Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Tuesday - at work




At some point I'll get tired of these plain ol' pencil drawings, but I tend to fixate on one thing at a time.  This is another 11x14" on Stonehenge.  I have two 16x20" pieces cut out and ready to use and I think I'll draw some cherry blossoms on them.  There's a plain old pie-cherry type cherry tree blooming in the woods next to our house and while I really like the flowers, they're all in complicated clusters.  I think using some bigger pieces of paper for them will keep me from running off the edge of the sheet (as I tend to do).
 

Monday, April 27, 2009

How I scan and reassemble a drawing in Photoshop

I've been getting better at scanning my drawings and paintings that don't fit on my scanner bed in multiple scans and putting them back together in Photoshop.  As always, this is just how I do it and it works for me.
Yeah, this isn't going to scan in one go.  I line up the top of this drawing with one edge of the scan bed.  Notice the lid is completely turned over and flat.
After trying a number of different things, I've decided that the lid to my scanner is too uneven to press down smoothly on the paper.  So I've been using a pad of tracing paper that exactly fits into the scanner bed.  Then I weight it with a book that's not too heavy - I don't want to mess up the scanner or put a permanent crease in the paper.  The top edge of the drawing is completely flat to the glass, but the part that's going off the edge of the scanner is not.  Since I'll overlap the two scans later, it doesn't matter that part of it is curved.

The weight of the paper or board is pretty important at this step.  This drawing is on a nice heavy Stonehenge paper that's sturdy enough to straighten back out after it's bent slightly on the scanner, but not so heavy that it refuses to bend at all.  If it's so rigid that it won't bend so you can at least get one corner flat on the scanner, you'd probably have to set up lights and photograph it instead.
Here I've removed the weight and slid - not rotated! - the paper to scan the bottom half.  Putting the lid flat allows you to slide the paper straight across to do the next scan.  I've tried rotating the paper to scan the different sides and something always ends up looking wrong - the color shifts, the scanner's lights cast a different shadow so the texture looks different, etc.  So to make the next steps simple, I keep the paper facing the same direction.
I put the weights back on, and scan.


Here's the two scans.
Now for the Photoshopping.  I have two images that have some overlap in the middle - some of the middle of the drawing is in both scans.

I save the images so I don't have to rescan them if something goes wrong, then I pick one to work from and extend one side of the image by clicking Image-->Canvas Size which gives me this little box.  I type in a new width for the image (roughly double the existing size) and click on the little square to show which side the current image will stay on.  If you leave it in the middle, it will give you extra space all the way around the current image and in this case you only need one side to be bigger.  

Now I have the Move tool selected and I click and drag the smaller image onto the one I've extended.

Side note: the option up at the top in the toolbar to "Show Transform Controls" with this tool is super convenient.  You don't have to go through the menu to transform/rotate the current layer.  Just watch the arrows as you mouse over the edges of the image or you accidentally rotate when you're just trying to move.  To resize, pick a corner and hold the Shift key to keep the layer in proportion, then double click on the image or click the checkmark button that shows up in the toolbar.  To cancel, click the circle-with-a-slash button.  I swear it sounds more complicated than it is :)

Change the layer opacity of the top layer so you can see when it's lining up.

Move it onto the bottom layer until it's lined up as close as you can get it.  Sometimes it helps to rotate the top layer to get it to line up better, but I find it to be tricky.  Don't worry about whether the whole thing is aligned - just get the area where the two layers overlap pretty close.

Now click the little button at the bottom of the Layers palette that says "Add layer mask."  This is how I blend one layer into the other so you can't tell that I had to fake it with two scans.  Once you have a layer mask, select the Brush tool.  The foreground and background colors are set to black and white.  Choose a large, soft-edged brush (you might have to run the little slider from the Brush Preset option in the toolbar to get one big enough) and click the "swap back-and-forth" arrow next to the foreground/background colors (or press x, at least on my Mac).  Once you have white selected as the foreground color, you can start painting.  But you're not painting, you're just choosing to stop showing some of the layer.  It's like using the Erase tool without ever losing any of the original layer.  You can "paint" some of the layer away on the Layer Mask, then switch to the opposite color and "paint" it back in.  That back-and-forth is really important on my drawings, because there will be parts that I want to show from the top layer and parts that I want to be visible from the bottom layer.
Here's what this area looks like when it's finished.

This shows where I've "painted" on the layer mask - if you can't see it, click to enlarge.  The main thing is not to just paint a straight line on the layer mask - if you break it up and weave around a little bit, your eye is much less likely to catch the transition.

As with anything, the layer mask sounds weird and complicated but you'll see how it works if you try it.  It's great for making any part of a layer transparent without losing any of the original layer - you can either put it back in or just delete the layer mask.

That was a long how-to for something that doesn't take that long to do...isn't that always the case :)

Friday, April 24, 2009

Friday magnolia




Here's a magnolia for your Friday.  I took a few photos while I was scanning this and I'll write up a short how-to for my best method of scanning something that's too big for your scanner sometime when I'm feeling organized.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Next!





Well, you knew this was coming.  Magnolias have bloomed so of course I had to go out and take pictures to draw from.  It's good for me to slow down and really take note of all the seasonal changes going on out there because this is the only time they'll be new to me.  Next year I won't be surprised that there is an old wild cherry (I think) tree blooming out in the woods near our house.  It didn't look like anything until this week and now if I squint, it looks a little like an iceberg drifting toward our backyard (did I mention it's really tall?).  I'll still enjoy it but it won't be such a surprise.  

I've been out with the camera taking macro pics of every little interesting thing almost every day this week.  I worry a little that the new neighbors will think I'm odd, but as I've already told them I'm an artist, maybe they would be disappointed if I wasn't odd enough :)

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Photo break


So here's what was hiding under all those fuzzy magnolia buds.  I was planting a few things underneath one of these trees a couple days ago and the sun was shining, there was a lovely breeze, and these flowers smelled delightful.  I really love spring.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Drawing - now in exciting beige!!



So here's the so-called "fawn" Stonehenge paper.  I like it (although I still say "fawn" is a weird name for it) and I think it makes the pencil lines look more delicate.

I cut down a large sheet of paper into two 11x14" and one 12x16".  Of course, Stonehenge has two deckle edges on the long sides and I made sure that all the sheets had one deckle edge.  I never get tired of them.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Yes, that's right. It's another drawing.





Draw draw draw - that's me.  Here's another crabapple blossom, pencil, Stonehenge, 9x12", because I work in series, yo.  

I also bought some Stonehenge paper in a color that they call "fawn" but which I would call maybe "buff" or "almond."  I'm going to start on that next.

I keep looking at all these little plants and flowers and outdoorsy things I like and thinking about how un-hip I am.  But I guess that is what happens when instead of hanging out with the cool kids when I was younger I wandered around in the woods picking up sticks and rocks and flowers and snailshells.  Or riding my horse - also in the woods, not out winning ribbons with the cool kids.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Drawing again



Yes, that's right, more drawings.  I can't stop myself.  Even when I'm painting or doing something that doesn't require a drawing to work from, I still have to keep drawing things into my sketchbook.  This is a non-sketchbook, straight onto the final paper drawing (Stonehenge, for anyone who is curious).  I'm enjoying the challenge because much as I love my translucent Yupo, it makes it almost too easy to go from a not-too-finished sketch to a nice slick tracing onto the Yupo.  I mean, I have to do it that way because erasing anything on Yupo messes up the surface so watercolor won't stick to it right (guess who learned that the hard way).  But drawing onto the Stonehenge makes me slow down and take my time so that I don't have a lot of eraser mess on the finished piece.

I don't really know how well this sort of thing works when you can't see it in person...I'm sure other types of artwork stand out more in a thumbnail-on-a-screen setting, but I guess I like things that are subtle and make you come in closer to see.  

Anyway, this is a drawing from the crabapple (I think) tree behind our new house.  I hope that's right...I kept looking at it all winter while it was asleep and hoping it would do something interesting in the spring.  So whatever it is, it's definitely pretty now with thousands of little pink flowers.  

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Drawings









I had a sudden whim to make some nice, simple, back-to-basics drawings.  These are hellebores which I think are worth putting into the garden just for the name.  All three are on bristol board and 5x7".

I spend so much time drawing on paper in my sketchbook that I hadn't realized until just lately that I haven't made a finished drawing on anything but Yupo or frosted mylar in a long time.  It's good to feel like I still have my love for paper even though I've been in a synthetic paper phase recently.

Friday, April 10, 2009

And again: seeds






Ok, I think these are the last of the seeds.  More watercolors, more 4x6", more Yupo, etc etc.  
I'm playing with these little hexagons and I think I'm going to use them on some other things, too.  I keep thinking of other things I want to combine them with, so I imagine they'll turn up again.  I made a page in my sketchbook of hexagons so that I could trace them onto the Yupo (translucent, you see) and at first I tried actual symmetrical hexagons like you see in chemistry or on a quilt.  They looked kind of boring, so I made a little paper template that's more elongated than a proper hexagon and traced around it to make several rows.  Then I could draw the seedling, place the Yupo piece over my sketchbook page, then move it around on the hexagons until I found a spot I liked and trace in some of the lines.  It was a very Photoshop moment - moving transparent layers around and such.