Starting over looking for advice
-
@reberlik wow! Thank you so much for the input! I really appreciate the draw over as well. I agree that the mouse hefting the tooth is a stronger image for sure! I will play with the other things you mentioned as well. I think I might just need to do another version of this, since most of it is glued down. Thank you!
-
Also you can always apply these ideas to your next piece if a re-do isn't possible. For example, what happens next in the scene? Does the girl wake-up? Does the mouse drop the tooth? Does he step on the examiner's foot and make her even more grumpy?
-
@Jeanne-M-Bowman
What you're doing is pretty challenging...making an actual collage on paper without easy digital fixes.What is your process like for planning compositon and cutting out/painting pieces? What media are you painting the pieces with?
Check out the work of Jeremy Ross here on the forum who is also using cut paper.
-
@reberlik Yep, I need to find a way to make it so that these things are easily revised. Maybe scanning the pieces in individually and assembling them digitally first and then gluing everything down for a physical piece might be the smartest way going forward. But for this I sketched out the composition first and then transferred everything to watercolor paper and painted the bits like the mice and the girl in watercolor and cut them out and then the blanket and wings I collaged from scraps of paper. But I try to stick to my sketch composition when arranging these things. I usually just do plain watercolor paintings but I really like dimensional pieces so I have been experimenting with cutting everything out.
This was my rough value sketch:
I really like Jeremy Ross's work! It is very inspiring for sure! -
Very cool to hear about your process! Sounds like you put in a lot of work!
Your value sketch has a stronger focal point because the little mouse is the whitest part of the image (other than the light bulb in the lamp. I think you should obsure the brightness of the bulb by making a longer lampshade).
In the painted/collaged version, the pillow area is brighter than the little mouse, making the big mouse seem like a more important character.
(more contrast = focal point) -
@Jeanne-M-Bowman Based on the complexity of your process, I recommend that you get feedback at the value study stage. Then as you are working, take a photo every so often and convert the photo to greyscale to check that you are following your value study correctly.
-
Hi @Jeanne-M-Bowman , welcome back to SVS!
this is a very lovely piece! I agree with what the others have said; however, I would like to offer a little different feedback for your consideration.
Since the girl’s face is very sweet, what if you abandoned the mouse idea and went with a traditional tooth fairy instead?
I did a terrible drawover and changed the composition to portrait to give you an idea of what I was thinking.
Then, you can use the magical glow of the tooth fairy to light the piece instead of the lamp.
Also, did you notice there’s an evil face in the bedspread? It’s kinda creepy, but not sure if it’s intentional.
I looked at your website, you have very lovely work.
Best!
-
@Jeremy-Ross
3 cheers for Drawover Club!
This is beautiful and I agree fits better with the overall soft and peaceful feeling of the piece.
Composition, value and focal point issues are resolved nicely here.To Jeanne, if your original concept is important to you, keep the parts you like, learning from the elements in Jeremy's drawover.
(And yes, I totally saw that evil face too! Pink triangle of quilt, closest to the coin)
-
@Jeanne-M-Bowman This is beautiful! Your style and skills are absolutely great. I think your only weaknesses now are composition and values. You could do better with contrast, silhouettes, and attracting attention where you want it. Your value sketch was great, but the final is much more tame, with the middle mouse being a middle gray almost the same value as the pillow. The thing that stands out the most is the top of the table. There are tangents, like the flying mouse's wing lining up with the pillow. I would recommend taking a composition class as your next step. Because everything else is already so pro.
-
@reberlik @Jeremy-Ross @NessIllustration
Wow! Thank you all so much for the care and attention that you are giving to my image! I really appreciate it! I think I will take this one back to the drawing board and play around with the composition and values more. Trying to translate this into a cut paper atmosphere is going to take some more finessing! You have all given me a ton to think about and I am so excited to dig into this some more.
Also, I didn't notice the evil face- but I see it now! Haha, it was just a random piece of cut paper with a stain on it. That cracks me up.
I'm learning a lot already, thanks again!