Immature Bald Eagle, gouache on gray paper of a Stillman & Birn Nova Trio Sketchbook |
If you love working on different colored toned papers, this sketchbook is for you! I usually carry around a selection of paper colors if I'm working out on location in gouache. Stillman and Birn came out with this Nova Trio sketchbook not too long ago. It contains gray, tan, and black papers within the same book. It doesn't get more convenient than this in a sketchbook with heavy weight paper! I've been wanting one for ages, having worked a lot in one of their Nova Gray books. I was in the independent Jerrys store in West Hartford last week, and admired this 7 1/2" square version. I treated myself to that and a few other things I've been wanting to test drive.
Last Friday, I had an immature Bald Eagle pay me a visit during lunchtime! Fortunately, my trusty Nikon P900 was nearby, so I snapped a bunch of photos of him from the kitchen window, and did the sketch above from my reference images in gouache on gray paper. If gouache is your thing, these books are hard to beat. There are many papers that I prefer to size in some way before working in gouache, but I never feel that's really necessary with the Stillman and Birn books, so I can dive right in.
Sumi ink (soluble) with a dip pen, and Dr. Ph Martin Bombay India inks applied with a brush (Bright Red, White) |
Here's a little pic with my setup:
At the Wadsworth Antheneum, there was a wonderful exhibit of Italian Master Drawings. I was especially intrigued by one that was sketched with red chalk, then finished with pen and ink. I wanted to play with that idea on toned paper. I bought a bouquet of flowers, and turned to the tan section of the book. Starting with a Sanguine Conte Pastel Pencil, I sketched some of the flowers, then worked with a Pentel Pocket Brush Pen, which I'd filled with Caran d'Ache Grand Canyon ink. I also threw in a bit of Viarco Art Graf Sepia, and just a few dark accents with Platinum Carbon Black ink. The white is from a Kuretake White Brush Pen.
I felt like the flowers needed more separation from the background, so I pulled out my gouache and negative-painted the background, mixing to a raw umber to keep the color range analogous. The paper handled all of this perfectly. The texture is smooth enough for pen and ink, has enough tooth to grab the pastel pencil, and allows the gouache to sit on top.
Pastel pencil, ink, soluble sepia pigment, gouache on S&B tan |
Flowers in gouache on S&B Black |
I give this sketchbook very high marks. It's lightweight and compact enough to fit in a sketch bag, yet has a 15" spread for sketching landscapes across the open book pages. It opens completely flat, accepts all media easily, and the paper doesn't buckle much. Often, I prefer to work on loose sheets, but when I want to work in a bound book, this one will continue to be a great option for me. In fact, it just might be addictive, so if you'll excuse me........
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I love all your paintings. They are great!!! Thanks for your review of the new sketchbook - it makes me want to get one and try it for myself. I like your signature - I have been trying to do something like that for a long time, but nothing I came up has looked quite right to me. Thanks again for sharing your process, expertise and tips with us.
ReplyDeleteCathy, I'd love to see some of what you've done with your sketching sig! It does take time to come up with something you like. I let mine evolve and kept playing with it for about six months before I started to actually use it on my sketches. It's hard to be patient with it, but I'm sure you will come up with something wonderful!
DeleteLove your gouache work, Jamie. I've just dived into gouache and it gives me hope :-) To deal with black paper, have you considered underpainting the areas you want very light with either white or yellow?
ReplyDeleteThat's a good idea for when you encounter opacity problems, Larry. With most high end gouache, I haven't had to worry about opacity, even on black. It took me by surprise on this one. I prefer not to break out the white too early in my process, as things can go chalky very fast. Since doing this sketch, I've done some others on the black paper. I went back to my regular gouache pan set and didn't have any of the opacity problems that I encountered here, so I think I'll stick with the high test versions when working on black!
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