anika mari

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Four Drawings, Pea Pods

With three drawings figured out, I was pretty much stumped about what to do for the fourth. I had several options, but none of them seemed quite right. I was hemming and hawing over it one night with my mom and she pointed to one of my practice drawings that I’d done to get used to tracing pencil on bristol, and said “you should do those pea pods”.

Pods

Well, to me, the drawing she pointed at didn’t look anything like pea pods, but I quickly got over that discrepancy as I thought, “Pea pods! Brilliant! What could be cuter than pea pods!?”

I quickly whipped up a sketch.

Peas

My sister-in-law loved it.

If you haven’t noticed already, the unifying element amongst the three drawings are little tiny critters. Little fishies, small bumble bees, teeny inchworms, and? The snails in the above drawing were actually added after I did the final sketch. First I tried another drawing of pea pods with butterflies.

butterflies on pods

I liked it, but the butterflies weren’t tiny enough. At this point, I wasn’t 100% sure about the pea pods any more. Another thought stuck in my mind because at one point my sister-in-law had suggested that fruit might be a good addition to the series of drawings. I had done a little sketch of lots of different little fruits.

Fruity sketches

I liked the fruit, but also felt that it wasn’t a really cohesive composition for the series. Honestly I’m not sure how the next idea hit me. Maybe I was just being silly and decided to make the peas into blueberries. In any case, the next sketch was decidedly more colorful and fruity.

Fruit in Pods

“Fruit in pea pods? What? That’s crazy! and awesome! and really cute and fun and perfect for a little girls room,” was essentially my line of thought as I drew the fruity pods.

I wasn’t satisfied with the corn or the raspberries in the first sketch. I decided to go with lemons instead of oranges, so I could do orange persimmons, and get rid of the corn. I drew some strawberries that turned out very cute, which took the place of the raspberries.

pods with fruit 2

There I finally had it. And I also had my critter too. The small snails were perfect.

I did a sketch to figure out the colors for the strawberries, pea pods, and blueberries.

Strawberry Color Sketches

I used pencil again on the final drawing since the placement was important. I noticed that my tracing skills are already improving, though it’s still tricky.

Fruit Pods, Final

I think this final drawing was the perfect addition to the series. All four drawings were really fun to work on. In the process I learned a lot, improved some of my skills, and made my sister-in-law very happy, so it was a good project in many ways.

Four Drawings, Inchworm Flower

As I was working on the drawings, I knew that i wanted to have a flower that was big and bold.

My sister-in-law had originally chosen two sketches of flowers that she liked from my sketchbook.

peach flowerspebble flowers

She was drawn much more to the peach and green drawing, but I liked the softer blue drawing, so for a while I was a little stalled out about what to do.

It wasn’t until I drew on a “scrap” piece of bristol that the idea started to evolve. I wanted to get used to drawing on the bristol, which was the material I was using for the final drawings, so I drew three of the bluish flowers. However, when they were drawn, they were a little more elongated than the original sketch, and reminded me more of pine cones than of flowers. So I went with it, and I started to color them in like pine cones.

Pine Cones in Progress

Before finishing the color, I decided to try out a few combinations on little mini sketches.

Petals

Finding a combination of colors that I liked, I finished the drawing.

Pine Cones

Looking back at the little sketches, I thought they looked like little clusters of petals and thought they might make a pretty flower. On an extra piece of bristol, I drew a number of little petal clusters in a radial pattern, and then connected them with thin stems.

Impromptu Drawing

I really liked how this turned out, so I tried several color combinations in my sketchbook.

Beige on PinkPink on BeigePetal Color Sketchesinch worms

I liked the softness of the first two, but I decided that I really wanted a bold, colorful flower. After working on the sketch with many color possibilities, I decided on going with a bold background, and light petals.

I discovered that the colors blended beautifully on the paper in my sketchbook, but would hardly blend or soften at all on the bristol. Also, the color of the marker on the bristol tends to show up significantly darker or brighter, so I had to adjust the colors slightly as I was working.

Inchworm Flower in Progress

The mulberry color I used for the background showed up really intense on the bristol, but in a good way. However, after testing the blue that I intended to use, it was much too bright on the bristol, so I ended up using a light gray for the petals instead of blue. The gray was a lot softer which helped balance the drawing, while maintaining the contrast of light to dark.

Inchworm Flower, Final

I like how the drawing and colors turned out. It lends the right amount of bold color to the series.

In the next post I’ll write about how fruit ended up in the pea pods drawing.

Four Drawings, Heart Flowers

Drawing the final Heart Flowers offered some interesting challenges.

After completing several sketches, I had a basic idea of what I wanted to draw.

HeartsHeart Flowers with CloudsHeart Flowers with BeesHeart Flowers, Cut Up

I was happy with the hearts themselves, but I tried out a couple of variations of leaves and grass and sky. I even borrowed an idea from design school, and cut up a copy of the sketch and rearranged it a bit, leaving out the sky and making the stems longer.

My first attempt at a final drawing didn’t work out so well.

Heart Flowers in progress

The shapes were way too wobbly. Not what I was after at all. Plus the grass looked more like a picket fence than anything that’s actually growing. And I forgot the leaves. The colors I chose seemed a little garish as well. The bumble bees were good though, so they would stay.

The lines turned out so wobbly because the piece of paper is significantly bigger than the sketchbooks I’m used to working in (8×8 inches vs 5×5 inches). Also there were a lot of straight lines, which are difficult to draw freehand. To overcome this, I decided to work a little differently than I am used to. For the final drawing, I used a pencil first.

This was great because I could erase any wobbliness and make sure it looked just how I wanted. Tracing the pencil lines with ink proved challenging, probably because I’m not really used to it and haven’t practiced tracing a pencil line with a pen as much as I’ve practiced simply drawing with a pen. Even though some of the lines ended up a little wiggly and awkward, it was a lot better than the freehanded ink lines. The pencil provided guidelines and good placement and composition, and probably no one else but me would notice the “imperfections” anyway.

After I got the line drawing finished, I tried a bunch of different color combinations before coloring the final drawing.

Heart Color Sketches

I loved the center heart colored red, but wanted an overall soft cheerful look, so I chose some bold and some lighter colors. I also worked out a better solution for the grass.

Heart Flowers, Final

I was really pleased with the texture I achieved in the grass. It looks a lot more organic, and not at all fence-like.

In the next post I’ll write about the Inchworm Flower drawing.

Four Drawings, Fish

The four drawings are done! Just in time for little Mia Lillian (my newest niece!) to be born.

The fish under the waves drawing was the most straightforward of all the drawings. From sketch to finished drawing, not much changed, and I didn’t have to fuss with it too much to figure out the colors or the composition.

Waves and FishiesGreen Sea
original sketches, just to refresh your memory

I scanned in the black and white drawing of the final.

b&w drawing fish under sea

The composition is basically the same as the original sketches, except for the school of fish that decided to swim in a slightly different area of the ocean.

The trickiest thing was working on a larger scale.

Sketchbook to Drawing

True, it’s not that much larger. The final drawing was on an 8×8 inch piece of bristol, and my sketchbook is about 5×5 inches, but the size was different enough that I had to draw the waves three times before I got them right.

Waves

When the waves finally looked right, then all I had to do was draw the fish and add color.

Fish Under Waves

Especially for the waves, it was great to have a sketch to work from. It was still rather free form in terms of where the different colors were placed, but it was great to have the reference of what colors I used.

When the waves were colored in, I wasn’t sure what color to use for the fish. I thought the blue in the sketch was too dark, but instead of trying out a color for the first time on the final, I made a couple of copies of the drawing and colored in the copies to figure out what color to use. After trying out a few different shades of blue, I decided to try orange. I liked the way it added some extra contrast and cheerful warmth to the composition, so I decided to color the fish orange in final.

Fish Under Sea, Final

This is the first final drawing of the series, and it felt really good to finish it up. In my next post I’ll go over the details of the Heart Flowers drawing.

Red Pattern Blue Pattern

After working hard to finish up a series of four drawings for my sister-in-law before her new baby arrived (incidentally I have four posts waiting to be published about each of the four drawings, but I forgot to get images of the final drawings before I gave them to my sister-in-law! oops!), I decided to start loosely sketching again. I drew a big flower in the middle of the page of my new sketchbook, and thought, “big surprise. you never draw flowers.” Instead of abandoning the page to draw something else, I decided that I’d make a pattern out of it.

I usually just draw to and off the edge of the page, but the shapes and lines always tend to get a little wonky near the edges. I need to practice imagining what the shape looks like, where it is positioned (even if that would be mostly off the page) and how the parts that carry over to the page would be drawn.

Instead of doing that, however, I decided to create a seamlessly tiled pattern. I took the page out of my sketch book, cut the paper into quarters and rearranged it so the edges became the inside. Then I finished the drawing.

drawing for pattern

You can see how the cuts come together in the center of the image, which were originally the outer edges of the intact piece of paper. I scanned this image in, tiled it in photoshop and then added some gray color to the background. The gray flooded some of the petals, but I like how that looks. A little off, a little unpredictable–adds some interest.

gray background

I’m not sure it’s all that obvious in the image above, but the pattern is not perfectly tiled. The edges didn’t quite meet up, but they were close enough, and really I just consider this a sketch anyway.

When working on the next two patterns, I followed the exact same process, and in the end, the tiling was even more off. So much so that it was really obvious that the edges didn’t meet up at all. I put my thinking cap on, and a clear solution hit me. I removed the tape from the paper and rearranged it so that it fit together as the original piece of paper would.

Horizontal Pattern, Original Drawing

Mesh Pattern, Original Drawing

As precise as I tried to be when cutting the lines, I figured they must have been a little off, and if they aren’t perfectly square, it would make sense that it would be harder to tile the pattern. With the pieces back in their original configuration, at least I had the original straight edges to work with. Oddly, it still wasn’t perfect, but it was much better

I worked in similar styles for the two patterns. One pattern has a horizontal composition, and the other is more of a mesh pattern, but both include similar shapes and line quality. After I had the black and white line drawings cropped as accurately as I could, I added some color to each. For the horizontal pattern, I added two tones of a dark red, and for the mesh drawing, I added muted turquoise blues. Then I tiled them to see the result.

Horizontal Pattern, Tiled and Red

Mesh Pattern, Tiled and Blue

I’ve been drawing a lot lately with a focus on precision, so it was fun to work in a looser style. These patterns really evolved as I was working on them, and I didn’t know what i was going to end up with until they were done.

The biggest challenge was getting the tiling to line up well, but I’m not sure computer precision will ever be realistic when working with hand made drawings. However, if I spend a little more time in photoshop, I know I can tweak the lines here and there to get everything to line up perfectly. I’ll try that out when I make my next patterns.