Inktober 2020 Day 22: Chef

I do think the white outline helps!
The only white pen that seems to consistently work for me, posca…

I am going to include some Amazon links here… definitely shop around a bit, though, because prices change daily. These are the best prices I have found today.

As an Amazon Associate I earn a small amount from qualifying purchases made through these links, and I really appreciate your support… but I only recommend things I really love using. Remember, “paid links” to follow! Other places I shop are Cheap Joes, Wet Paint Art, and Jacksons… but generally I find things more easily and at better prices on Amazon, which is why I joined their associates program. If you have found any of these items at a lower price somewhere else, please let us know in the comments!

I have rotten luck with all white pens… my fully-reliable-artist-friend Mandy (who it seems to me is mostly right… check out her site here: https://linktr.ee/HoustonM) has suggested it may be my paper, but whatever the reason, THIS PEN https://amzn.to/3dQFPQs is what seems to work well for me every time. I’ve linked it on Amazon, right now at $4.05, but the price fluctuates there all the time, so look around for a good deal.

(They also have what looks to me like an even thinner one https://amzn.to/2TjkjKZ I haven’t tried before but am about to order for myself. .. why does it irritate me to pay more for a thinner tip?? Completely not related!!)

The pen I’ve been using for the inktober challenge is the TWSBI Eco fountain pen. I got it last year at the Wet Paint store in Minneapolis, and I LOVE it. I have found it much cheaper (unless Wet Paint’s price went down) today on Amazon at $31.99… I really don’t know fountain pens much. I’ve had cheap ones and enjoyed them but didn’t love them. This one I LOVE using. It is definitely my New Favorite Pen. I fill it with Platinum Carbon ink, a beautiful silky dark black ink available in a bottle or in cartridges. Dries quickly, and WATERPROOF (essential for me) https://amzn.to/2Hijksa https://amzn.to/3kkWy13

The paint brush I use most often right now is the Winsor & Newton Series 7 kolinsky sable #4… I got it on Amazon in 2018 and it has lasted well, retains a nice point, holds lots of paint, and paints beautifully. I have many sizes of this brush and adore them all. Right now it is $28.75 on Amazon, which I know is a lot for a little brush, but I really really love it. Maybe someone can recommend a less expensive place to purchase these? Really nothing paints watercolor as nicely as sable. https://amzn.to/3odJMUd

I’d love to hear what your favorite supplies are! Post in the comments!

Day 274 (Mon Oct 2) Inktober day 2

More ink! Today I came home to find my artsnacks box had arrived. Yay!!!! (My monthly subscription box) All ink stuff of course, for Inktober. (see previous blog) So of course, lacking ideas of my own, I drew the items. Some pretty fun tools were included!! I am a pen fanatic, so this one is right up my alley.

My special Inktober sketchbook (I’ve been waiting all year to order this! 🙂 Each day has a prompt, so I wrote them out, thinking maybe I’d try them.

I didn’t worry about the prompt yesterday so today gave them both a quick shot.

Day 207 (wed 7/26) supply bonanza. And paints!

Woo-hoo!! Stuff. Lots of little stuff. No art created today, but lots of time spent watching painty how-to videos, and organizing my palette (adding my new Qor high chromos set in)  I get a monthly subscription box from ArtSnacks, and they had some of the past month’s boxes half price, and free shipping. I ordered three, giving me a paint brush and some watercolor pencils I was interested in trying, and a full sized Qor paint tube, all less than retail price, plus all the other items basically free.

No time to do more than organize my palette, though (and swatch the paints out)… I’m inordinately slow at that. I removed the piece that holds the paint pans and put magnets on the bottom of the pans, fitting 39 pans instead of 24. All the Daniel Smiths and all the Qor paints (which I’m really looking forward to trying out!) I’m not sure I really like the palette box without its insert. But I do like having all the paints in it and also like being able to remove a few to use on a project. I have my eye on a big ceramic palette pan that stays out on the table. (How many palettes do I need to try??)

Some nice tools here I’m interested in using!

Day 185 (Tues July 4) Noodlers ink test on Pentalic watercolor paper

This page includes a couple of art supply sketches and a test of my fountain pen ink when water is applied. It turns out most fountain pen ink is not waterproof, or even water resistant, because properties that make an ink waterproof also make it likely to clog or even ruin a fountain pen. You can get a nice fountain pen for $25, but when some cost upwards or $300, I want to be sure I know a little about them.

I ordered Noodlers Heart of Darkness ink for my fountain pen because so many people who enjoy drawing with a fountain pen swear by it. I I like to watercolor over my ink so tested for waterproof properties. (only on two samples of paper). I found the HOD to be mostly water resistant on writing paper almost immediately, but I guess it just sits on the surface of this particular watercolor paper, because even 24 hours later it still bled. A lot. Disappointing. I’ll try it on another paper. Meanwhile, I’ve ordered another ink that I saw recommended by a youtube artist I follow.

 

“I’m New to Watercolor: a paint palette? What???”

A question was asked recently about some of the tools (and terms) I use. Paint palettes specifically, so I’ll address that first. A palette may refer to a group of colors we are using (color palette), or the dish on which we mix those colors (palette tray), or a container used to hold our paints (palette pan). I generally just use the term palette for any of those, so I can see how it might get confusing, but am most often talking about a palette pan. And yes, I have a ridiculous number, because I’m still trying to figure out exactly what tools and paints I like best. You’ll see some of my things are purchased, some are… repurposed.

So first…because it’s short and sweet…. palette trays:

I’ve tried metal, plastic, and ceramic. Ceramic, all the way. Yep. The paint doesn’t bead, it spreads out and you can see it well against the white. You see there a square Pampered Chef luncheon plate, a big deviled egg tray, a little rectangular sauce dish, and my most used, the ceramic flower shape. Ignore the green… sometimes I leave the paint there for the next time I paint. I’ve included the link for the flower shaped one, but they are half that price if you can find them at an art supply store. But really, pretty cheap either way. I have two of those I use. There are lots of ceramic shaped larger ones I’d be interested in getting, but I’m not willing to pay for them quite yet. (I do like this one, though, because it has a lid, and it’s only $12, but it is very tiny. Also Amazon says i could have it tomorrow, which I find cool.)

Okay… go get a snack and meet me back here for info on paints, and paint palette pans or boxes. It will be lengthy. Prepare yourself for too much information.

I definitely suggest once you KNOW you love watercolor and want to try it for a while, invest in great paints, paper, and a few good brushes. But if you don’t have the money for expensive paints, you can make beautiful art and really express yourself on a shoestring budget. Here are some of my supplies…

This is one of my favorites right now, my Sennelier set, and I could almost stop here, I like it so much. But I won’t:

The above link will take you to the 24 pan set, which is $90 right now on Amazon. I purchased the 18 pan set for $60, but can’t find it right now. The 18 pan set on Amazon is $82 plus $7 shipping, so… for a dollar more you can get 6 extra pans!! $80 is a pretty good deal for this set, I think. (and I love these paints, rich and creamy, lift easily off paper, wet with very little water and come right off their pans… so nice to use. They don’t seem to run together as loosely and quickly as my Daniel Smith paints do, but I think they are dreamy.) These are half pans. I prefer whole/full pans. But that would put these way out of my price range! As to the actual palette box… I LOVE it. The white enamel inside is very white, no blue tinge (like my Meeden box), and allows me to really see the colors I’m mixing, and the colors don’t bead and pool into little difficult drops like in my Meeden pan. There’s plenty of mixing space, and both covers lay flat. This set feels luxurious. Buy this one, if you can. Or the next one I list (which is a more affordable way, short term, because you can go one color at a time, and offers larger pans, a big plus for me)

So, that’s a palette pan, or box, holding my paints…with palette tray, right? To mix colors on? Containing my color palette. Get it?

Next is my Meeden palette pan with my Daniel Smith paints:

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Do not assume because I like my Sennelier palette better, I feel less strongly about this Meeden set. I think it is a tremendous deal. For like $13 on Amazon you get a really nice metal tin and 12 FULL pans. Yes, these are full pans. Full sized EMPTY pans… no paint. I like to be able to use a larger brush without getting it just everywhere. I’m pretty messy. Meeden offers different sizes, larger and smaller, and they offer with or without full or half pans. Really nice prices and a good selection.

And, the Daniel Smith paints are amazing. Here is a really nice Daniel Smith set for just $23, plenty of colors to mix really anything you need, without being overwhelming! These are little tubes, and you can use them wet, on a palette tray, or put them in pans and let them dry, and use them from there. I don’t like to use them right out of the tube as much as allowing them to dry in these pans and use them that way. Both the Daniel Smith and the Sennelier are high quality, professional grade paints. Buy this one, and Daniel Smith, if you don’t buy Sennelier. I might try the largest one (24 full pans or 48 half pans) if I were to do it again. But really twelve colors is plenty. PLENTY.

Next is my Prima watercolor set. These have four different sets. Tropical is a nice set, and is only about $13 right now on Amazon, where the other three are $15 and $20, so it’s a good one to try.

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This pan is nice, like the Meeden I’d assume (which is about $10 with no paint). I actually took one of mine apart, popped the pan holder bit off of the inset, and use it as an extra mixing tray. I’ve added two extra pans in here and have my favorites from all three sets, but I did at one time have 21 half pans in here (two many choices, it turns out.) I keep a tiny pencil and little collapsible travel brushes in here, and a page I swatched the colors out on, then laminated. This palette is tiny and extremely useful. The Prima paints are vivid and fun to use, but don’t use names like the other sets (you’ll have to figure out which is most like ultramarine, for example), and don’t give pigment or lightfast information, so I assume they are a more student grade. Bright though! So I really don’t know about fillers and additives. And they wet really nicely.

Next up… my new Windsor & Newton Cotman Sketchers set. At about $13 (incl shipping), this set gives quality and a great starter selection: two reds, two blues, two yellows, some useful earthy colors, and white. With a cute tiny plastic palette box. And a really adorable, quality  W&N travel brush (teensy). I already had one, and paid eight bucks for it (incl shipping). So not a bad deal at all.

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These are quality paints, but several are “hues” (you know because it says so in their paint name) which real artists seem to look down on (probably with reason, but I’m not experienced enough to know), and a few are difficult to moisten. You can see from my swatches, though, that really they are quite vivid, and this offers a GREAT selection of colors for someone just starting out. FOR THIRTEEN BUCKS!!! DID I MENTION THAT!?? You’ll still need a larger brush or two, but it’s a nice set. Gives you a really good “color palette” within your paint palette to start with. 🙂 You can pretty much mix anything you need with these.

I use this Art Bin palette right now for my M Grahams. I don’t have many M Graham colors. (although REALLY, you only need a few!!) I love that the pan has a magnetic bottom so my little square metal trays stay in place. And I have multiple shapes and sizes of trays. I like that they allow a larger brush than the half pans. I don’t like how shallow they are, although really that hasn’t been a problem. I think I got this from Cheap Joes, but I’m not certain. It was like seven bucks. In the end, eventually, I probably won’t use this one. But I still like it, and will use it for something else, if not paints.

Next: A velamints tin is perfect for the 3 new Qor paints I have, plus I added two daniel smiths to take with me yesterday, gamboge and sepia. I put magnets on the bottoms of the pans. It’s tiny, for carrying, and the inside was already white, perfect for mixing!

I cut down a pencil and some brushes to fit, added the windsor & newton teensy detail brush, and added a little eraser. Perfect little tin to take with me. So really, for very little money you have enough here to start with. 🙂

Here’s a sweet little bitty tin a friend sent me, to sample some M Graham paints:

(I’m using one color in another set right now) These are half pans. With magnets added.

Look, I found these little empty divided eyeshadow boxes to try, for maybe a dollar on eBay :

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And I bought these for a dollar and emptied out the eye shadow:

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(They work pretty nicely, really, if you don’t care about a white mixing area or a place for brushes)

This is a big eyeshadow holder from eBay for $2…

I’ve filled it with some old student tubes I’d had for so long that several completely dried out, so really I may not often use these. But it’s a fun, cheap option. I painted the inside of the cover with white enamel to provide a mixing surface.

And this tin I found for a dollar is hinged, large, and already white inside!!! This will be great to hold full pans, with magnets on the bottom, and full sized brushes.

Really you can use so many different things. I started out with this for my first cotman paints but now it holds some M Graham full pans, with magnets on them:

One final paint set I haven’t shown you:

The popular Gansai Tambi set. This box is huge, so you need room on your workspace. I LOVE the huge size of these pans, and it is why I tried the set to start with. The paints themselves are nice… they wet smoothly and quickly and have bright colors. Four or five of them aren’t lightfast (according to someone online who spent a year testing them) and they offer no pigment or lightfast rating information. Still, for $30, this is a nice set for someone just playing around with paint!

So as you can see, I’ve tried a lot, but there are a LOT of really cool palette trays (for mixing paints) and palette pans or boxes (for storing and mixing) out there still. 🙂

I’m SO happy with my Meeden and my Sennelier right now. The metal ones are definitely my favorite. I  love the small metal Prima box (Meeden also has one that size) and now my newest and cheapest travel buddy, the Velamint tin I got from my mother. If I were to start over and choose only one, I’d go with either the Sennelier palette and paints, or the Daniel Smith tubes and the (largest) Meeden palette box. (I haven’t yet decided… probably the Daniel Smith set) And of course the ceramic palette flower dish.

Questions?

(edited to add: YES! You can definitely use most tubes of watercolor paint to fill your own pans, like the little white ones or the flat metal ones I have photos of… they dry and you just wet them like you would a set of dry watercolor paints. Windsor & Newton is the only company I know of that specifically states their pans and tubes are different formulas, and not to use their pans that was. But honestly, as I’ve read artist’s forums, most of those artists agreed that they did it with W & N tubes for years with no problems. Daniel Smith paints do great this way. M Grahams are made with honey as their binder, and they don’t ever FULLY harden, but you can still do it with them, just know they will always be at least a little sticky. Mine are just sticky to touch. Some people say they still flow a bit, though slowly, in their pans.)

Day 117 (Thurs April 27) Watercolor Coloring Book Pages. And supplies. Lots of supplies.

The ‘adult’ coloring book craze is in full swing, despite the popular nomenclature giving some of us the creeps. (Me, anyway.) So my mother and I attempted a couple of relaxing hours playing with her new Prima Tropical watercolor set and Crayola watercolor pencils and markers. I searched for paper that could support at least light washes of watercolor paint, with bolder graphics than some of the minutely detailed books have. One of my favorites is made by Prima. They have at least four volumes… one is ‘faith based’, one is phrases, one seems to be more detailed designs… I ordered this Prima book, volume 2, which was under $10, and seemed to have mostly simple designs that shouldn’t overwhelm a new-to-painting artist. The paper is really thick, very nice watercolor paper, and designs are varied. I also found this Secret Garden book on Amazon… I didn’t realize in addition to the gorgeous coloring storybooks offered, they also have made-for-framing pages on heavier paper. The designs are so beautiful. A little more challenging than I thought the two of us would want to tackle, but I wanted plenty of options so ordered it as well. Both of these are high quality paper and great images. The Prima offers simpler drawings and the four different themes, so for what I wanted it is the winner, but The Secret Garden thing is really lovely. Also, at only $6.11 right now, it is a FABULOUS deal. REALLY high quality. If you are at all interested in trying some coloring pages with paint or markers, this might be a good place to begin.

I also found this box of 44 cards for $4.01… a pretty good deal I thought. Too small for postcards, sadly, but sweet encouragement to tuck into a lunchbox or greeting card, and good little practice cards. Some with very tiny detail and some simpler cards. (I like the two listed above better, though)

I found some little coloring notecards and gift tags at Michaels which I will be listing in my Easy store soon (I’ll add a link when it is up and running!) These held my paint well yesterday, not very wet washes, but copic markers do bleed through to the back. Both the paints and watercolor pencils did well. Michaels also had a selection of books for $5 suitable for watercoloring, in various themes, (I chose travel), and another larger faith based book with pretty, uncomplicated drawings. Now we have LOADS of options. Too many.

And about the watercolor pencils… I looked at all kinds of “student artist” as well as artist quality watercolor pencils and markers, and finally decided to just try Crayola. I know they don’t use artist grade pigments and aren’t lightfast etc… but I wasn’t even sure Mom would want any of this. I was very pleased by their bold strokes! If you just want to play around with them a bit to see if you like the idea, you can get a good feel for the watercolor pencil craze from the Crayola set, for just a few dollars.

(Also, if you are thinking about a little paint set to try, while I do highly recommend the Primas for a delightful sensory experience, I just ordered this Windsor & Newton Cotman (student) set for $12.99, 12 colors with a (supposedly) really nice travel brush included! Neither of these sets will be artist quality paints, but I suspect the Cotman is a higher quality paint to learn with than the Primas, and they do give pigment information for their paints, and you can purchase replacement pans. The case is very simple, but sufficient, if you don’t mind a plastic case. (paths is where the Primas have a huge advantage, in my opinion) I hesitated, because the paints are “hues”, which artists suggest you avoid using, if you can afford better, but in my reading I also learned from several artists that they really like some of the Cotman colors, even hues (and some they listed are included in this set) so for $13, this may be a really good starter set. I’ll let you know! They should arrive tomorrow… wow. Two days.)

Back to our coloring book day… we got a cheap set of tiny brushes with plastic handles from Michaels ($2!), and I cut their handles down more so they’d fit inside the little paint tin, and sanded them smooth with a nail file. They are very short, but they work. I had actually ordered these travel brushes, but they haven’t arrived yet. They are for nail art… yeah, fingernail polish!… they are supposedly sable (??)… I’m not sure I believe that, for the price, but they are a very affordable replacement for travel watercolor brushes to fit into the little travel sized paint tins (like Prima), with lids that protect the bristles during travel, then snap on the back to lengthen the handle for painting. They have several sizes, and even have flat brushes (if you hunt for them) Sable or synthetic or whatever they are, they feel nice. I had ordered an individual one previously, and gave it away (after trying it!), so I already know I like these, and I’m bummed I didn’t have them in time to give Mom one or two. The one I tried holds water well and keeps a nice point while painting. A professional artist may not approve… but I love them and look forward to their arrival! A nice little secret find!

We played around with several different coloring and painting techniques. And I found that coloring books ARE relaxing and fun. An hour well spent.

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