Monthly Archives: June, 2018

What About Barb?

Recently, while doodling a little, it struck me how often I nearly crumple and toss away my idea completely, and thought I’d walk through the process of how I draw a face.  I won’t give you instructions, really, as there is plenty of that out there (and practice is the best art tool) but more walking through what the process is for me, so you can see that it’s not always a basket of lovely, sweet-smelling perfectly-drawn roses.

Sometimes I think of it as resuscitating a dying patient.  Will it make it?  Is it going to survive?  Or will we lose it to a scribble, right there on the drawing page?

So I’ll start with a Barb.  Barb is from the show Stranger Things, and I like her because I was a lot like her at one point in my life, I think (geeky and sweet…and apparently not popular enough to warrant a complete town-wide search).   So I felt like drawing Barb.

BARB-1

People often ask if I use references, and to that, I say HECK YES.  I nearly ALWAYS use references.  It’s fun.  It’s okay.  The thing is, my goal is not photorealism.  I don’t WANT it to look exactly like the photo–that’s what photos are for.  So absolute realism is NOT what I strive for.  I start with a photo for reference, but I make changes as I see fit, and sometimes mix several reference photos to combine.

There are many ways to calculate proportions of the face, some of which are admittedly VERY helpful.  But once you know them, I find that the fun comes in just drawing it as it comes.

I start with an eye.  Since she has glasses on in this one,  I like fit to the eye in that space the way I see it, the way it measures up to that space, and sort of gauge where the other eye is from there.  The edge of the nose usually lines up with the inner corner of the eye, so somewhere around there is where it goes.  And the corner of the mouth usually falls where the middle of the eye is.

BARB-2

Those are helpful guidelines, but as I say, I play off them, I don’t use them as law.  Knowing the rules and then playing with them, I think, is what gives something your own personality, your own style.

Often, just a few little tweaks make a big difference.  For example, the chin in the first picture below juts out more than I’d like, so some shading below it (as in the reference) helps it blend in more in the second photo below.

BARB-3

Even still, I find my proportions are always quite wonky–with the eyes I draw, one is almost always unintentionally larger than the other….but to me, that’s okay.  Like I say, it gives it personality. See the eyes there in the bottom right drawing?  A little shading in there helps straighten them up a bit…

BARB-4

The question is when is distortion TOO much?  There are times, to be sure, that it just doesn’t work, and I toss it and throw it away.  But to me, that’s the fun of the process.  It’s fun to see if you can piece a face together little by little, piece by piece.  There’s something relaxing to me in not creating something photorealistic.  So by all means, study the face, study facial musculature, and study drawing proportions of the face and body.  And then take that, and play with it.  And have FUN with it!

BARB-5

I also get asked a lot about the supplies I use, and that’s what I love so much about ballpoint pen:  it’s NOT fancy.  It’s easy and fun.  I can paint in watercolors on top of it, and I can paint in acrylics on top of it.  Does it bleed?  Not really–but admittedly, the paper has a lot to do with it.  Multimedia or watercolor paper is the best and can hold up to a lot of water and paint and blending without bleeding.  Regular drawing paper is toothy and porous, and not really meant for liquid mediums, so the pen might bleed on that surface.  You don’t need a lot of expensive supplies to create good art, but so much lovely things happen when you use good paper!

Anyway, the best advice I can give, is practice.  If you want to get better, you’ll do it.  You’ll try new things, and you’ll find your own techniques.  You’ll do it all the time, and it won’t even FEEL like practice.  It’ll be FUN.  And the more you do it, the more you’ll learn what works for you, and the better you’ll get.

The Loraxlotl

We’ve had a lot of changes lately.  New in-office job, new move, new house.  Sometimes when crafty time is put to the test, it seems the urge to create actually kicks into overdrive.

While shopping for house necessities in our new place while my family was closing up shop in our old house, I came across this little fake succulent dome display for $8, and it spoke to me.  “HEEEYYYYYY,” it said in a loud whisper.  “I bet you could TOOOOTTALLY make something out of this.” 

loraxlotl-1

Those are the types of voices you don’t ignore (especially since it wasn’t telling me evil things).  So it went in my cart and came straight home with me.

Thankfully, most of my craft things had been unpacked, so I grabbed my box o’ Sculpey  and got to work.

loraxlotl-2

I wanted its body to wrap around that succulent scenery, so I gave it an internal structure of aluminum foil so I could bend it and try out a few poses.  I pictured some sort of floaty thing, maybe the way they display underwater creatures at natural science museums.  I wanted it to be sort of puppy-cute (I have a thing for the squoosh-faces), and have a leafy-seahorse vibe.

loraxlotl-3

Once I had it where I wanted it, I preheated my oven to 250, put it on a baking sheet (with an aluminum foil “pillow” to hold him in position), popped it in, and turned off the heat.  Then I left it in there for a few hours, til the oven had cooled.

After I painted it in acrylics, I used E6000 glue, and dabbed some on its cheek, its fin, and its tail, using sewing pins on its tail to keep it in place until it dried

loraxlotl-4

When I posted it, someone said it looked like a mix between an axlotl and the Lorax and they dubbed it a “Loraxlotl,” which made me laugh.

loraxlotl-6

So there it is!  It may become decoration for my new office, it may be for our house, but it’s one of those things that just needed to BE.  And you have to listen to those things, because that’s where the fun stuff is.

loraxlotl-5