Wednesday, 8 January 2014

My favourite brushes.

The flat and round brushes I use most. Both synthetic #4.



I acrylic tube I kept from chocolates proved to be a great holder for those delicate little brushes, currently holding my to favourite large detail brushes.

My Mont Marte taklon detailer in #1 was only a few dollars yet proved to be a great brush for travelling, I use it with watercolour more than other paints. 



One of my favourite brushes for fabric painting, I use a taklon round brush in #5.





Derwent Inktense pencils.

Applying two medium pressure layers with the Inktense pencils produces a dramatic, abstract and bold effect.

 Colour swatches from the 6 pack of pencils, using Pentel water brush produce such vibrant colours. 

The thick strong cores are resistant to breaking and need less sharpening than a student grade pencil.

Colours displayed on the end of pencils allow for versatile storage as you can easily see which colour is which.


Pentel water brush in action, slightly stained brushed tip but still has a great output. 

Such a small brush but it feels like the water lasts forever! The one i was using here was the fine tip, sizes range from extra fine brush tip to a large tip.


Super flexible brush bounces straight back into shape.

Glass painting supplies!

For a family friends birthday I painted wine glasses with little scenes, I bought a tonne of different brand glass paints and these gave the best results! Hopefully this helps out someone looking for a gift idea, these also make great gifts for kids, I was given a few as kid.


The small tips allow for intricate designs and surprisingly last very long, I managed to paint 8 glasses and only used 1/4 of the paint!

These glass paint pens were good for a background giving a less solid colour, like a watercolour finish. 

I used these painted on with a cheap synthetic paint brush, mixable colours gave such great palette options.


Reasonably priced compared to some art products in Australia. 


Tuesday, 7 January 2014

Copic Ciao 12 colour set reivew!




Above shows the flexible brush tip which creates such a great variation in line width.

I scored this 12 pack for $60! Which in Australia is pretty crazy i went to my local independent art shop expecting the usual brands but they had two of these! I've had this set for a few weeks now and still amazed by their ability to blend.

In the pictures below I tried to show how they are packaged, so secure in an acrylic transparent case with end separators which seem like they wouldn't be of much use but make it a lot easier to store these markers you can take one or two out without the other markers moving or falling.


The top swatch set of  each colour shows the brush tip and how it looks applying light, medium and hard pressure, allowing a large range of strokes which is great for tattoo style designs and anime.

Top row of the green colours is the brush tip and the bottom row is the broad tip used on the three different main sides.

Using the brush tip to blend colours.

Top: Blending purple and red. Middle top: blending red and yellow using orange to assist the blending. Middle lower: blending red and blue. Bottom: blending yellow and blue.


Back of the paper used for these swatches even on 200gsm paper the back clearly bleeds through the paper, so DO NOT use Copic markers on the back of important paper! Remove paper from your art book or paper stack and use on a clipboard or dark desk.

I did not take my own advice and marked my desk permanently if this happens on a wooden surface it can be lightly sanded back sometimes even may need to be lacquered. 


After using Copic Ciao for blending for about two weeks even my lightest colour shows no discolouration from the other markers ink.

My yellow Promarker was used for blending with a red Promarker and is now permanently discoloured.

Blending of Promarkers is possible but doesn't produce and nice of results, considering they are almost the same price I would much rather own Copic and Copic Ciao

Pan pastel mixed media set.


Mid last year (2013) I purchased a Pan Pastel mixed media set, this set was not the original colour combination I wanted but I was only buying it off eBay not an art shop, this set was $61(AUD) with $11(AUD) postage. I'm extremely happy with the pigment and quality all round for these pastels but due to the odd colour palette I haven't made an art piece with them, sometime this year I will purchase the 20 colour portrait set from an Australian art website http://www.seniorart.com.au/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=14_480_483_486 I've been looking around for a long time for his set and this site seems to be the cheapest and most reliable. If you have never used Pan Pastel before or even pastel at all I would definitely recommend buying a 5,7 or 10 pack first.

I wouldn't recommend this to someone who hasn't tried painted, used charcoal or pastel before, but definitely good for people like me that like the appearance of a painting but hate waiting between layers and people that like pastel but hate the dust getting everywhere.

All the Sofft tools this set comes with.

Slide the cover off for cleaning, all cleaning instructions come with each pack.

The cover on for more precise lines.

I could imagine this set would last an artist half a year and the hobbyist anywhere from half a year to two years. 

I hoped this could help out someone not sure whether to splurge on these products.

Sunday, 17 November 2013

Epson Scanner for under $200!!! And review.






Feather in charcoal, photographed with canon 1100D.
Same feather in charcoal but scanned with my Epson scanner. So much clearer than a photograph.

Love my new scanner, previously I was just using the scanner in my multi function printer but the DPI was half this scanners.

Easy to set up and use, only took me 15 minutes to get it out of the box and connect it with my computer, comes with a simple editing program so you can flip or crop the scan instantly. 

It came with a 12 month warranty with the store I bought it from, and through the Epson site if a technical problem occurs with the product they will replace it, as long a it wasn't you dropping it after the warranty. The sites operators are nice and easy to talk to, so head over to their site to read other reviews and pick the right scanner for your price range and needs.


Friday, 15 November 2013

Derwent Colorsoft 6 pack skintones.


My first encounter with Derwent Colorsoft pencils, they are almost like pastel pencils so buy the Derwent Artist pencils for details. For larger pieces these are great.

They produce a lot of dust, but are highly pigmented.