We're off to India on Thursday evening so I've been busy going over our itinerary and fine-tuning it - noting lots of places to visit/things to see - time and weather conditions permitting.
We travel totally independently booking our own flights and hotels so its hard work putting together the itinerary ensuring we're in specific places on specific days/dates so as to maximise our experience.
We usually travel to India early in the year - Jan to March but are breaking with tradition in order to experience some ceremonies that occur in November (The camel/horse fair at Pushkar - near Jaipur, and Dev Dewali at the River Ganges at Varanasi). We're staying in the North of India this trip and not tagging on a South Indian tour.
Anyway, as always, I intend to keep a blog doing daily posts about our experiences so if anybody is interested the link is:
https://clinxxvi.blogspot.com/
Whilst we are away my younger brother will stay at our house and decorate the hall/stairs and landing so we've had to take down window blinds, wall-hangings, mirrors etc., and clear out all the hallway sideboards/cupboards so he can shift furniture on his own. Its been a busy period.
In the meantime I started another coloured pencil portrait of the co-owner of a bar in Corralejo, Fuerteventura (our second home).
I decided to go back to basics and work on Fabriano Artistico white watercolour paper for this one and use dry watercolour pencils with very sharp points to just keep adding loads of very light layers - I think I'm up to about 20 layers of varying colours to get the skin tones right . When I first started drawing human portraits in coloured pencils I followed the tutorials of an American artist. Sadly I can't remember his name and I can't find recent work by him on a Google search. He used cross-hatching initially with very delicate strokes to stain the papers. Pencils had to be ultra sharp and after every couple of layers he lifted some colour gently with Blu Tack or putty and then smoothed the pencil with a tissue and kept repeating these steps. I think he expected to use 50 or more layers of colour building up very slowly. It is very time consuming though.
The original ref photo is taken against a dark background and she has quite a tan/glow. Halfway through this I really regretted my choice of paper - my last cp piece done on tinted mountboard went so quickly as the paper colour greatly reduced the numbers of pencil layers I needed.
I also didn't think through the fact that this lady is wearing a headress/fascinator with pale coloured flowerbuds and creamy/white pearls so a darker background would have shown them off better. Having got this far, I'll persevere and see how it ends up - then I'll probably dash out and buy some mountboard and do another version in a fraction of the time!
Anyway. These are the first 2 progress pictures - I won't have time to do any more work on it till we're back from India so its being added to the list of ever-growing 'not yet finished' pictures in my studio.
The photos are poor as the light was bad when I took them - the paper is white but looks dingy/grey in these. I'll try to take the next photos in proper daylight.
First WIP
and the 2nd WIP after a couple of hours working on it this afternoon
A beautiful work in progress portrait, Sue! I really look forward to seeing this finished. I, as well have problems getting the right color when taking a photo....
ReplyDeleteEnjoy your trip to India and will be following you on your link. I hope you know how I envy you....just thinking of all the reference photos!!! WOW.