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04-23-2003, 02:15 AM
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#1
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Juried Member Featured in Pastel Journal
Joined: Jan 2002
Location: Arizona
Posts: 457
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Sorry, I forgot to ask her name.
I finished this on a Monday evening using my new found support of choice: sueded mat board.
My color was a deep royal blue and the model had golden skin, the drape behind her was gold and her hair was stark black. Light was set up rather burning on her cheek so the skin was showing between the knots in her terribly teenage hairdo. I was very excited by how the blue enriched the skin tones.
Once again, my Terry Ludwig pastels amazed me. I blended with some hard cretacolor sticks.
9x11", 3 hour pose.
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04-23-2003, 08:51 AM
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#2
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PHOTOGRAPHY MODERATOR SOG Member '03 Finalist Taos SOPA '03 HonMen SoCal ASOPA '03 Finalist SoCal ASOPA '04 Finalist Taos SOPA
Joined: Dec 2001
Location: Tulsa, Oklahoma
Posts: 2,674
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Debra,
Can you give any particulars regarding the "sueded mat board?" I saw some pastel paper the other day in the art store that had a suede or velour type finish (tiny hairs) is this what you mean? Did you fix the paper to the board yourself?
Oh yeah, very nicely done, per usual.
__________________
Mike McCarty
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04-23-2003, 10:14 AM
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#3
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STUDIO & HISTORICAL MODERATOR
Joined: Apr 2002
Location: Southern Pines, NC
Posts: 487
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I love it; that shoulder lost in shadow is beautiful. It's a great, solid head, and I love your shadow shapes.
Is this image cropped from the original? I'm curious about your placement of the figure, if you wouldn't mind elaborating.
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04-23-2003, 11:30 PM
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#4
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Juried Member Featured in Pastel Journal
Joined: Jan 2002
Location: Arizona
Posts: 457
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Thank you both.
This is scraps I found in Joann's craft stores. Is made both by cresent and bainbridge and it a mat board with a truly sueded texture. I have tried velours and most prepared pastel surfaces eat my sticks and I am cheap. Velour seems rough and as I once commented to great amusement, like the top of an antique Ken doll head. The final result is very similar, but what I am discovering with this is an amazing adhesion. It does not leave dust in my tray! The board holds it all, at least with my buttery Terry Ludwigs sticks. When I use hard sticks, they need a lot more work but are not bad. The best effect so far has been to work mostly with soft and use hard for blending. It is quite intellectual, because I must remember I am blending down to the support so in this one, as I blend, I am going dark to blue. If I use a lighter shade it will blend down to the color of the board as it knocks off the soft color.
I swear using soft sticks, this stuff never fills! It keeps taking color until it is flat.
And the final debate as to colorfastness is summed up with this being a product for matting, which stays under the same glass and uv protection the painting would. It MAY discolor in light, but I believe my canson and other standard papers will fare much worse.
About my positioning. That is all she wrote. I like to work touching four sides. It may be my downfall, but as this is in open studio, they tend to grow rather organically to the edges. Also nice on the board that I don't need tape or a clip as it is a board and can fill it up.
Aroung the sketch group I am known for the minor amputation around hairline. I tend to focus too much on the features and love being relieved of the necessity to render clothing and hairdos.
And honestly, I feel a lack of energy when I see one of my heads haloed with that horseshoe of blank above. Hate background so I try to make it more of the composition. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.
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