As I have
mentioned before, I often do sketches while I am commuting on a train
or when I am sitting waiting for something such as a doctor's
appointment. For the most part, these sketches are just for
practice. However, from time to time, one is a special image that I
would like to take further.
The problem is that the sketches are
small, pocket-size images done on a note pad or on a piece of scrap
paper. Their size and the quality of the paper preclude trying to
make them into a series piece of art.
My solution has been the traditional
one - - I hand copy the image onto a larger, better quality piece of
paper. Once the image has been successfully transferred, I can add
color, change it or otherwise develop the work.
A problem with this method is that
sometimes something gets lost in making the copy. An image can have
a certain something that cannot be re-captured no matter how hard you
try. A random line or two may be what gives the sketch its
character. Also, hand copying can be a lot of work.
This week, I tried an experiment. I
took two small sketches and made high-quality digital images of them.
Once you make a digital image of a
work, there is a lot that you can do with it using a photo editing
program such as Photoshop. You can add color, erase mistakes,
improve the brightness and contrast etc.
But I was not looking to digitally
manipulate these sketches. Rather, my goal was to enlarge the image
and then work on it by hand.
Therefore, the next step was to print
the images. Of course, the print will depend upon the quality of the
printer. However, using my rather ancient printer, I was able to
print out acceptable quality prints that could serve as the base for
further development.
I then used a pen to emphasize some of
the lines. For color, I used colored pencils on one and Cray-pas on
the other.
I was pleased with the results. The
size of the works was now more substantial. Also, the addition of
color had enhanced the images.
Clearly, there are limitations to this
process. The largest paper my printer will accept is A4 so the image
cannot be larger than one that would fit on that size paper. Along
the same lines, he printer is probably not capable of handling heavy
water color paper and the like. A better printer would push these
limits out further.
I don't think I will give up on hand
copying. However, this little experiment has put another arrow in my
quiver.
Before and after. Above: The original sketch on 3 by 5 inch note paper.
Below: The image after scanning, printing and further hand development on 8.5 by 11 inch paper.
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