Another abstract botanical. Here are the steps I took in creating it.
- Draw the black and white line art design on dot-grid paper from Rhodia using Sakura Micron pens.
- Scanned the drawing in, removed the dot-grid, removed noise and created a transparent background in GiMP opensource photo editing software.
- Imported the image with a transparent image into Autodesk Sketchbook Pro and added colour and texture.
It took a couple of hours to draw the design and several hours to colour and so on.
My digital tools are a Microsoft Surface Pen and Microsoft Surface Studio.
I love the way many of the elements seem to glow against the dark green-blue background.
Many of my latest works like this seem to have an ocean, watery background going on. So, in the one I have on the go at the moment I’ve done a kind of sunset background. I’ll see how that turns out. Working digitally means I can alter my backgrounds really easily for sure.
I’ve been creating backgrounds digitally, but I want to create some on paper with Distress Inks and scan them in to use instead of the digital backgrounds.
I also made use of a more limited colour palette in this work – going for a more cohesive look/feel. These aren’t colours I’d normally choose to go together, but they seem to work fine.
I now have a fair few of these images and so now really need to try to work out what to do with them. I may try to import them into Repper and create repeating patterns from parts of them; that could be an interesting exercise for sure, but a fun one!
If you have any ideas of how my artwork could be used, leave a comment – I’d love to hear!