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    Gouache and Collage Artists - How do you Scan/Digitize?

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    • cianamacaroni
      cianamacaroni last edited by

      I seek thy wisdom once again, art companions. I'm going crazy trying to digitize a gouache collage I made today of these space dogs. I really wish I could get it to look the way it does in person, but I've spent hours editing it and still feel like it looks cold and dull. I'm attaching the scan I spent hours editing (sniffle) and two actual, in-person photos (full page, close up). For reference, I'd really love to get this to look like the pristine scans of Christian Robinson (see here: https://www.writershouseart.com/christian-robinson/) or Oge Mora. Any insight you have would be appreciated.

      Other details: My scanner is a CanoScan LiDE 400 and I am using Photoshop on a Macbook Pro. All photos have been compressed significantly to post here.

      0B0274CF-78C0-4FBF-B9E4-5177FCB8CD09.jpeg 53B730BB-6F24-4EE6-B7E7-741AE38843C6.jpeg
      9AD6B429-0AE4-4D46-BF0B-A48231C2BAD0.jpeg

      IG: instagram.com/cianamacaroni
      Website: https://www.cianamalchione.com/

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      • Coreyartus
        Coreyartus Moderator last edited by

        It seems to me that the colors are pretty close. What seems to be missing, to my eye, is the paper cut out collage effect. It loses it's dimensions becuase we aren't seeing the collage layers.

        You might be able to recitify this after-the-fact by using a bump map or height map in Photoshop. I'm speaking of something I don't know anything about, but I've seen iPad apps like Colorama add depth via lighting to photos and illustrations, creating a kind of artificial "relief" effect based on how the apps "read" the original image. I think Photoshop has that capacity, too. Not sure what hoops you have to go through to use it, but I think it's there...

        Here's a vid that might help, maybe?

        https://youtu.be/jxbVU9LD_J0

        Children's Illustration Portfolio: https://www.coreyartusillustration.com
        Art Portfolio: https://www.coreyartusimagery.com
        Mastodon: https://mindly.social/@Coreyartus
        Pixelfed: https://pixelfed.social/Coreyartus

        cianamacaroni 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • Coreyartus
          Coreyartus Moderator last edited by

          Another solution would be to cut and past each piece from your scan, and then layer them in with drop shadows and highlights... That would be tedious and wouldn't read as authentic to a trained eye but might give you a semblance of the effect you desire...?

          Children's Illustration Portfolio: https://www.coreyartusillustration.com
          Art Portfolio: https://www.coreyartusimagery.com
          Mastodon: https://mindly.social/@Coreyartus
          Pixelfed: https://pixelfed.social/Coreyartus

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          • cianamacaroni
            cianamacaroni @Coreyartus last edited by

            @Coreyartus That's definitely what it is, you're right. I'll give that a shot. If not, I do think forcing a little bit of a drop shadow in some places would do it. Thanks a lot for your time!

            IG: instagram.com/cianamacaroni
            Website: https://www.cianamalchione.com/

            Julia 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Julia
              Julia @cianamacaroni last edited by

              @cianamacaroni hello! Good job! Could you post after you tweak it? I am interested in seeing the result and if it gains dimension. Thank you!

              https://www.instagram.com/julia.nsw/

              cianamacaroni 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • nadyart
                nadyart last edited by nadyart

                I think it is beautiful work! I work with collage often, and I run into the same problems when scanning. When it is possible, I try to photograph the piece, or have it scanned with an Art scanner (the "Cruse") that doesn't make contact with the surface of the artwork. Those are hard to find, I was lucky to have a company locally that does this when I created a book in 2018, but it's quite expensive. An alternative is to photograph it yourself in the right light. This is what the paintings looked like with the scanner without contact: https://youtu.be/xf_zD9T5hSA
                The shadows are a bit too harsh there, but maybe this demonstrates what I mean.

                I think adding shadow in Photoshop would be a good alternative, if you paint them with subtlety. I think the white lines that light certain edges of the collage, are just as important as the shadows to have it look right.

                This is an example of a collage I managed to scan without losing to much of the depth. You can maybe try to elevate certain elements of your work, which will create more of a natural shadow.
                Girl-Guitar-Creme-achtergrond-small-.jpg

                http://www.instagram.com/nadyart
                http://www.nadyart.me

                cianamacaroni 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • cianamacaroni
                  cianamacaroni @nadyart last edited by

                  @nadyart Hi Nadya. That all makes perfect sense. I'm new to collage and will just need to find a process that works better for digitization, which may involve greater depths between layers like you're saying. Or faking it a little bit in Photoshop. Or both! Thanks for your response, you've given me some things to consider and your work is lovely.

                  IG: instagram.com/cianamacaroni
                  Website: https://www.cianamalchione.com/

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                  • cianamacaroni
                    cianamacaroni @Julia last edited by

                    @Julia Hi Julia. Sure, I'll post an update when I finish. Stay tuned

                    IG: instagram.com/cianamacaroni
                    Website: https://www.cianamalchione.com/

                    cianamacaroni 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • cianamacaroni
                      cianamacaroni @cianamacaroni last edited by

                      @Julia Here's what I ended up with. You may not be able to tell, but I added very subtle highlights (that "white line" that Nadya was talking about) and shadows where the paper was cut. If you work with collage a lot it may be useful to enhance them afterward like this. In my case I was looking at the way the collage looked in person and adjusting the scan to match. Like I said, this is my first time trying to scan a collage like this, so I have a lot of figuring-out to do. Still doesn't look exactly how I wanted.

                      BelkaStrelka.JPG

                      IG: instagram.com/cianamacaroni
                      Website: https://www.cianamalchione.com/

                      Julia 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                      • Naters.Art
                        Naters.Art last edited by

                        I usually work in black and white, but I run into scanning issues all the time. Usually the scanner isn't large enough for the paper I use. I've decided to invest in a camera and set up a little photo booth for my art. This might be a good solution for you too because cameras are made to pick up true colors.

                        my Sketch Blog
                        https://www.instagram.com/naters.art/

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                        • Julia
                          Julia @cianamacaroni last edited by

                          @cianamacaroni I think it works! It looks very much like the picture, and not dull as the 1st scan. Well done!

                          https://www.instagram.com/julia.nsw/

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