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Old 10-30-2004, 06:46 PM   #1
Sharon Knettell Sharon Knettell is offline
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Why not have your photo ink-jetted onto a canvas and retouch it?
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Old 10-30-2004, 10:12 PM   #2
Richard Budig Richard Budig is offline
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A bit cranky, Sharon?

We all use one method or another. Gridding, or squaring up, has been used since art began. It is written about in regard to Da Vinci, Michealangelo, and all the other biggies. If it was okay for them, isn't is okay for us?
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Old 10-30-2004, 10:56 PM   #3
Mike McCarty Mike McCarty is offline
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I find that whatever method I use, it is crucial that I be able to get back to a known point at any time in the process. For me, I have to continuously reestablish the critical measurements. I find that the corner of an eye, the corner of the mouth, will drift often, and substantially enough, from the initial drawing.
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Old 10-31-2004, 09:04 AM   #4
Richard Budig Richard Budig is offline
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Rockwell used shellac

Mike:

I have a book about Norman Rockwell in which he is quoted as saying that he first did a drawing (in ink, I think, but maybe charcoal), and then preserved it with a coat of shellac (sp?). That way, he said, he could always wash a little spot and find his original drawing. Same idea as yours, it sounds like, to me.
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Old 10-31-2004, 09:33 AM   #5
Mike McCarty Mike McCarty is offline
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Richard,

I don't think this would work for me. My oil painting method requires many layers of paint. At the end of each session I smooth the days work with a fan brush. Toward the end, when I am confident in my drawing, I begin not to smooth. Each layer is essential to the final outcome. If I had to dig through these layers looking for a drawing all would be lost.

I can, using the method I described above, quickly verify the critical points, right on top of my work.

I can also, by skewing the math, elongate or otherwise caricature the subject.
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Old 10-31-2004, 10:37 AM   #6
Allan Rahbek Allan Rahbek is offline
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Mike,

If we put our heads together to make a bigger processor and combine all available techniques, I think we could manage to mark a certain point on a canvas.

The way of using the Photo Shop should be effective, (for those who got one).

But I came to think of a simple way of remembering the drawing.: When the drawing is laid, you place a transparent acrylic plate in front of your canvas and draw the main lines on it with a White board Pen. In that way you can always compare your actual drawing to the original one.

Just a thought.

Allan
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Old 10-31-2004, 11:47 AM   #7
Mike McCarty Mike McCarty is offline
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I think one can be accurate and expressive.

I also think that the viewer will extend much latitude to the artists personal expression if they have first established their bona fides in the critical areas of the drawing.

For me, photographs offer the ability to capture a unique perspective. In addition, they give me the opportunity, if I develop my skill such, to capture a likeness through accurate measurement. Beyond that, I feel that it is incumbent upon me to give the client something more, something that conveys a since of art and wonderment that is personal and unique to me, the artist.
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