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Teresa

SoWal Guide
Staff member
Nov 15, 2004
30,811
9,493
South Walton, FL
sowal.com
P5230007.JPG


Waiting
24"x30"
charcoal and pastels on brown paper

P5230004.JPG


School Days
11"x14"
Pencil on Paper

I saw these at the Torre Rosa - silent auction items - thank you so much SJ, and they are all so beautiful. I didn't know you did the charcoal and color chalk - that one was very large and incredibly beautiful, my very favorite. SJ - I need an art lesson!
 

NoHall

hmmmm......can't remember
May 28, 2007
9,032
996
Northern Hall County, GA
I saw those, too, (actually, I saw them just before Torre Rosa) but didn't make the connection between the artist and the art. Wow--they're wonderful!
 

Smiling JOe

SoWal Expert
Nov 18, 2004
31,644
1,773
Thanks. I'm not so sure about the color thing. I have a difficult time blending the colored pastels to make my own colors. With paint, you can add more of one color to get a different shade, but I have not discovered how to do that with pastels.

Tootsie, I used to have a guy who worked in my kitchen who carved some of the most beautiful ice sculptures. I was always fascinated. Once, I asked him how he knew what to chip away. His answer was, "I think about what I want the ice to be and I remove all of the other ice." Since I am only a student at heart, the best advice for drawing I can give you is to buy and work through the entire book, Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain. Check it out. Amazon has a copy (used) for $0.90.:clap: That colored drawing was not the finished product. I thought I was finished, then I later changed it. Heck, after I finished it the first time, it was a black and white charcoal drawing.

Here is a picture of the final version:
P5240015.JPG
 
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NoHall

hmmmm......can't remember
May 28, 2007
9,032
996
Northern Hall County, GA
That colored drawing was not the finished product. I thought I was finished, then I later changed it. Heck, after I finished it the first time, it was a black and white charcoal drawing.

I can't tell you anything about blending, but my prized piece of artwork (hanging in my living room) started out as a b/w charcoal drawing of a vase of roses. (It's drawn on the back of a Piggly Wiggly bag. Yes, I'm from North Georgia!) When I told the artist how much I loved it, she colored it for me. GAW-jus...

I love the frame on your colored drawing, too. Is there a story there?
 
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danhall

Beach Lover
Jul 14, 2006
140
9
danhallstudio.com
Hey SJ, in all of my experience with pastels, the best way to get the color that you want is with "optical blending". If you need a certain green, you would find a yellow and a blue that lean toward the green that you want to achieve. By hatching these two together, not smudging them together, they will blend in the eye of the viewer. It takes a little planning but can be done effectively.

Also, I have two very nice pastel stick sets. Would you be interested in them? I just don't use them. They are Sennelier and Rembrandt...

holla...
 

Smiling JOe

SoWal Expert
Nov 18, 2004
31,644
1,773
Thanks for the tip. I didn't even think of that, but it sounds like a winner. I think that might take some time working with the ratios to get the right color, but blending sure doesn't seem to work. Though I haven't played with oil pastels, I hear that they can be blended with mineral oil.

I have only a small set of the pastels, so I would gladly accept any which you won't put to use, but I've seen your work and think you should do much more of it!
 

potatovixen

Beach Fanatic
Jun 2, 2006
1,218
43
39
PCB
www.myspace.com
rashidajones.jpg

Rashida Jones

dwightyoakam.jpg

Dwight Yoakam

These are both a few months old, but I've finally gotten around to scanning them.
 
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