this northern boy

Illustrations for an imaginary age

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Some new toys…

I’m becoming a bit of a magpie when it comes to pens, pencils and sketchbooks. I’ve written before about some of the materials I use when I’m doodling or sketching – but that list is probably in need of an update.

I was in Germany for New Year, which gave me the opportunity (as I’d forgotten a bunch of my pens) to buy a few new implements.

Recent additions

Recent additions

I treated myself to a Lamy ‘Scribble’ mechanical pencil, not cheap, but really lovely to hold. Chunky and weighty it’s a lovely thing.

While in Germany (specifically at Papier Haas in Freudenstadt) I picked up some little coloured Stabilo fineliners. I hadn’t seen them before but they’re great. Lovely, fine, even line, good range of colours. I grabbed a few different greys and some bright oranges and greens. The pale grey is a brilliant pen to draw with, almost like using a pencil – so great for rough sketches that you can then refine with a black ink.

While I was away I saw an ad for Leuchtturm sketchbooks. I didn’t manage to get one at the time but ordered a couple when I got home. They are gorgeous. They come in contrasting colours – cover one colour, band in a contrasting colour. The pages are a little thinner than my usual Moleskines, but smoother and whiter. I’m looking forward to using them.

A little while ago I got a Rotring Artpen but hadn’t used it much until the last couple of days. It’s a really smooth pen, but I can’t (although some people might) manage to get much variance of line with it. So for me it kind of suits very loose, gestural sketches.

The Copic Multiliner at the bottom of the picture is a really great pigment liner. It’s super fine with just a 0.03mm nib, so it’s capable of adding incredible detail. It’s one of my favourite pens right now. I owe John Evelyn some thanks for recommending that to me.

I love getting new pens and sketchbooks – but really, it doesn’t matter too much. Draw whenever you can, with whatever’s to hand. Some of my best sketches lately have been done with a biro on a post-it note!

Three days in Paris

I’ve just got back from a few days in Paris. Very hectic, trying to fit in as much of the big Paris stuff, for my two young nieces, as possible. Eiffel Tower, Louvre, Montmartre, Sacre Coeur, Notre Dame, boat trip down the Seine…

Exhausting, but brilliant.

The architecture completely blew me away. Not just the big, grand museums, palaces and galleries (but blimey were they big and grand!), but the regular streets and residential buildings. It seems that nearly every street in central Paris is an eight storey avenue of astonishing apartments. I fell in love with practically every roof I saw – steeply pitched and leaded, with ornate windows, chimneys, balconies and facades. Beautiful.

I think those rooftops are going to make an appearance in at least a few of my drawings very soon.

Here are a few photos from my trip…

The Island

I finished and coloured The Island, seen in my previous post. Coloured with Copic Ciao Markers.

Colour Illustration of The Island.

The Island, finally coloured

Of secrets beneath the waves

More imaginary places. I’ve blogged before about how I love to draw make-believe places, and in the last few days I’ve been doing more…

The Copse

The Copse

The Island

The Island

The City

The City

I’d like to visit all of these places. I’d like to know their inhabitants, their histories, their futures… I want to know why that rock floats with its little stand of trees. I want to know about those tentacles beneath the island – I want to know if the people who live there know about them. I want to know about that city, who rules it, who that great wall keeps out…

Maybe I’ll write the stories of these imagined places one day.

 

You can also find prints of my work here

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New projects…

Well, the Droids are done – although I will be updating my Tumblr blog over the next few weeks as I reblog and rework some of my favourite robots – so it’s time for something new.

Today I wrote my first post over at Asteroid Belt Blues, my new Tumblr. I’ll be posting illustrations, sketches and some writing here, expanding on some of the spaceship and science fiction drawings I’ve been doing alongside my droids. I want to create a believable world, a near future where the asteroid belt and outer planets are the new frontier.

I also have another project I’m beginning, not an illustrative one, so I won’t really be posting updates. Today I’ve begun a children’s story, which will hopefully become a book. I’ve had some ideas swirling around my head for a while, so I thought it was time I did something about it. I’m giving myself a year to write and illustrate it, and to submit it to publishers. I have no idea if that’s a realistic time frame, but I’ll give it a go.

Should be fun.

On loosening up, and the tools of the trade

I draw too tightly. Always have. Way too much consideration to making something that looks nice, rather than trying to capture a great idea. That’s why I’ve started drawing these little pen and pencil doodles lately, and it’s why I gave the Copic Markers another go.

Copic Marker Mechs

Copic Marker Mechs

Copic Marker Mechs II

Copic Marker Mechs II

Throwing in a really broad shape with the markers makes you forget about trying to create something beautiful, it’s about creating a cool shape, or an interesting form. Picking up a pigment liner and then trying to discover the shapes is great fun, and it’s a pretty quick way to work. Each mech takes between five and ten minutes.

Tools of the trade

Tools of the trade

The photo above shows my mugs full of pens. Copic markers, and a few Sharpies in the first mug – along with a white gel pen, and a Pentel Pocket Brush. Sakura Pigma Microns, Staedtler Pigment Liners and a few Faber Castells in the second mug, and a bunch of pencils in the last – along with a brush for removing erasing bits, and a scalpel for sharpening. There are a few ellipse and circle guides behind, with a metal ruler and a few coloured pencils.

Weapons of Mass Creation

Weapons of Mass Creation

And that last picture? Well my OCD just shines through… Those are some of my most used bits and pieces.

Rotring Mechanical Pencil
Staedtler Classic Pencils (HB)
Swann Morton scalpel (with 10A blade)
Staedtler Pigment Liners – 0.05, 0.1, 0.3 and 0.5
Selwyn watercolour brush
Moleskine Sketchbook – A5
Moleskine Plain Journals – A6
Copic Markers – 100, C-7, C-5, C-3 and C-1
Staedtler Mars Plastic erasers
Staedtler Rasoplast eraser
A big ball of rubber bands
12″ Steel Ruler

.

Bicentennial Man

A pencil sketch of ‘Andrew Martin’, the robot hero of Isaac Asimov’s story “The Bicentennial Man”.

This was based on a small thumbnail I drew yesterday that I thought had an element of humanity about it.

Drawn with Faber Castell HB and 2B pencils on layout paper.

Bicentennial Man

Bicentennial Man

New Year’s Resolutions

2013 was the year a drew a lot, maybe not enough, but a lot. It was the first time in at least 20 years that I’ve drawn that often. Sometime in 2012 I started to do a few doodles in a Moleskine notebook, by the beginning of 2013 I was happy enough with my progress – and excited enough by drawing again – that I decided to start this blog. My aim then…

Hopefully it’ll act as a catalyst for me to draw an awful lot more, and by drawing more I hope to get better at it.

I feel the blog has been reasonably successful in making me draw more, although my decision in August to start a ‘drawing a day’ project has obviously had much more impact in that regard.

What I can see from both the posts on this blog, and my posts on tumblr, is that although I’ve produced some illustrations I’m really happy with, there are an awful lot that I’m not proud of at all. My consistency is entirely lacking. That’s one thing I really need to tackle in 2014 – which brings me to my New Year’s resolutions.

  • Take life drawing classes – this is something I really enjoyed at college, but I haven’t done any since. Figure work is completely lacking on this blog and that has to change.
  • Push myself – I’m lazy, I find it way to easy to just draw the things I know (I hope) I can draw. Part of that is fear of failure too…
  • Fail often, fail better* – I need to stop worrying about failing. The only way to improve is to try stuff, and if it’s rubbish then to learn from it.
  • Paint – Droids seem to work fine coloured using photoshop, but if I want to improve as an illustrator I need to be more comfortable with using colour from the outset. So I need to paint. Watercolour or acrylic probably, though I may use inks too.
  • Research & inspiration – I’ve recently started using Pinterest to collect images, either as reference for specific projects or simply as a place to gather together work by artists whose work inspires me. I’d like to take this further and look into the work of some artists more.
  • Sell some work – It’s over fifteen years since I sold any illustrations. I have, since then, produced illustrations as part of other projects, but no outright illustration commissions. I think if I’m to call myself an illustrator, rather than just someone who draws – then I need to sell my work. This year I plan to produce some prints and postcards to sell online, and perhaps a book collecting some of my robot drawings.
  • Keep at it – draw more, draw better, never stop.

 

*Samuel Beckett, Worstward Ho.

 

Standing on the shoulders of giants

You can find inspiration anywhere and everywhere. It might be a book or a film, something you see in nature, a person on a train… or you can be inspired by the work of someone else.

I’m not sure when I came across the beautiful illustrations of John Evelyn but I do know that as soon as I saw them I was wowed by the dreamy and ethereal nature of them. They are full of delicate clouds and landscapes, moons and clock towers and populated by tiny little figures looking up at the sky.

You can see all of John’s illustrations here.

One of John’s pictures in particular caught my attention, and he’s kindly allowed me to include it, and the sketch that preceded it, in this post.

John's beautiful illustration 'Home'.

John’s beautiful illustration ‘Home’.

I love this drawing. I don’t know the story behind it (or at least I didn’t when I first saw it), and I just found it impossible not to create my own narrative for it. The landscape is so unusual – this tiny little hamlet with a crazy lighthouse, perched on top of an outcropping of land that just peeks above a sea of clouds. And then there’s the people at the bottom right, stood on their precarious little platform, pointing up at the view. I don’t think it’s possible to look at this and not wonder what’s going on.

I asked John if he would could explain how this illustration came about, and his thinking behind it –

In terms of the scenario in ‘Home’, I always have a distinct idea that spawns the scene in my mind. Mostly I jump straight in to drawing the final piece without any preliminary doodling, whilst other times I have margin scribbles in my notebook which I return to – this was a case of the latter.

In all instances I draw straight away with pen, no pencil work or anything so whatever happens, regardless of planning, there is a haphazard way these things come out (it also make the act of drawing a bit more like playing!) – which I imagine is how I’ve ended up making pictures with plenty of scribbly lines. I guess it takes poise and composure to be precise and sparing with your line-work, both qualities that I’ve yet to attain!

I did a very quick, very noisy doodle in my notebook with the intention of drawing it properly as soon as I got home. Ultimately I drew the final image over the course of 4 days in 30min – 1.5hr sittings.

The idea that spawned this picture was: 
Once people have found each other, it is remarkable the lengths they will go to find a home.
Combined with the idea that:
These homes, despite their worth, are fleeting so it is all the more important to put your all into finding yours while you can.

You can see John’s initial sketch below –

John's initial sketch for 'Home'.

John’s initial sketch for ‘Home’.

There was something about this drawing that just wouldn’t leave me alone, this bizarre little dreamscape just kept tugging at my thoughts, until I had to ask for John’s permission to draw a version of my own. John was kind enough to agree.

I knew that I wanted to concentrate a little more on the character of the village itself – drawing some cues from my earlier illustration ‘Doodle Street’ – and I also knew that I was really looking forward to drawing that lighthouse!

My version of John's fabulous 'Home' illustration.

My version of John’s fabulous ‘Home’ illustration.

John and I both use pigment marker pens for our illustrations, but I find it pretty amazing that we both use them in such different ways. John’s lines, unhindered by any pencil sketching seem insubstantial, as if a strong gust of wind could blow the lines right off the page, and yet they conjure up an incredibly evocative dream-like world. I almost always draw something in pencil first, and in the case of this illustration I did a pretty detailed drawing before I picked up a pen. I’ve always enjoyed trying to create texture with as little line work as possible – some textures are much easier than others – and the rock and tree in particular are indicative of that. The way John and I draw clouds couldn’t be more different either, John’s almost look as if they have a life of their own and won’t be constrained by the direction of the wind. My clouds have always been, regardless of what illustration of mine they appear in, those big perfect white clouds you see against a bright blue sky. Dense and solid, looking like you could reach out and scoop a handful for yourself.

Looking at all the elements in each drawing, there are very few differences, I added a weather vane to the lighthouse and squeezed in an extra little house, but otherwise the content is the same. Stylistically I don’t think the two illustrations could be more different. John’s definitely benefits from his spontaneity and really evokes this faraway magical place far more than mine. Mine in turn possibly looks more believable, in a physical sense – but perhaps it suffers because of that.

One thing that seeing John’s work, and diving into his imagination to create a version for myself, has done is to give me a huge urge to conjure up more imaginary landscape for myself. So there will definitely be more to come.

I have to thank John again, not just for his words for this blog post but for being so generous in allowing me to steal his idea like this. You should definitely check out his work on Instagram and his Tumblr. John also makes some gorgeous music (he’s sickeningly talented).

All Tooled Up

I’m in to my eleventh week of drawing a droid every day. So far my drawings have been either a quick pencil or pen sketch, or a slightly more considered drawing in pen.

So far all my droids have been in black and white. However, I’ve finally got to a point where I think some of my droids would benefit from a splash of colour.

Below is my first attempt at colouring on of my droid illustrations, Droid #73 is my favourite so far, so it’s only right he should be the first.

The pen illustration was scanned and colour added in photoshop. Colouring took about 5 hours, and I didn’t go over the lines once. Honest.

Droid #73 receives a paint job.

Droid #73 receives a paint job.

It's all about having the right tools for the job.

It’s all about having the right tools for the job.

Detail of Droid #73.

Detail of Droid #73.