Scruffy Mallard

This scruffy little mallard was painted in Brusho and watercolour, I’m not sure if I’m done with the little guy yet, but I thought I’d post him just in case he gets thrown in recycling to join all his older brothers.

Alcohol Inks Experimentation

I’ve been so inspired by the abstract work other artists make with Yupo, I thought I’d experiment a little on some well used, scrappy Yupo I had lying around.

On the right side of the paper I used a hairdryer to blow out the alcohol inks with large puddles of isopropyl and you can achieve lovely sheets of blending translucent colour. In the bottom left side, I let the alcohol ink dry then added spots of isopropyl which I then blew outward with a straw.

I wondered if I could marry watercolour and the alcohol inks, and cobble something together which could look pretty seamless. On a whim I drew out a seahorse onto the dry alcohol inks in a Copic Multiliner SP, which was the only pen out of twelve different brands I tried which faired decently once isopropyl and water is thrown at it. I then painted her with watercolours, and beefed her out with Indian ink once dry.

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Yupo Fox

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I haven’t really played around with Yupo with watercolours since 2016, and I really want to experiment a little more with it.

I used a ball point pen and pencil for the underlying drawing, watercolour and finished off with Indian ink. It’s a bit of a fight finding pens which stay on the paper even with light pressure from brushes. None of my fineliners were up to it, which is unfortunate as I think ball points have such ugly lines.

Gel pens were also out of the question for detail because of the tacky way the paint dries, so in the end he was saved by some paint pens which I used for the white accents and now waits in my shop for a new home.

Yupo Goose

I found kinship with this hissy goose on an angry day I was having, so I decided to paint it out. I couldn’t quite believe how many ‘teeth’ they have, even along the tongue which is fun and terrifying.

I have less of an attention span of a goose at times, so I had forgotten how exactly to work on this interesting plastic paper so had to learn all over again.

Firstly I used a ball point pen to draw the image out, which I then went over with a Staedtler permanent Lumocolour pen to go over those lines. I then used Indian ink to flesh out the drawing a little more and give the goose some more character.

After the Yupo was dry I used watercolour for the eyes and the beak, then used alcohol inks for the rest of the image, using isopropyl alcohol to split the inks and clean spirit to completely wipe colour off the paper entirely.

I used a 4B pencil to help me shade in a few areas and to create some scratchiness and after it was all dry went in with white pigment and white spirit to add some details and contrast.

Small Foxy Inkings

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Just a couple of fox inkings I’m working on, these are small A5 foxes on different weight papers. Funnily enough I used the same drawing to transfer the images using the light box, but they look quite different. I’m really looking forward to seeing how they turn out once painted.

Cat Scribbles for my Sibling

My sister has been abroad for many years but is coming back to the United Kingdom soon, sadly though having to leave her two scrappy street cats she adopted in Mexico behind for a while.

I thought I’d illustrate her two substitute children as a surprise to tide her over.

I used a variety of different materials to create these paintings, I found that using charcoal and pastel over a watercolour painting created some really great fur texture, along with scribblings of white pen.

Funnily enough, the ‘cuddling’ cats picture was saved from the ‘crap pile’ by my mum, and without her intervention, they would be lost.

I often discard work through pure emotion, as I get easily frustrated if things don’t turn out the way I’d hoped. My mum insists on going through all my recent painting fails when she visits (nosy!), dragged the pair out and made me resee the potential, so I worked on them some more, and now I’m really happy with the result and, more importantly so is my sister — thanks mum!

House Flies

I’m not a fan of summer, it’s hot and there are flies and that’s enough for me to wish for eternal winters, but for those who long for the summer, here’s a reminder to not wish the year away just yet …

Flies are actually quite beautiful up close and I’ve always wanted to paint them. I chose hot pressed watercolour paper this time, I thought the shiny bodies lent itself to a less textural paper, with some crêpe paper for the wings.

Hummingbird Moth

In the summer I was admiring the out of control buddleia population in my garden, and wow, I couldn’t believe we had a hummingbird moth visit! They are so fast and stay perfectly still whilst feeding as their little wings whir like crazy, zipping all over the garden.

I used some tissue in the buddleias to give them a little more texture, and went a bit mental with the Brusho, but with the heavier stock 140lb watercolour paper but I think it looks great. I’m so happy with the painting that I’ve made him available to buy in my shop.

Forgive me for my lapse in posting, I have a more personal project coming up which I can’t wait to announce to you all in a couple of short weeks.

Deer Illustrations

Here are some quick deer illustrations in which tissue features heavily, it’s the usual tissue (Crêpe) paper adhered with Bindex to the watercolour paper which can create these muted, softer tones. I really enjoy using tissue paper, you can achieve some really interesting results depending various factors like wetness, size and how folded or flat the tissue is.

Mystery Toad

I have a notorious section in my studio named the ‘crap pile’, which is where not worthy paintings go straight to the local recycling facilities. Occasionally my mum will visit and save pieces from such a fate. This was one of them.

When you’re so close and spend so much time drawing, transferring, redrawing, inking and then watercolouring you can get so frustrated with the outcome - you just can’t look at it anymore and it has a stay in the famous pile, maybe indefinitely …

This toad made it out of there, I cleaned him up, unbuckled him as the paper was extremely buckled from all the water I threw at him, (I’ll share this technique in future posts) and he now sits flat and beautiful in my shop ready for his new home!

He was made from watercolour and ink with some white pigment, he’s so old I didn’t even get to sprinkle some Brusho on him, a rarity these days!

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Meerkats and ‘Semple’ Lions

I was commissioned a very small meerkat painting, and I painted a meerkat in the same pose on different papers, they both look quite different which is interesting. I also picked up Stuart Semples watercolour pan set - and WOW! They really are the colouriest colours!

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I was so used to fighting with the dusty pans of Winsor and Newton and resigned myself to using them but Stuart Semple’s watercolour set is almost jell like, really easy to work with and gives such juicy, vibrant colours. I painted these simple but bombastic lions in them. I love Semple’s ethics around selling art materials, his colours are so affordable, he aims to fight against art elitism, how could I not support that with my purchase?

Not sponsored – I just love them!

Relief Inks On Yupo

I’ve longed and pined for a print press, I thought it was the only way I could make lovely work like my ‘Dutchess’ series prints again, wonderful horsies that seem to come so naturally even though it was my first ever experience of printmaking.

I wanted this feeling back so after much experimenting with oils and other inks on Yupo paper, I have a technique which mimics the look of those prints.

I used Indian inks and permanent pen to act as the ‘burr’ of my lovely doggo Nemo, drawn straight onto the yupo, I then slathered on relief inks and removed ink using rags and white spirit and dried the whole thing using a hair dryer.

It’s not the same thing I know, but I thought it was interesting to try out, I used white gouache to lighten a few areas, and I probably won’t do that again when I try this in future.

The Swift and the Fox

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I’m really pleased with how my swift came out, the drawing was so simple and I worried I wouldn’t be able to make it look interesting, but with the help of Brusho I much prefer the swift to my fox image. I think because the image of the fox was so much larger (320mm × 410mm), it makes you a little more cautious, which restricts how mad you want to go with the paint. The fox was also made with Brusho and watercolour on 100lb paper.

Inky Kissy Pigeons and Fox

Sometimes paintings just don’t work out - I lose interest and don’t want to redo even with my fantastic Light Pad. I’m going to make of habit of taking posting inks before they get painted. My kissy wood pigeons unfortunately didn’t work out, but my fox is in progress.

The Seagull and the Swallow

The struggle for good white ink continues, a toothpastey nightmare. On the Seagull I used Pebeo Colorex a French ink and for the swallow just Winsor & Newton white gouache, since my Dr. Ph. Martin’s ink dried up through neglect - and I found it difficult to swallow the price since it doesn’t seem to be very shelf stable.

The search for good white ink seems endless! These two birds in addition to sad white pigment were made from Brusho, watercolour and ink with a smidge of charcoal on the gull on 100lb Montval Canson watercolour paper.

March Magpies

March was the month of the magpies according to my garden activity, so I painted a few taking obvious liberties with colour and people eyes, the Brusho came out again! My favourite one is the bluey magpie as I messed with him the least and it’s just a really pretty image in person.