sealed palette with cups, but I wanted something smaller and easier to take with in odd places.

So, I dug out my Inktense pencils. I had thought of getting rid of them before, but because they were pricey, I hung on to them. I am glad that I did! Even though it felt like limited colors originally, I found that I could blend and layer to get the shades I wanted. I eventually did buy the larger tin of 24 and notice colors in one of the online stores that I want to pick up to compliment my set.

Disclaimer - My creations now are experiments. More developed artwork will come. I started with bookmarks since they are small. I can use a heavy weight paper of different textures to see what I like. I have seen online about using them different ways but most roads lead to Pinterest collections. I wanted to see actual artists. So, instead of wading through those sites, I wanted to add in the blog some of my own things. Most are experiments, so don't expect big things yet - those will come.

So, there is drawing with the pencils themselves. You can leave them dry - right out of the pencil,  but since I use a textured paper I did not get anything smooth. It was a lumpy coloring. It would have been different on a hot press paper.  I really wanted it to look like the ink it was. I found I could draw out a design and color it in. It did not even need to be a solid thick color to begin with. When coloring, I took into account what areas I wanted to have lighter and either left that area white for another time or just had my coloring lighter. There are light colors but they do not always go over a darker color like acrylic paint might. It seems to be a mix of watercolor and acrylic methods. With using these pencils you have 2 choices. You can do a solid color (as thin or thick as you like) and then paint over it with water or you can use the pencils and make blends of colors and go over that. It really does feel like you can be creative with how you do your pictures. When I had a color/area that I liked I would paint it with water and let it dry. I would not  dampen touching areas at the same time. By waiting for the one section to dry before coloring or  wetting the next you have control over bleeding. You can even color over an area that you have already colored and dampened to get the shade or intensity and depth that you were intending. Another way of working is to dip the pencils themselves in water and apply it to the paper while still wet.

I have been doing bookmarks since the small pieces give me a chance to experiment with how they work. I have colored and painted water over both sides but will test it also. I want to make sure that all inktense has been dampened and is permanent because I would hate to use it and have unset ink on the pages. I might also laminate it to seal it in but it does not need to be. I have read that varnishing is iffy but that is a future experiment also.

Inktense is supposed to work well as a multimedia material. I wanted to see what that meant by trying out some different things. I have some pictures that I did using the water soluable pencils. They have been drawn then  using a brush with water, blend the drawn and colored in areas so you have control over your light and dark values. Because it is a graphite? it tends to be a graytone picture. Some things work well with that material as it is, but other pictures may have so many details that it ends up mushed together. I used some Inktense accents on some of my pictures to see if it would perk them up. I think it was a big improvement. I had pictures that I was ready to throw out and felt now that some were salvagable.  The issue may come up that when originally drawn with the water soluable pencils that not all of it  was dissolved at that time and maybe is reactivated or something when you use water to activate the Inktense. I did not have much mushing, but it is something to watch for and consider.

Purple Iris - Pencil wash drawing
colorized with Inktense
Before Iris - pencil wash drawing



Schoolhouse - experiment - watersoluable pencil
wash drawings colorized with Inktense
Yellow and Blue Sunflowers - multimedia
acrylic paint on paper with Inktense accents
and dimentional fabric paint





Landscape Experiment with Inktense pencils on light
blue acrylic paint base
One of my latest experiments is with acrylic paint. Online there is talk where you can do it over an acrylic painting (but can't do acrylic on top of Inktense). There are a lot of variables to this method which each artist will have to experiment with. One is whether you are painting on paper or primed canvas. Both are affected differently. Another thing is how many coats of acrylic are on before you add the Inktense. If it is even a couple of coats it gets to be more plastic. Sometimes the color will ball up, sometimes you can wipe some of it off even after it has been on it for a while. I added details with the pencils on an abstract and it came out light (the staining), and when I did a landscape could scratch in for details. I think there is a lot of variation, textures and experiments that will come with working with the material.

I know even for myself, I am just scratching the surface. There are a lot of possiblilities using the pencils. Using the blocks, fabric applications, and even printmaking open up a whole new world. It seems like with the drawing that the materials seem to last for quite a while too so that is a bonus.

Counterfeit Art Supplies

I have had a few things lately that makes me wonder about the art supplies that we buy. I like it if I can score some cheaply at a thrift sale, garage sale or thrift store. Sometimes there are lots on Ebay and I wonder where they came from - did somebody steal them to be able to sell them so cheap? One of my latest things have been Inktense pencils. I saw two kinds - one in the regular blue tin and other sets that said Inktense but the pencils were painted white and were from China. Even though the Chinese ones were cheaper I wondered if they were knock offs and bought the blue one instead. The blue ones say "Made in the UK.

Yesterday I was at a thrift store and saw some Yarka watercolor paint in tubes. I picked those up because I knew it was a good brand. I went on Amazon to check out what kind of deal I got. There were two entries with this size of package of Yarka tube paint. I looked at the first one and they had common paint color names. It also had the same stock number that I had bought. The problem was that the one I bought had a different box and the paint names were different too - they were not the usual pthalo blue, cad red etc that the first box had listed for colors. They had more original names like emerald green, golden ochre, English red. The box I had said "Made in Russia" on the side and on the paints. The box I bought had an orange lily on it. The second set had the orange lily, but a different stock number and didn't list the colors that came in the box. I checked the 2 reviews and they are what set off red flags. One said theirs said "Made in China" on it. They were used to using Yarka and said that it was close but they could tell that it wasn't the original.




They then bought the other box and it was the same thing. I went on the internet to see if  Yarka was still made in Russia and there was a linkin article by an expert that said that they were made in Russia and who the manufacturer was - also in Russia. The article was written in 2015. I will need to contact her to see if it still is. Dick Blick and Jerry's both have a blurb on a different Yarka product that they are still made in Russia. The other thing is that it says on the box that I have and has the same thing printed on the cover of the box that it is imported by Jack Richison. When I check the Jack Richison website they no longer carry this tube watercolor paint but still carry pan watercolors. That is not saying somebody got a stash and is selling them but it just makes you wonder.

I guess the reason I am being touchy about this is because one of the Facebook groups I follow is talking about people stealing their designs (mostly from the far East) and making money off of them. Original intellectual property has lost out because of the theft of copyrights/patterns/inventions stolen and their rights have been infringed upon. I want to know if I am buying Yarka, that it is actually Yarka made in Russia instead of a knock off made in China. Passing off one for the other is fraud.  It is knowing that I really am getting quality and not wasting my money on a fake. People have spent time and money developing product, setting up their businesses, building a reputation, and it is not right or fair that somebody hacks it and makes money off of somebody else's hard work. I would rather support the inventor than the thief. As artists, we do not want our artwork stolen and somebody else making money that we should be making off of our creativity and hard work so we, in kind should be supporting other innovators and creators in maintaining their copyright also. If ideas/ inventions/ art/ copyrights continue to get stolen at the rate they have to date, then there will be nobody inovating anymore because it is just not worth it.

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Sketchbook Overhaul

I have been working on Art for a long time. Because of that I am thinking about what I like and what I do not. What works for somebody else may not work for me and vice versa. I also work in acrylic paint, so cool things that work for an oil painter may not work for me. I have already shown you my overhaul on my palette. This is my overhaul on my sketchbook.

New Sketchbook idea
I love having a sketchbook with me. I get ideas, I see things to draw, I get an idea or observation to write down. I write down about what I want to do, my shopping list, what is going on in my life like a journal, and I have an never-ending "to-do" list. I substitute teach and end up with prep time, kids at recess, lunch, specials time. After doing it a few years, I am sick of reading and that is why I draw or brainstorm. I might be there one day just to watch kids take tests or work on their research papers. I ended up with a big stack of sketchbooks that I never look at and ideas long forgotten. I had begun to rip those apart and keep only what I want to keep in a large blank book. So, I write a lot of crap that I don't want or need to keep  and I need to find a way to take care of it quickly.

Because I haul these things I did not want a big one in a tote. It gets heavy enough as it is with water, lunches, and my purse. Because of doing some plein air events, I think about how can I take everything I want in a small way because I may have to haul it in myself. I shouldn't have to take everything and the kitchen sink because I am away from my studio.   I did not want a small one because sometimes I can only draw small pictures nor did I want a large one which takes up a lot of room. I chose a small/ medium size 3 ring binder to use. This size binder fits a half sheet of printer paper.

My binder/sketchbook is assembled with what I need. Front cover on this one has a pocket that I can put a picture in. I have a small clipboard that goes in the front pocket. If I desired and was doing  a 5x7" painting or sketch that also could go in that front pocket.

So, front pocket - mini clipboard

      1 section - calendar ( printed from free printables online to get the size I wanted 
 
      1 section - contacts/address book (I am using                          lined paper)

      1 section - sketch paper - printer paper cut in                          half

      1 section - "to-do" list - all in one space so I                            can add on as new things come                              up  or remove a page when it is                              all   done - and throw it away! I                            don't have to write my list                                      repeatedly or all
                        over the place (again and again)

      1 section - Blah, Blah - the things I feel compelled to write about - things I saw, misc
                        these are easy to look over and throw out later.

      1 section - acrylic paint color studies - for me to take on the go                          without having to have another system. I can do                                each tube color on a page, add additional pages for                            more experimenting with mixes. It makes it flexible                          but also so I can take it with to locate colors when
                        doing studies.



 1 section - Inktense color studies. I am just starting to use these                          and maybe be also do them for multimedia work . I                            have  24 pencils but need to see the actual color washed.
                  Under this section or make a new section, I can do the                      washable pencils so I can see  way it looks colored,                          washed and the softness/hardness qualities.


So, that is my new sketchbook overhaul. I think it has everything that I want and need. I use a rubber
band to hold it shut but could change that also. My concern is how long will this binder hold together with use. I may have to check out different models, use packing tape to reinforce or play around with different things. The only thing that would be nice is to have a pencil pouch on the inside. Not sure if they make them to fit. The beauty of this is that I do not have to load it up with paper for writing or drawing. I can take what I think I will need for the day. I also do not have to keep it in there like I used to do with a sketchbook, waiting for the sketchbook to be full.