Thank you !!! Love the style as well as your style of presentation. As a beginner it would help to have more description of inks and paints. What about cleaning brushes and pen nibs too?
You mentioned that this Celtic pattern depends on how the lines cross. In this regard, can I give you the tip to photograph the draft made with pencil: This way you can always see which line runs over or under another. I myself photograph every step of the creation of a project anyway so that I can archive it that way. Good luck
There is also something called pricking where many tiny holes are punched through the sheet the original drawing is on. These holes follow the lines of the drawing. Some form of coloring is then forced through the holes and onto the final sheet. The final step is to take a pencil and follow the dots to finish the drawing before guilding or painting. As for black India ink made by Speedball? You can get their ink in some large bottles on Amazon. I have seen their ink in pint and quart bottles for a good price for the amounts in those bottles.
Your work is beautiful. It's refreshing to hear that the process may not be as easy as it appears. I love different style fonts in my WORD file but I think I want to try handmade lettering (I can always default to my computer generated letters). I'm not artistic so I may be in for a rude surprise. Do you think a beginner should attempt to do such complicated letters or maybe take a class first? Thanks.
Thank you so much! Yes, the process is definitely time consuming, but I think anyone should try it as long as you take an approach that works for you. I suggest finding a style that is simpler and trying to replicate it on grid paper. Grids do wonders to help us stay symmetrical. If you'd like some extra help at first, try tracing paper. It will help you learn the line and curve patterns. Hope this helps!
Thank you !!! Love the style as well as your style of presentation. As a beginner it would help to have more description of inks and paints. What about cleaning brushes and pen nibs too?
Thanks for this! Very inspiring. Also love your cat's cameo appearances :-)
Enjoyed watching this. Thanks for sharing! It helps so much to see illumination being done.
So glad to hear that! I'm hoping to do more illumination videos in the future :)
Thank you for sharing your wonderful talent.
Thank you for watching!
Excellent detail, exquisite deleneation ¿asi se dice?
Congrats Maydi! 😀🌹
Mil gracias!! ❤️
You mentioned that this Celtic pattern depends on how the lines cross. In this regard, can I give you the tip to photograph the draft made with pencil: This way you can always see which line runs over or under another. I myself photograph every step of the creation of a project anyway so that I can archive it that way. Good luck
That is a very good point! Especially for when I'm not filming it already. Thank you!
Great work!
Thank you!
There is also something called pricking where many tiny holes are punched through the sheet the original drawing is on. These holes follow the lines of the drawing. Some form of coloring is then forced through the holes and onto the final sheet. The final step is to take a pencil and follow the dots to finish the drawing before guilding or painting. As for black India ink made by Speedball? You can get their ink in some large bottles on Amazon. I have seen their ink in pint and quart bottles for a good price for the amounts in those bottles.
I've never done it with this process, but I've seen it and it looks quite efficient! Exploring transfer methods is quite fun.
Where do you purchase your Sketch inks?
Your work is beautiful. It's refreshing to hear that the process may not be as easy as it appears. I love different style fonts in my WORD file but I think I want to try handmade lettering (I can always default to my computer generated letters). I'm not artistic so I may be in for a rude surprise. Do you think a beginner should attempt to do such complicated letters or maybe take a class first? Thanks.
Thank you so much! Yes, the process is definitely time consuming, but I think anyone should try it as long as you take an approach that works for you. I suggest finding a style that is simpler and trying to replicate it on grid paper. Grids do wonders to help us stay symmetrical. If you'd like some extra help at first, try tracing paper. It will help you learn the line and curve patterns. Hope this helps!
Thanks for this video! Can you please give the exact name of the green ink? Thank you
YEEESSSS
U can't see it