Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Tips for the Frugal Artist

Today's economy can challenge any artist's creativity and resources - let's face it, art supplies are expensive, especially professional grade materials.  The tips below may help!

1. Keep materials and supplies clean and organized. They’ll be in good shape when you’re ready to go plus you’ll be able to easily find just what you want. Knowing what you have means that you’ll be able to use it! Taking care of brushes will extend their life. They should be cleaned well and dried flat; never leave them standing in water or solvents.

2. Consider alternate materials. Making a mark with a charred stick on a stone can cost nothing; it expands creative boundaries and connects us to our ancestor artists. Besides stones, consider more mainstream surfaces such as paper bags, Tyvek envelopes, plastics, wood, or fabrics. How about chalk, ball point pens, crayons, or berry juice for mark-making? Can you paint with a finger, a feather, or with yarn? Investigate inexpensive supplies from children’s stores and office supply aisles. Does it have to be archival?  Let your digital camera or scanner archive the image for you.  I love using inexpensive mechanical pencils for sketching. Use the backs of your material, too, if it’s thick enough.



3. Explore materials you already have but seldom use. Start by creating some test swatches on different surfaces. Try out those brushes and sponges you collected but never find yourself choosing.  If your materials aren’t acceptable for creating art, what about using them in other creative ways? Can you use that odd shade of orange for stamping, printing, to decorate end papers, or as a base for something else? Can you mix it with another color to make it more viable?

4. Trade with another artist. We all have something we bought at one time that we've used seldom or never. Swap supplies with someone else!

5. Make your own sketchbooks from leftover paper. There are many online resources ; sketchbooks can be made any size, and from almost anything. I had about 30 pieces of light-weight watercolor spiral bound for less than $2.00 and created a unique and portable sketchbook that was a joy to use. An online resource I came across recently used duct tape instead of stitching or binding. I’ve also hand-sewn bindings, using materials I already had at home (see journals at right). I used carpet thread and an embroidery needle for stitching, leftover beeswax chunks to wax the thread, a butter knife handle as a bone folder, duct tape for book cloth, thin cardboard for the spine, front and back covers, white household glue for the covers, an old Tyvek envelope to cover the outside, ribbon scraps for bookmarks, and leftover colored paper for the end papers.

6. Investigate other art forms. Have you thought about creating small pieces, such as ATC’s (artists trading cards)? Collage is a great way to explore dimension and texture, and lends itself to found materials readily – so do altered art forms. There are hundreds of online resources on altered books and journals, and repurposed clothing and accessories. Consider printmaking techniques such as leaf monotypes, or printing with leaves, gelatin, or fish.

7. Let accidents happen. I learned this one great thing from a fellow artist – if you make a mistake in your journal or sketchbook, don’t throw that page away. Make it into something else or cover it up with a square of paper and continue drawing or painting. Let an accidental splotch or puddle lead you into a new area of exploration, you have nothing to lose! Learning to utilize “happy accidents” loosens us up and expands our vision as well as saving paper.

You can click on each image to view it larger on my Flickr photostream.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Creative journal ideas for drawing plants

We’ve all had those blocks in writing or drawing...nothing is sparking, the ideas have stopped, we see through a muddy glass. We sigh. The wellspring seems to have dried up, and there is nothing new under the sun.

Sometimes all we need is a little pump-priming to get the flow moving again. Think about these ideas for drawing, interpreting, and revealing things about plants:

• Draw the same subject three times using different media and/or line styles.

• Write a haiku about your drawing. Let a favorite quote inspire a new sketch.
• Try leaf printing with acrylics and watercolor paints.

• Sketch a series of seedpods or fruits for comparison and contrast.

• Explore the stages of maturity: for example, the sprouting seed, an opening bud and flower, or the withering folds and forms of your subject.

• Look at different leaf shapes through silhouettes.

• Describe line textures in different kinds of tree bark.

• Incorporate graphic elements into your journal pages. Think of text blocks, or a border a plant or leaf study.

• Paint a collection of nature objects from your yard.

Enjoy!

Above left:  a watercolor leaf print on heavy muslin of a fern frond.  Above right: another fern watercolor leaf print on handmade paper enhanced with a Pitt brush pen and watercolor washes.