Tag Archives: Daily Painting

Value(able) Lesson

Important lesson from this week: color is flexible, but value needs to remain constant.

KnightLeft

©2019 Elizabeth Fram

Problem:
How to convey two objects that are the same color, ostensibly sitting under the same light source, but depicted on backgrounds that are entirely different from each other in both color and saturation.
The best answer seems to lie in value. Look closely at the similarities and differences of these two knights to see what I mean. The highlight color is constant, but the shadow colors are not: shades of mauve and purple in the knight facing right, slate blue and navy in the knight facing left. Yet the overall impression of both is the same.

Knight Right

©2019 Elizabeth Fram

My January 2016 post, Benefiting from the Basics, points out how trimming back to thinking only in terms of value (while painting a monochromatic watercolor sketch) revealed an unexpected and beneficial parallel with my textile work, one that I continue to think about and use today.

Knights Together

©2019 Elizabeth Fram

As Carol Marine says in Chapter 4 of her book Daily Painting, “If you have the values down, the world will be your oyster”.

Ok, I admit it, this is more than just a link to an archived post. Old habits die hard, but it’s a start. The good news is that I saved hours this week, all of which have been devoted to stitching (and making discoveries about value).

Making It Work

There has been so much to write about in the past weeks that I’m just now realizing it was all the way back on September 19th that I last made any reference to the piece that is currently in the works. Time to  bring you up to speed.

ChessKing1

Progressing from bottom to top

The various issues that were dogging me in the beginning have since ironed themselves out, so I’m at the point now where it’s more a matter of putting in the time to get the piece done. I will undoubtably be circling back to polish up this first side, but for now I’m roughly halfway to the finish line and hope that the piece as a whole will progress more quickly. But that said, hand-stitching is not speedy work.

ChessKing2

I’ve used this stitch a fair amount. I like the way it fills a space without letting it become too static. For another example, look at my banner photo above.

As is often the case, fortuitous discoveries tend to develop out of necessity, and this piece is no exception. As I was methodically stitching the main figure of the chess king, it didn’t take long to realize that I wouldn’t have enough of the colors I’d chosen to complete the checkerboard pattern within it. Whenever my work is going smoothly and I’m on a roll, I really hate interrupting the process to go out for more supplies. Therefore, I’m much more likely to search for (in the words of Project Runway’s Tim Gunn) a “make it work” solution that will allow me to keep going.

ChessKing3

Now that I’ve told you my secret about the color variety in this central figure, don’t be surprised if you see me using the same device again.

So what you’re seeing above are the results of that hiccup. Rather than just the two thread colors originally planned, I’ve used a variety of six. And frankly, I think doing so has brought life into the figure that would have been missing otherwise.

ChessKing 4

Onward and upward — the queen will soon be appearing within the blue arch.

You can’t arrange for these kinds of issues / solutions ahead of time, but they do seem to regularly present themselves. Invariably that’s a good thing. To a large extent that explains why I try not to plan a piece too far in advance or to be too married to a particular outcome. Kismet is often much smarter than I am.

Words to live by:
I just started reading Carol Marine’s  Daily Painting. Although I haven’t gotten very far into it, I like it very much so far. In Chapter One she talks about writing a letter to portrait artist Michael Shane Neal for advice. He wrote her back with a lot of helpful information, but finished the letter with what Marine characterizes as the best advice she’d ever receive.

“The best way to improve your skills is to do some kind of art every single day.”