A friend recently asked for my suggestions for beginner watercolor supplies, so I thought I'd turn it into a blog post and spread it around to help make the shopping process easier. There are so many amazing products out there that it can be really daunting to make the "right" choices. There aren't many wrong choices, really, it mostly comes down to preference. That's something you'll get to discover for yourself, too! Without further ado, here is what I would buy you if I was going to gift you a beginner's painting set...
Read MoreReview: Four Different 90# Watercolor Papers—Saunders Waterford, Canson, Bienfang
I bought four different 90 pound sheets of 22 by 30 inch watercolor paper from Blick. I’m testing them to figure out which would be the best option for my upcoming graphic novel, Wild Dogs. While I was doing it, I thought I might as well do a little review.
Read MoreReview: Sennelier French Artists' Watercolor Metal Pocket Set of 12 1/2 Pans
I seriously love everything about this set.
These paints are so incredibly smooth, fluid, and pigment rich. They are the luxury sedan of the watercolor paint world. There is no chalky or grittiness to any of the colors, they are made purely without fillers or an imbalance of components.
Read MoreNew Year, New Goals: Update
Well, I've been pretty shit really at following through with my resolutions.
My biggest failure so far is that I haven't worked on the graphic novel. At all. I started working on page one and immediately got overwhelmed. I really should have paid more attention to the perspective lessons in college. My first panel should be a big, beautiful shot of a castle amidst mountain peaks, a highly-detailed three-point perspective piece that will set the visual tone for the rest of the graphic novel. So far I have...a horizon line.
But it hasn't been all bad. I just finished a new painting that I'm quite proud of (you can see it in my Personal section).
In addition, I've started setting up my online store & populating it with products. So far I have a few originals & prints of my more favorite pieces. The hold up with officially opening? Taxes & legalities. Sales tax is complicated, folks. But, with any luck, it will be open by the weekend!
My Artistic Process: Sexy Demon-Girl
I talk about my new Sexy Girls series & walk you through the process of painting my latest piece.
Read MoreMy Artistic Process & Symbolism: Skyclad Witch Painting
PROCESS
I thought it might be nice to do a break down of how I work through a painting from concept to final product as well as explore the symbolism in a painting. I've already broken down the symbolism in the Grant Morrison piece on the latest episode of Chat-man & Robin, Episode 28.
I didn't get photos or video of the process of painting itself. I was feeling a little self conscious about this piece (still am), but I can walk through how I laid the paint & ink down.
This rough sketch was drawn from a reference photo I took of myself. A few things were changed from the original photo, of course: longer, fuller hair, I evened out the level of the arms, left out my philtrum piercing & tattoos, made the drawing more cut & muscular...
You can see in this sketch I had a crescent moon on my forehead. I hadn't worked out the background imagery yet. Once I did, I swapped the crescent out for a rune
At this point I laid the horizon line & vanishing point down. I used the lines from my reference photo to find these. Maybe it's cheating, but it took way less time! Once those were in, I drew in the candles working over some roughly sketched in ones. Next came the sacred circle. When I was happy with these things I cleaned up my guides. Then I threw in the trees. Last came the athame, apple, & the moon.
The moon stayed this size all the way through transferring the drawing to watercolor paper (I do this using graphite paper—it's very hard to get up once it's down, so you'll notice a faint small moon inside the final). I felt the moon was too similar in size to the apple & athame, so I made it larger. It helped to add some drama to the piece, too, so it was a good choice.
How I worked when laying in the paint is I started with a pale yellow wash over areas I knew would have some of this showing: the candles, ground, sacred circle, the body, moon/sky, areas of the foliage. Then I worked on the candles while I was waiting to take a reference photo of myself to see how the candles' light would create shadows. (I realize as I write this that I didn't include shadows cast the pillar of the candle itself. Shit.) Then came the witch working light to dark skin tones, then details like hair color, lip color, the runes & alchemy symbols. I painted the apple & athame at the same time as the witch. The sky & ground came next. Next to last came the ink was of the trees & background. This actually took a good chunk of time. Finally, fine details on the witch like gouache highlights & painting in the moon with tinted gouache.
Symbolism
Like the Grant Morrison piece, I'm working in the same structures set up by existing religious (primarily Catholic) artwork. The arms raised by the witch were meant to be a harkening back to the Mother Mary's outstretched hands and also Justice personified. Balance, but also a calling down of the divine & of the feminine Moon. Her right foot is put forward in a symbolic placing of her foot upon the path of the spiritual journey.
Above her hands are an apple an an athame. I chose the athame first. Not only is it a common witch's tool, but I also used it to represent the phallic, the male. I needed another symbol to represent the female & what first came to mind was the apple. The apple is a very loaded symbol highly associated with the female & also with Eve, temptation, and knowledge. I was reading a short while before I chose this as my symbol in a book called Cunninham's Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs that I would highly recommend to anyone interested in herbology or green/hedge/kitchen witchcraft.
Some symbols are incorporated. They are symbols primarily of intention. Working top to bottom: on the witch's forehead is the rune beorc/berkanan that represents growth & rebirth. It's meant to represent the beginning of a new way of thinking. On her left cheek is the symbol of Mercury, an alchemical symbol associated with the masculine as well as mental processes & communication. On her right cheek I imagine is the symbol of Venus, associated with the feminine as well as the physical: love & sexuality. Note: everything is line with the witch's left/right. Again, I'm working with balance. The balancing of the spiritual & the divine. On her arms are more alchemical symbols. These ones are or fire (left) & water (right). (Another realization as I look back at this...I accidentally reversed these symbols. They should be swapped to keep with the left/masculine & right/masculine side of the image.) Again, fire equals male, water equals female. On her extended foot is the last symbol, the rune nyd/naudiz that represents need, craving, or a desire. As mentioned above this is in reference to the spiritual journey.
Three candles to a side are balance again. Also the number six is associated with the artist, responsibility, balance, generosity/humanitarianism & being community-oriented. All wonderful things to call into an act of dedication to witchcraft. Green, present in the witch's hair and the apple is associated with prosperity & fertility—in this case meant metaphorically in relation to her growing powers & budding spirituality. The plug seen in her earlobe is meant to be a moonstone, used for fertility as well as for spiritual growth, protection, & amplifying intuition.