Society of Visual Storytelling

    SVSLearn Forums

    • Register
    • Login
    • Search
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Search

    Interesting exercise in seeing

    General Discussion
    5
    13
    1228
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • burvantill
      burvantill Moderator @demotlj last edited by

      @demotlj Can you please tell me what your field sketching kit is? What you bring with you? Size and content, etc. It sounds like it would need to be small for painting on a kayak. Im going backpacking this weekend and want to bring a small kit to paractice this same thing. I watched the Marco Bucci interview by @Will-Terry last week and wanted to try it out. link text
      I am interested to see what you see as well. I think I will take a photo of the area that I decide to sketch and then compare them when I get home.

      Lisa Burvant
      www.lisaburvant.com
      Instagram & Twitter & SVS: @burvantill

      demotlj 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • K
        Kat SVS OG last edited by

        Interesting exercise - never thought of trying to verbally describe a scene, and I wouldn't expect the focus to be so different in a photo from real life. I'll have to give this a try, although probably not in a kayak with my dog. Not unless I was trying to paint an underwater scene LOL!

        demotlj 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • demotlj
          demotlj SVS OG @burvantill last edited by

          @burvantill I've only been doing this for a couple of weeks so things might change but here is what is in my kit:

          Winsor & Newton Cotman Water Colour Paint Field Plus Set (This is 12 half pans of student grade watercolor that folds out to a couple of palette trays and water cups. I replaced the Cotman's with artist grade paint but the Cotman's are fine for sketching. I love this kit.)

          A rollup brush holder with at least a flat brush, round brush, tiny round brush, a couple of pencils, and an eraser.

          Wrist sweatbands -- someone recommended these to wipe your brush on instead of using rags and they work really well

          A watercolor sketchbook I made myself by cutting 9x12 sheets of paper in half and spiral binding them. (You could just tie the pages together but I happen to have an old spiral binder.) I decided not to invest in a nice sketchbook because I didn't want to be afraid of painting in it! This way I can toss the bad paintings... of which there are many.

          Binoculars to look at birds ๐Ÿ™‚

          I throw it all in an old shoulder bag and it's really portable. I did worry about getting the sketchbook wet in the kayak but I do all quiet water paddling and my kayak is pretty broad and stable. Besides, if I do get it wet, since it's watercolor I can just say it was an "abstract representation."

          Laurie DeMott
          instagram.com/demotlj

          burvantill 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • demotlj
            demotlj SVS OG @Kat last edited by

            @kat The main thing that was different was that I was captivated by a field of wildflowers along the shore which barely showed up in the photo. I was just so drawn to the color that I imagined them more dominant than they were which also suggests that my assumed focal point and composition may not have been the best one.

            Laurie DeMott
            instagram.com/demotlj

            K 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • K
              Kat SVS OG @demotlj last edited by

              @demotlj You could take that information and exercise a little creative license to create a composition that really focuses on the flowers, though. I would bet that other people also noticed the flowers the most when seeing the area. Might make a really nice image ๐Ÿ™‚

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • demotlj
                demotlj SVS OG last edited by

                Just to follow up, here is a very very rough sketch I did this afternoon based on my photos and notes I made. I didn't even do it on watercolor paper because I was just playing with various colors and compositions so I don't know if the end painting will look anything like this but it gives you a sense of what I was looking at as I drifted by. I think the wildflowers that I was so obsessed with in real life work better as an accent rather than the focal point.

                0_1529366728519_IMG_2956.jpg

                Laurie DeMott
                instagram.com/demotlj

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • burvantill
                  burvantill Moderator @demotlj last edited by

                  @demotlj Thankyou! Thatโ€™s helps. ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ˜ƒ

                  Lisa Burvant
                  www.lisaburvant.com
                  Instagram & Twitter & SVS: @burvantill

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Miriam
                    Miriam last edited by Miriam

                    Yes, what you see with your eye can be very different than what you see through the camera, and of course different camera lenses can make a big difference, as well as the angle of the shot--even moving a little higher or lower can really change a photo & the focal point of the image.

                    Thanks for sharing your experience, and your list of tools, @demotlj.

                    If your sketchbook isn't too big, you could slip it into a Zip-lock bag to protect it from getting wet while you are kayaking to and from your sketching location.

                    Thanks for sharing the interview link, @burvantill.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • burvantill
                      burvantill Moderator last edited by

                      So I tried watercolor sketching last weekend while backpacking. Feeling ambitious, I built a little w/c pad with 6 pages and only used one. lol! I had a nice chunk of time on Saturday afternoon, but Sunday we didn't stop for more than 20 minutes until we reached the car at 8:30pm. I did wake up around 5:30am because of a noise and lay there staring out at the most wonderful shade of DARK powder blue and black shadowy trees which I will try to replicate tomorrow in my w/c sketch pad, until I fell back to sleep๐Ÿ˜ฌ.
                      Plein air painting is tough. The subject I choose had a great light on it for about 15 minutes. Then poof! Gone. All shadow. So I had to improvise. I'm happy with it for my first try, but I do need to push myself to go to the dark side...they have cookies there ๐Ÿ˜œ. My pict is still too light I think. Here is the photo and the painting.
                      alt text
                      alt text
                      I didn't look at the photo until after I was done with the painting just to see what my mind saw as opposed to what was really there. Its a very interesting exercise.
                      @demotlj I am glad that you started this post.

                      Lisa Burvant
                      www.lisaburvant.com
                      Instagram & Twitter & SVS: @burvantill

                      demotlj 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • demotlj
                        demotlj SVS OG @burvantill last edited by

                        @burvantill I love this. Like you, I am trying to do better at the dark values but i find it harder to do in watercolor, especially Plein air, because everything dries lighter than I painted it and I forget to take that into account. I also sympathize with your planning on doing more than you actually had time for - I just spent the weekend in Boston visiting my daughter and carried my sketchbook all over the city but didnโ€™t have time to pull it out once. I think Plein air painting has to be done solo and as the sole purpose of the trip! I did, however, go to an art store and bought some more cool things for a potential watercolor sketching expedition down the road. Daniel Smith has come out with watercolor sticks and I got a free sample. Iโ€™ll let you know how they work.

                        Laurie DeMott
                        instagram.com/demotlj

                        burvantill 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • burvantill
                          burvantill Moderator @demotlj last edited by

                          @demotlj yes please do so. Anything to help the process. Lol!
                          My next trip is in 1 week and itโ€™s just two of us so we decided that we will not be hiking ALL day and dedicate some down time for our personal goals. ๐Ÿคž๐Ÿคž

                          Lisa Burvant
                          www.lisaburvant.com
                          Instagram & Twitter & SVS: @burvantill

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • Sarah LuAnn
                            Sarah LuAnn SVS OG last edited by

                            Interesting! A great way to experience and internalize the difference between the camera and the eye. Iโ€™ve found verbalizing character descriptions to help me when trying to draw a consistent character tooโ€”I wonder what other ways using verbal descriptions could help in creating visual art. ๐Ÿค”

                            sarahluann.com

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • First post
                              Last post