Showing posts with label just for fun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label just for fun. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 May 2024

Spiral inspiration

 

Spiral inspiration from paper trimmings ©2024LisaLeQuelenec


Inspiration really is everywhere! Aren't these spirals just perfect. Trimmings from paintings I was getting ready to mount. I feel a new pattern coming on....

They remind me of Karl Blossfeldt photographs.


Thursday, 19 May 2022

Lines in the water - doodles and linoprinting

 


Telephone doodles   ©2022LisaLeQuelenec


I've had reason to be waiting on hold with telephone music to keep me company lately. Totally mind numbing. However with my mind numbed and without thinking my hand set to work doodling, it had quite a bit of time fortunately/unfortunately. Once said call had ended and my brain slowly worked its way out of the fog I looked at what my hand had done. I'm not sure if it is something or nothing but thought I would spend a little bit of time exploring the drawings, redrawing, pondering - I like the flow and movement of the lines and the variations of weight and depth. 


The lines are making me think of Wilhelmina Barns-Graham's drawings and some Victor Pasmore paintings. What do you think?


Linoprinting has always been a challenge and was something I actively avoided in my college days (many, many years ago). However these line doodles feel like they might work best in this medium so I am having myself an experiment. Now lino has come along since I last had a go and there are much easier materials to carve these days. No more the tough as nails brown, heavy stuff that I used to lay over a hot water bottle in the vain attempt to help soften it, no now there is this marvellous blue Japanese vinyl. With a reasonably sharp tool it cuts like butter, which is a good job as my hands would definitely not be up to carving the old style lino.


So after refining one of my Phone doodles I traced the drawing onto the vinyl and carved away. Time was not on my side so instead of getting out the printing ink and because I was far to impatient to wait for another day I tried out an ink stamp pad to try making a quick proof print from.



Playing with lino ©2022LisaLeQuelenec


There is quite a bit of 'noise' - bits of lino that I haven't quite carved enough away and have printed where they shouldn't. I'm not sure whether to leave some or not as I think it will help the image not look quite so graphic and maybe a bit more like water. Also in my impatient proofing I did crumple the paper which left a couple of creases oops! I will ponder some more before getting the printing ink out another day and playing with different combinations of inking. It feels rather exciting to be trying something completely different again and I am wondering how this will feed into my other work it normally does at some stage without me realising it at the time.


Wednesday, 4 December 2019

So I tried.......but I failed.....


Back at the beginning of November printmaker Sherrie York posted here about how she was going to return to a challenge of drawing 100 thumbnails in the month. What a challenge I thought to myself. I had read the post mid month and thought to myself I would give it a go myself with the aim of making it to 50. I have been a little undisciplined of late with my drawing practise and thought the challenge would give me the kick up the proverbial that I needed....

However 50 was a little ambitious I think at this time of year for me and I only managed 30 even though the maximum time I had spent on them was two minutes! How shameful - that's only an hours worth of drawing that I managed after all ;o)  I will do better this month (I hope) it's a nice challenge to get the juices flowing and a couple of these little scribbles might be the start of something in the future who knows...

Sherrie has posted a wonderful video of her Hundred which you can see here . I have to say they are amazing and show just what a skilled draughtswoman she is. Pop over and have a look. Now where is that sketchbook....


30 thumbnails for November   pencil on paper each one 5x5cm approx   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec

Wednesday, 25 September 2019

Cloud monoprints and mixed media - an experiment with technique



In the clouds   foil covered plate on the left and monoprint with mixed media on the right 12x12cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


Finally the ink was dry enough to take some photos and move onto the next stage..... Above are some results of a fun mornings experiment. I was short on time and needed to be inventive as I had run out of acrylic medium. I had had an idea and was desperate to get something down on paper but without the medium to seal a plate I needed a work around in my approach.

I had read a while back about a technique called foliography where by you lay down leaves, grasses and organic matter onto a plate and cover in tin foil before inking up and running through the press. I think the idea is that the foil adds strength to the delicacies of the plate and by not varnishing it you aren't adding any accidental brush marks that could detract from subtle veining etc in the plant matter. I wondered if this idea would work for me and thought I would give it a go.

Using a 12x12cm piece of greyboard I 'drew' a quick design with a hot glue gun. The glue dries very quickly and so I could quickly move to the next stage of covering the whole plate with some tin foil. (The one I had was quite a thick one, I think the thin stuff would tear a bit too easily.) Carefully as I wrapped the foil onto the design I was burnishing it into the recesses of the plate and smoothing out any little wrinkles that could hold ink where I didn't want them.


Glue gun design on mountboard (detail) ©LisaLeQuelenec


On the left is a close up detail of another plate I have waiting in the wings to be experimented with.  This one is on a scrap of mountboard so you can compare, I hope, the  difference in depth between the board and the glue. The plate I used for this experiment had some areas that were very thick like this one.




Then I inked up the plate with a brush and wiped with a rag, taking out highlights and sometimes adding a bit more ink here and there. Now to run it through the press (using dampened paper) .... It worked pretty well and I managed to get 5 prints before the glue started to move around and tin foil began to wrinkle under the pressure of the press.

So not a great technique if you wanted to make an edition but for very small sets or for monoprinting and generating ideas I think it has its merits. Speed of plate making being the most useful - I can see with a bit more playing how this could be useful to do in a workshop situation when you are always working against the clock.

One of the things I particularly liked about using the glue gun to make the image was the variety of mark that could be made manipulating the glue and the very deep emboss that could be achieved. This is definitely something that I will utilise again. I wish I had had the forethought to make an impression without any ink at the start - I have made a mental note for next time.


In the clouds   monoprint and mixed media 12x12cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



The ink on the prints took the usual ten days to dry so I impatiently waited to work back into them with colour pencil. After seeing the depth of the emboss I knew this was something I wouldn't be able to resist. It also meant that I could carry on experimenting and exaggerating the tonal and colour differences that began in the inking process. I now have more ideas to develop at a later date maybe in print or paint - I will let them percolate a while before deciding.

We have had some spectacular rainstorms the last couple of days and are forecast the same for the rest of the week. I was caught out yesterday walking the dog in rain so heavy that I couldn't see for a few minutes. It was really quite extreme. Watching the build up of cloud and the changing light before hand was quite dramatic as were the flooded roads on the way home. The rest of the day was pretty much blue skies and sunshine. more clouds to ponder....


Friday, 20 September 2019

Waiting for ink to dry....


Preparing sketchbook pages   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec

I was supposed to be tidying up my desk but instead I had fun making more mess and preparing sketchbook pages for drawing. Some days you just have to keep busy whilst waiting for ink/paint to dry...idle hands and all that.

I see on my dashboard a notice to try the new Blogger... does anyone know what that is? I can't find any info...it might have been there for a while...


Thursday, 4 July 2019

Palette inspirations - digital sketchbook pages and colour notes


I forget to show images of the things I use as as palette inspiration. I have posted about my colour notebook before here and I thought I would show a little of my notebook, digital sketchbook and scrapbook that I refer to when I work. I make these grids and medleys on down days as a way of getting my self going again. Just like looking at old sketchbooks and photos can be the little spark I need that leads to an inferno of ideas.

Ideas are not in short supply at the moment but unfortunately the small dexterity issue that I am experiencing with my hand means I cannot proceed with the work that I had intended. A lesson in patience for me but there is always something else that can be done. For now I am filling notebooks with thumbnails, catching up on admin and making some more medleys like these.


Colour notebook pages, photos and the paintings that they inspired  ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


Magazine snippets, paint charts, beach finds and a sketch that became the basis of a drypoint  ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



Snippets from a clothing catalogue with beach finds and amazonite beads   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



Colour notebook pages, photos and the paintings that they inspired  ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



Thursday, 4 April 2019

A fun little project - carving stamps and making cards.



Three little carved stamps   4x7cm each   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


I had carved this set of little stamps some time ago and used them to make a set of greetings cards. It was a fun little project and they became best sellers when I used to do fairs and demonstrations. I thought I would re-print them and have made them available on Seasidestudiosuk on Folksy. I think I might make some new designs as it is an enjoyable project especially for a rainy afternoon.



Card design ©2019LisaLeQuelenec

Thursday, 27 September 2018

Making shapes



Watercolour sketches   watercolour   ©2018LisaLeQuelenec


My little bundle of happiness on four paws has been making some interesting shapes as she explores her world.

*note to self - you can justify puppy watching as research if you have a sketchbook and brush in hand ;o)


Thursday, 1 February 2018

A pebble repeat pattern




Pebble study in watercolour   21x15cm approx   ©LisaLeQuelenec2017


I love the markings on this pebble so much and just had to continue playing with it for a while. I thought it had the makings of a good repeat pattern.







Pebble repeat I   ©2018LisaLeQuelenec


After scanning and editing in photoshop I experimented with different layouts and combinations finally settling on this motif.
I like the graphic qualities of it and so decided to convert it to black and white.


I have added it to my RedBubble collection where it is available on a number of products which you can see here.








A few of the products that the pattern is available on via RedBubble   ©2018LisaLeQuelenec

Thursday, 28 September 2017

My favourite art books


A while back artist Sherrie York posted about her book collection and it got me to thinking about my favourites, how they had changed over the years and about the ones that I keep referring back to like old friends. Back in 2011 I wrote this post about 10 of my favourite art books. Those are all still 'up there' but there have been quite a few additions especially as I have explored new techniques in printmaking.


Some favourite books  photograph ©2011 LisaLeQuelenec


I have put together a Pinterest board of favourite books  if anyone is interested in having a peek along my bookshelves virtually. Maybe you will find something that would interest you to check out at your local library next time you visit.

Would you like to share your favourite books in the comments? I would be interested in knowing what you recommend after all you can never have too many books ;o)


Wednesday, 20 September 2017

Pine cones - it started with some sketches....



Pine cone sketches   pencil ink and watercolour   ©2017Lisa Le Quelenec



...and quickly got out of hand... but in a good way. I love the structure of pine cones, such a challenge to get 'right'. There is a park I visit with my little one that guarantees we will come home with at least a few we are both as bad as each other with our little collections and we added quite a few more this summer.

Sketches and doodles turned into...



Pine cone stages   watercolour on A4 paper   ©2017Lisa Le Quelenec


There are two paintings available to buy here at Seaside Studios UK.


But then that turned into....



From sketch to drypoint plate to prints   ©2017Lisa LeQuelenec


and now I have these....


Trio   artist proof 1 drypoint print 19x10cm   ©2017LisaLeQuelenec


Trio   artist proof 2 drypoint print image size19x10cm   ©2017LisaLeQuelenec


Trio   3/20 drypoint print image size19x10cm   ©2017LisaLeQuelenec



Trio   drypoint prints image size 19x10cm   ©2017LisaLeQuelenec


Which are also available at Seaside Studios UK and at Seaside Studios Uk on Folksy.


I do get myself in a pickle sometimes :o)

Monday, 7 March 2016

Experiments with Daniel Smith's Lunar Black watercolour




Lunar black mixes in my colour notebook   ©2016Lisa Le Quelenec
Lunar black sketchbook page ©2016Lisa Le Quelenec




 





















Sketch I - lunar black ©2016Lisa Le Quelenec
Sketch II  - lunar black ©2016Lisa Le Quelenec



I treated myself to a new (to me) watercolour tube of paint on my last order ; Daniel Smith's Lunar Black. What a beauty! I am rather partial to colourful black watercolour as you know and have written about some experiments on the dark side before here and here. Whilst not what I would call a colourful black it does have the most beautiful granulating quality. These images show the first few sketches and tests that I have done using it. I'm still very much at the 'getting to know you' stage of the pigment, experiments so far show how difficult I found it to control the granulating properties but it is definitely a colour that I can see great potential in.......very, very, exciting. I think it will show it's true potential in large scale work and onsite sketching will be another place I use it as I make tonal studies. Time to play I think....




Sketch III lunar black mixes ©2016Lisa Le Quelenec



Friday, 19 February 2016

A wave in monoprint



seasidestudiosblog.blogspot.com
Surf   monoprint and coloured pencil   21x15cm ©2016Lisa Le Quelenec


A little monoprint - just playing with ideas and using up leftover ink. I wonder where it will lead me....

Thursday, 14 January 2016

Sketchbook pages...


Inbetween printing and working on a commission I have been working away in my sketchbooks squirreling away ideas and inspiration for later projects. Sometimes pages are just recordings of little things that have caught my attention - like the daffodils flowering during the first week of January! I'm pretty sure that hasn't happened before but we have had a very mild winter so far. A walk on the beach at Southbourne was very fruitful for ideas. The light was very dramatic as heavy showers started to roll in and the energetic tides were throwing up all sorts of treasures like these mermaid purses (a much more romantic name than fish egg case) some were smooth as silk others furry like animal skin in colours ranging from black to pale olive. Anyway here are a couple of pages...



seasidestudiosblog.blogspot.com
Mermaid Purses sketchbook page ©2016Lisa Le Quelenec






seasidestudiosblog.blogspot.com
Daffodils for New Year!  sketchbook page ©2016Lisa Le Quelenec


Thursday, 26 November 2015

Low tide experiments with inking drypoints




Low Tide   drypoint 3.5x15.8cm   ©2015Lisa Le Quelenec


I had a tiny snippet of perspex left over from cutting down another plate and not being one to waste anything I thought I would use it for an experiment. I have come to the conclusion that the skill in printmaking very much lies in the skill of inking up the plate. It's quite a thing to learn - how much ink to apply, how much to wipe off, where to polish and where not to, colours behave very differently to the paint that I am used to and the consistency is a million miles away from acrylic and watercolour - beautiful sticky stuff that it is...

I digress, this little piece of acrylic with a simple design scratched in has been a test piece to practise with. The print on the right has some added marks in the plate where I wanted to add a little more tone but I am finding it interesting to see how the plate develops each time I print it and get braver and more experimental with the inking. These have been done over a series of a few weeks and as I have the time and inclination I will print a few more.


Tuesday, 28 October 2014

Sea shell notebooks


Well I don't know where my mind is at because I thought I had posted about these weeks ago. It seems I saved the post as a draft instead of publishing it.


A little side project that I had been working on...

A5 Sea Urchin notebook hand painted in acrylic ©2014Lisa Le Quelenec




Detail of A5 Sea Urchin notebook hand painted in acrylic ©2014Lisa Le Quelenec


There are six in the series and they are available in my Etsy Shop here .

Monday, 9 June 2014

Gulls in flight - watercolour sketches



Gull sketchbook  25x5.5cm   ©2014Lisa Le Quelenec


The lions share of the pages from a watercolour sketchbook had been used up in a commission and I was left with a narrow bound book to play with. Using only flame red and turquoise FW ink I painted some diluted backgrounds and once dry sketched gulls in using only white gouache and pencil for the dark wing tips.

The few lines of poetry are from Pablo Neruda's Ode to the Sea Gull; '... ecstatic line of flight.' became almost a mantra as I tried to get the swiftness of the shape in one stroke. There is something very calming and meditative in the repetition of sketching in this way which I enjoyed. My aim was to get to believable shapes using only one or two brushstrokes. I found as I went along that the more I did the more I wanted to do until I had painted just under 150 of them! Then wondered how much better the results would be after another 150. Maybe another sketchbook is waiting to be filled.  - practise makes perfect after all...

Friday, 30 May 2014

A quick sketch - Daisies



Daisy sketch 12x14cm pen and wash ©2014Lisa Le Quelenec





'On tiptoe walked she in the sun
Until, our eyes to greet,
A fallen constellation we
Discovered at our feet.
Before us white and wonderful
The daisies gleamed so bright...'

                            Anon










Every year I enjoy watching the daisies spring up before the first mowing. His Nibbs leaves it a couple of weeks longer for me to enjoy before starting the daisy massacre. He has been known to leave me a couple of patches which get cut at the second mowing. I'll let you into a secret.... last year I planted a couple of bits that I had dug up from the grass into the flower bed. This year they are very well established and have spread. They look so cheerful and the leaves have given what was a bare patch a lovely green covering. The official line is, 'I wonder how they got there...'.  ;o)


 

Thursday, 8 August 2013

Sketchbook page




Sketchbook page   watercolour and ink   ©2013Lisa Le Quelenec




The pattern on this little piece of sea worn china has been fascinating me. The cracks in the glaze and the way that the colour has slowly faded and worn away is so beautiful to my eye. I enjoy looking for these little found abstracts that, to me, have so much history and meaning. I wonder at what kind of vessel this piece came from and who made it and used it and how?  For what purpose? How did it end up in the sea and how far and for how long did it travel? I found it, put it in my pocket and then it traveled over the sea this time to end up on my desk reminding me of a walk at the beach, time spent with my family. My sister is an archaeologist and researches the answers to these kinds of questions for the things that she digs up from the earth....... these thoughts must run in the family.


(Apologies for the orientation of the picture - gremlins have turned it landscape instead of portrait again.)

Tuesday, 2 July 2013

Sand Dunes and Shadows II


Sand Dunes and Shadows II   watercolour 15x21cm ©2013Lisa Le Quelenec


 

Sand Dunes & Shadows acrylic on paper19x28cm  ©2012 Lisa Le Quelenec
Sometimes it's interesting to take a composition that you painted in one medium and do another version in a different one. Sand Dunes and Shadows was painted in acrylic in May last year. The second painting was painted recently when I was demonstrating at the Living Crafts event at the Priory in Christchurch. I like the warmth of the colours in the watercolour. The acrylic has more of a cooler evening atmosphere. I wonder what this composition would transform into if I used printmaking techniques.....