June is world watercolour month and watercolours are such a great medium that it would be really a shame not to try them at least. Although watercolours are one of the more affordable media (since you don’t need a lot of colours and a pan can last you quite a while) art materials in general are quite expensive and that can keep someone from trying art altogether.
And that would be a shame… Many people don’t want to invest in art materials they don’t know how to use and many people feel guilty for investing when they don’t use the ones they bought. If that’s you I hope this will be helpful.
So I made a tutorial on how to start your watercolour journey – in a very unintimidated way. I like the simple exercises that you can do with cheap kids’ watercolours and I like the fact that you can use the papers in collage afterwards – it’s an art win-win. You practice strokes, get to know your brushes and paints and get collage paper in the end! I hope this inspires you to get your brushes out and just play:).
As any of returning readers already very well know, I loooove watercolour! It’s my favourite medium and I can’t go long without them (sounds like a true obsession – but it enriches my life not diminishes it so let it be, ok?;)
But I’m not the only one – watercolours have this magical ability of capturing people. Do you want proof? July is the world watercolour month – founded by Charlie OโShields from Doodlewash. And hundreds of people join it… so – I’m not the only one obsessed;). The idea of World watercolour month is to paint a watercolour painting every day in July.
Of course, there’s no art police, you can do it as often as you want – but it’s always nice to try to stretch yourself a bit;)
So if you are contemplating this challenge but need some easy beginner friendly ideas I found some on my blog and I you get a big learning resource list of my favourite channels about watercolours on Sunday.
You can use watercolours in your bullet journal if you use one – I almost always use them in my bujo and yes, you can use them even on normal paper – just go easy on the water so that paper won’t tear. Non-watercolour paper (as is in bullet journals) will not handle layers well so try to do everything in one or maximum two layers and avoid heavy washes.
I know that the magic of watercolours is in layering but you can cheat a bit by using an ink pen (fine liner or technical pen, even ball point pen would work for this) for the outline or use coloured pencils on top to give more depth to your piece.
You can try different styles – from realistic to magical, but if you were to try a loose style, do take a watercolour paper – otherwise lot’s of water will warp your pages and paint will bleed through the thin paper. Don’t ask me how I know – I’ve stretched the capacities of the paper in my bujo many many times;).
But if you don’t have watercolour paper that doesn’t mean you have to abstain from watercolours. Just use less water in your mixes and on your brush. Water-brush is quite good for that because you can’t have it that loaded.
You can paint in how many layers you want on blank watercolour postcards, though. They are very thick, don’t warp and usually have quite nice watercolour paper on one side (it’s not cotton but it can handle water quite well).
In my experience, people are always very happy to receive a handmade post card – even if the painting is not that good, the proportions are off, colours are not real etc… Even a missing limb is not that problematic unless you’re sending it to a biologist;).
So have a go at watercolours this July – even for one painting:)
Last week I shared some animal mermaids but I do like to paint cute ones, too. So today here are the girly mermaids. They have different complexions because they live under the sea and they could be any colour I guess. I want to get better at drawing different ethnicities but I’m still a bit nervous I’ll do a horrible job so mermaids are great for practice because no one knows how they look like;).
I used a technical pen for drawing (size 0.3) and a small traveling set of watercolours to colour them. Those are my very basic supplies and I like them because they are so very versatile – ink and watercolour can produce so many styles! And they are perfect for the really tiny drawings – like these! This mini art journal is 6×6 cm (that’s a square with 2 1/3 inches side).
I always liked small things – and these journals are really cute and so portable – you can take them anywhere – even in the back pocket of your jeans! And any woman knows there’s not much you could carry there:D. I know what you’re thinking – but you need something to draw with! I have a little tip for that, too! I put a tiny pencil into my paper handkerchiefs – we all carry those – and that way the pencil doesn’t poke any holes or get your clothes dirty;). I carry one in my jacket and I’m set wherever I go:).
It’s here again – my favourite challenge! To tell you the truth, this year I completely forgot about it. I stopped posting on IG a while ago (I don’t know if I’ll go back again, maybe) and I didn’t see mermay anywhere. It’s not like something you’d see going down the street, you know;).
So I forgot about it. But when I packed for our trip I wanted to take some mini art journals with me because they are so small and portable so I finished a few that I’ve cut and scored already. (By the way if you want to make a mini accordion art journal, here’s a tutorial for you. And if you’d like a more in depth tutorial of a bigger version, check out my Skillshare class.) And there I saw the beginning of my last year’s mermay – the pig mermaid that I painted in one of those miniature journals. I later switched to a bit larger scale because I wanted to draw the two versions of mermaids – the fantasy sea cow and the real sea cow for example.
But that little journal reminded me of mermay so now l want to play along – but I have quite a bit of catching up to do. I decided to finish up the animal version of mermaids but also do the normal girly mermaids as well – both in this miniature version that I would be actually able to finish in time;).
So you’ll see this year’s mermay tomorrow so come back:).
I have written about this online art event last year but I figured somebody might appreciate the reminder;) There are 2 workshops (about 40 minutes to an hour each) released every day for 14 days and after that you get 2 more weeks to watch and complete your projects (you can complete them later as well, of course, but the free access is closed on 20th of April). If you need more time, there’s a VIP access for lifetime. There’s a very active fb group (I’m terrible with fb but it’s there for the fb lovers;) and lovely hosts.
Today I’d like to invite you to search for your references you might want to use in the future. I want to learn portraits so I created this board of references. I will also create a list of people I want to draw in addition to the references (and I’ll probably search for their references as I go).
There are tons of places with great references however if you use them commercially, stick to the royalty-free images or photographers who allow you to use their references. One of great portrait photographers who let’s his work be used as inspiration is Earth (that’s his real name!) His portraits are great for caricatures, character inspiration and portrait painting!
Last year I participated in my very first 100 day project. I chose to draw animals and had lot’s of fun with them. This year, however, I want to tackle people – and more specifically – portraits. I am a bit afraid to commit to doing one every day (you know the saying: “Don’t let the devil know your plans;)) so let’s just say I’ll try to draw people every day and see how far that will get me. I learned that setting myself small goals leads to better results than spreading myself thin and getting sick;). *Who would’ve thought! ๐
If you haven’t heard of the 100 day project yet, I’ve written about it last year and here you can find their official site. If you would like to try it out but need some guidance on how to choose your project, they made this FAQ list. If this is too much for you, you can do what I do – I’ll just do one little drawing the first day and than hopefully one the next day,… ๐
So I’ve been rambling about goal setting and how to deal with lack of enthusiasm for our new years resolutions before but here is a simple trick that has worked wonders for me personally. I never was a “habit girl” – I am more of a “campaign learner”. I learn best when I have an exam next morning, I do best when I have a deadline. That hasn’t changed. But I wanted to trick my mind since now I want to learn things that have no exams and I want to do things that have no external deadline. So little habits are very welcome. But how to make them stick for the very spontaneous person?
As I’ve mentioned before, I think that the problem with our goals, resolutions and tasks in general is that we are too ambitious, to eager at the start: “fools rush in” as Elvis would say. But there is something to it: we go in full – head on, determined that we will exercise every single day, stretch or do yoga for half an hour, go to nature every week for a 5 hours long hike, draw for 30 minutes each day… and so on and on… And than the life hits. There are birthdays, we get sick, our kids get sick, we need to pack for their trips, there are work emergencies, bills need to be payed, empty fridge demands a visit to the store… and we somehow can’t fit everything in. We leave out one day, the next day, the day after… and fall of the wagon completely… and ditch everything.
It’s natural, it happens to all of us – ok, maybe not to the “life optimisation gurus” – although I must say I am pretty sceptical about them;). In any case, it’s normal for life to happen. So let’s plan for the busiest day from the start! Let’s set the bar so low that you can reach it even when you chase your tail all day. Like drawing one line. You don’t have to take out anything, you can do it on a scrap piece of paper, on a receipt, with a pencil or a ballpoint pen. It all counts! I started with 5 minute tutorials and I did not use more than 5 minutes to draw my sketch. That worked. Whenever I tried to extend that goal to half an hour or more I ended up exhausted from work, kids and life and than fell asleep behind my desk more nights than not… Don’t get me wrong – you don’t have to only spend 5 minutes – you can draw for hours when you have the time and energy to do that. But for all the other days, 5 minutes or even just one line is enough. Just picking up the instrument counts. Just unrolling your yoga mat counts. Make it super small!
You can draw one snowflake a day in the winter (more on that to come;). Doodle one flower in the spring or leaf in the autumn. Those minutes add up. 365×5′ is 1825 minutes and that is 30 hours! You won’t become a rocket scientist in this time but you can chill out and just get the habit in. And you’ll see that many times you will do way more than 5 minutes. But 5 minutes is enough, everything else is extra. It really doesn’t need to be big:) Start slow and speed up as you feel comfortable. You can still learn at your compulsive pace if that’s your nature – these two things don’t need to be mutually exclusive. Take the cake and eat it too;). Just add in a sprinkle of salt – you won’t be able to taste it but it will make it better:).