20 February 2015

more ink monotone studies


I've been doing a few more sketches testing various ink colors with monotone washes, some water-soluble and some waterproof with a matching watercolor.

I retried the De Atramentis brown, this time with a burnt sienna & ultramarine watercolor mix. This is much closer to the ink's color than the burnt umber I tried previously. I thought the previous deer sketch looked a bit dull; now I've decided that it wasn't the color of paint, it was the extra niggly sketch lines. For this drawing technique, I think it looks "fresher" with limited ink lines, using the wash for depth instead.

2 comments:

  1. I know I probably should know, but what are you mixing to duplicate the De Atramentis?

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  2. I'm not duplicating the ink itself, I'm matching watercolors of near color to make up the washes since the ink is waterproof. The cowboy is the only De Atramentis ink here --- in a previous post I tried using burnt umber watercolor but it seemed a bit dull. So with the cowboy I mixed burnt sienna with just a small bit of ultramarine --- much closer to the brown ink color!
    BTW, I decided that the earlier deer sketch looked dull more due to too much niggly sketch lines. This monotone ink & wash seems to work better with a minimum of lines, allowing the wash to provide the form.
    The other inks on this spread are from Noodler's. The purple and red are both water-soluble so the washes are the ink itself. The napkin holder is drawn with my own mix of polar brown and polar black (both water-resistant) with a sepia watercolor wash.

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