eller: iron ball (Default)
2023-05-27 05:20 pm

Faux Cave Painting

The saga of artistically questionable postcards goes on! This time, I drew the address of someone I already knew a bit from the Postcrossing forum - and they're another paleolithic art nerd! YAY! Of course, I could not resist the temptation to produce some cave art fanart.

faux-cave-painting

I prepared a piece of thick Kraft paper (A6 format) with sand (collected myself, of course) and acrylic paste, so the result looked kind of like a sandstone cave wall. (The closest approximation I could manage, anyway.) I then took charcoal and pastels and drew on it, which was somewhat tricky. I fixed the end result with spray varnish. (Also, obviously, I had to send it in an envelope, but I’m told it arrived undamaged, which makes me very happy.) This was SOOO much fun! XD
eller: iron ball (Default)
2023-05-24 08:36 pm

North Sea

Another postcard for Postcrossing. This time, I decided to combine watercolor and papercutting. The person this card is for is another North German and loves the North Sea coast in particular. I am, of course, always happy to help out with North German nature... Comfort zone. LOL.

North-Sea

The seagulls and the island with the lighthouse are cut from cheap white note paper and pasted on a watercolor background, Winsor&Newton Payne's Grey on Vaessen Florence Texture White watercolor paper in A6 (postcard size).

I'm actually quite happy with this one - in hindsight, I'd change a few things about the composition, and also, give the birds more detail, so maybe there's going to be a remake of this one in the future. Possibly also with a nicer seascape... And better papercutting paper that doesn't deform... (Initially, that lighthouse was more or less straight!) Yeah, many things went wrong here, because I didn't want to spend hours on this piece, but all that can be fixed in a remake. The overall concept is fine as far as I'm concerned.
eller: iron ball (Default)
2023-05-05 09:46 pm

Music Papercut

I was sooooo amused earlier when I drew an address on Postcrossing and got a nice person in Russia whose hobbies are... music (!) and papercutting (!!!). That's... kind of niche, but of course, I was super happy! I don't usually make papercut cards for postcrossing, simply because that's too much work, but in this case I was willing to make an exception.

Musik-Scherenschnitt-kl

Not very detailed, but hey, it would be a shame not to send a papercut, right? I didn't find my good scalpels so I had to use one that wasn't really sharp anymore, and it kind of shows, but whatever. This took me a bit over an hour as it is. XD At least I used decent paper (not silhouette paper, but a very good alternative intended for... lamination?!?, but also very stable - it works great!) and decent spray glue. The background is simple white cardboard. I'll be mailing this in an envelope because I don't trust Deutsche Post with my art. XD

eller: iron ball (Default)
2023-04-04 07:24 pm
Entry tags:

Chess Papercut

Part 1, Shadow theater, the process
Part 2, Papercuts and storytelling
Part 3, Shadow art, paper art
Part 4, Palaeolithic Animation
Part 5, More Shadows and Silhouettes

The little silhouette series goes on! This is again my own work: a fast one I did last night when I couldn't sleep. (Tidy this is not...) The material is stuff I grabbed: one of these small note paper thingies (you know, the ones that come in those cubes of, like, 1000 sheets), mounted on a white index card (A6). I'm showing it not so much for its intrinsic artistic value, but because I experimented a bit with the technique, and this is the first time I'm incorporating value gradients (created with watercolor sprinkles) in papercut work. One thing I learned is that these little note paper squares are not papercut paper. They don't just take any opportunity to tear (which is to be expected from ordinary paper, but they deform under stress. I ended up with a piece that was decidedly not a square anymore... which caused problems in the end, when gluing inevitably led to creases because the lower edge had miraculously elongated. (It's magic!) Still, I kind of like the effect with the gradients, and I'll definitely do that again - preferably in a more controlled manner. :) This was fun!

schach-scherenschnitt-kl


eller: iron ball (Default)
2023-04-03 12:11 pm

More Shadows and Silhouettes

Part 1, Shadow theater, the process
Part 2, Papercuts and storytelling
Part 3, Shadow art, paper art
Part 4, Palaeolithic Animation

In this fifth installment, I will again talk about some inspiring art pieces (in the widest sense) that involve a shadow, silhouette, and/or paper craft component.

''Waldschattenspiel' (Shadow in the Woods) by Walter Kraul

The Waldschattenspiel is an impressive board game for children aged 5+, and it's played in a dark room, by moving a tea light through a forest. A full English-language review with pictures can be found here. The trees cast shadows. There are two variations how you can play this, both of them cooperative: A) The players are supposed to meet under a certain tree while staying in the shadows all the way, and a game master moves the candle according to certain rules. If you're hit by light, another player needs to come to your rescue so you can move again. B) You move through the forest, but if you end up in the shadows, you get lost. You can be rescued by another player if they use a mirror thingy to reflect the candlelight to your location.

...it's pretty brilliant, and I LOVED this as a little child, when I played this with my parents! I suppose I learned a few things about perspective and geometry along the way? But mainly, it's the atmosphere - the room is dark, and there's only one small, flickering light... It's very primal (actually, come to think of it, this is also how cave art and shadow theater work!) and instinctive, and playing it feels good. I was never a fan of non-competitive games, but I was making an exception for this one.

Safety note: if you think a game that involves combining paper, open fire, and little children has a few practical issues, you'd be correct. This is why the instructions are very clear that only a grown-up is supposed to move the burning candle. Seriously.

'Instrument Buch' by Peter Apian

This is actually a math book... From 1533. (This is one of the rare cases in which I actually bought an expensive facsimile of an old book.) I'm including this not only because you all know I'm obsessed when it comes to sundials and related tech (what can I say; I really like shadows), but also because Peter Apian included some suuuuuuper nice volvelles. (Even more of those can be found in his Astronomicum Caesareum.) That is, pictures the reader was supposed to cut out and build quadrants and other observational instruments from. YAY! The whole text is surprisingly interactive for a book this age (and I think the only way the author got away with that was by founding his own print shop: I strongly suspect he did that because any publishers he showed his work to would have balked, but hey), including many woodcut illustrations (works by H. Brosamer and M. Ostendorfer) as well as those lovely paper sheets for crafting. It's a great piece of art. And, by the way? The math is impeccable.

Apian is often overlooked as a mathematical researcher, because he deliberately aimed this book at the lower classes. The author had some freakishly modern ideas about education: he stated the opinion it's totally possible to teach math to peasants if you remove all the fancy words. The Instrument Buch is designed to be read (and crafted, and used) by people without an academic background! The explanations can be understood without any previous mathematical education. Somehow, the author managed to pull this off without dumbing the content down - many of the shown scientific instruments are his own designs, and they're excellent, but he explains their use in a very straightforward way that, apparently, disqualified him as an intellectual. (Seriously, check the works of some of his contemporary math authors like, say, Copernicus. That stuff is not actually better, it's just phrased in a fancier way...) The content of the Instrument Buch is all you ever need to know about projections: absolutly enough to pass a Geology 101 exam, presented in a straightforward no-nonsense way. It's still one of the best textbooks out there (if you ignore the somewhat antiquated language), and yes, that's my professional opinion. It makes Apian one of my fave math authors. Also: PRETTY PAPERCRAFT STUFF!!!

'Silhouettes Tarot' by Masa Kuzuki

A lovely tarot deck, and it's in silhouette style illustrations... I believe this did not actually involve any paper cutting, but digital painting of black silhouette images in front of colorful background illustrations - which is an artistic style I had not encountered before. (I'm used to simple, single-color backgrounds for silhoutte art.) It really works, though! The background illustrations are also in a clear, ornamental style, so the whole concept feels very natural. I've never written a full deck review, and that's because I rarely use this deck, but I enjoy having it in my collection and occasionally looking at the pictures!

'Picture This: How Pictures Work' by Molly Bang

This is the reference text for artistic composition: the author explains the effects of certain spapes and compositions on the viewer, and how to use these effects in your art. She does this... with papercuts. (The example story she uses is 'Little Red Riding Hood', because clearly, papercuts and fairy tales just go together. LOL) The visuals are deceptively simple, with nothing distracting from the effects of the composition, and the explanations short but to the point... This is a definite recommendation for anyone interested in the visual arts, not just for those of us who are into papercuts and/or shadow theater. No matter what you do - drawing, painting, papercrafting - the principles of composition are the same, and knowing which psychological effects you can induce in your vievers is extremely useful. If you ask me, this is the best guide to visual composition on the market.

...okay, this is getting long-ish again. There's more awesome art, and I guess I'll have to continue this series further. LOL


eller: iron ball (Default)
2023-03-30 10:37 pm

Shadow art, paper art

Since all this talking about silhouette art is somehow, unplannedly, evolving into a little series:
Part 1, Shadow theater, the process
Part 2, Papercuts and storytelling

In this third part, I will be discussing some art that inspired me on a personal level. I don't claim this assortment to be complete in any way - I have no background in cultural history, so all this is just random stuff I encountered along the way (and most of it as a kid), ranging from prehistoric cave art over children's picture books and classic silhouette film to modern art installments - with a clear focus on art that's easily accessible to someone growing up in northern Europe. I decided to leave out pure music, literature, and storytelling without a shadow and/or paper art component, in order to have at least a bit of a common theme.

Also, this list needs to come with a disclaimer: I'm not an art critic. I am, in fact, one of the least art-enthusiastic people on this planet. I'm that person who doesn't listen to music more than ten minutes a day, doesn't read many books, doesn't watch movies, and, during a museum visit, doesn't care about all that painted canvas and just waits for the group to move on to the cafeteria. Uncultured and art-immune. You know the type. (The irony of simultaneosly being one of the people who produce much more art than the average human - and in different art forms - though virtually everybody would be much better suited to the task, has not eluded me.) Of course, there's also an advantage: the instances in which art actually worked on me can be counted... not quite on one hand, but you get the idea - and I remember all of them clearly.

Behind a cut, because again, long-ish. )

(I don't own the copyright of anything behind the external links. I have, however, taken care to link only to stuff that looks legally published to the best of my knowledge, and I'm linking it for... educational purposes, I guess, though it feels weird to attach this label to a post of mine.)

eller: iron ball (Default)
2023-03-29 12:55 pm

Papercuts and storytelling

So, since I talked about shadow theater yesterday, I thought I'd talk a bit about the underlying traditional craft, Scherenschnitt (papercut), today - especially about the performance aspects of it.

I think you've all seen silhouette art before. Pretty much everyone agrees that papercut art was originally invented by the Chinese (who also came up with paper in the first place), but you know how it is with good ideas: they spread. In northern Europe, this traditional craft focuses mainly on portraiture, fairy tales and folk tales - in fact, at least from the 18th to the 20th century, it was considered the most appropriate form of illustration for traditional tales in Germany. I'm not just interested in Scherenschnitt (the German word for papercut art in this style) as illustration, though - in fact, I consider it a cultural loss to reduce it to that. Making a Scherenschnitt is, and always has been, a performance. The process is usually much more interesting than the results.

The first time I encountered Scherenschnitt as a live performance was as a young child (I was 5 or 6, maybe) at a market stall. Someone was sitting there and doing Scherenschnitt portraits of people, and I guess my parents had a bit of spare money at the time, because they paid the artist to do a portrait of me. (It's still in a picture frame on their wall. This should tell you two things: this is a VeryTraditionalHousehold (TM), and proud parents are proud parents everywhere.) Unfortunately, I don't remember the artist at all, not even if that was a man or a woman (and I'd have to take the picture out of its frame to look at the signature, which is typically on the back because you don't write or draw on Scherenschnitt art), but I remember being fascinated by the process of this person picking up black paper and scissors and... a face - my face - just appearing. I guess I don't need to explain it's extremely difficult to do a recognizable papercut portrait of someone without a preliminary drawing? Anyway, that was magical. Interestingly, in the result, it's visible how fascinated I was: some of you (the ones on access, anyway) have seen photos of the very peculiar 'focused' facial expression Kiddo!Eller had while playing chess. The Scherenschnitt somehow managed to capture exactly that. Baby!Eller was watching carefully.

At that time, of course, I didn't make papercut art. I enjoyed papercraft all right, but... Well. I wasn't the kind of artistic prodigy who would have been able to produce anything like that as a child! First, I had to figure out that I really need to use scissors and knives with my right hand despite being left-handed when it comes to everything else, like writing or drawing. (Yes, I know special scissors for lefties exist. No, my parents bought me those - they don't believe all the superstition about lefties and didn't try to re-train me when they noticed I picked up pens with my left - but leftie scissors don't help. I'm simply not capable of cutting properly with my left hand. It's interesting that cutting and drawing seem to require completely different brain activity despite both resulting in a picture, but there you go.) Also, no one in my family practices the art. (And the only shadow play I was exposed to was Mom shaping rabbits and such with her hands - you know. I got to see 'normal' puppet theater from my grandfather and father but was never really into that...) My first papercut was an ATC I made in 2009:



This is very obviously beginner work. The not-very-clean edges are not only my fault; the unsuitable material (a plain index card!) contributed, but, well. I also did not have that much control yet. Still, I'm quite happy how it turned out - as a first attempt, it's fine. Could have been much worse.

In the following years, I practiced a bit, but I was only able to add more detail on that small format when I actually used 'the good stuff', that is, professional-level papercut paper. This exists for a reason: it's thin enough for fast and easy cutting, but doesn't tear. Much. (I have, of coursed, managed even that... My superpower: destroying paper.) The following are two very classical fantasy-themed ATCs I made in 2015, using both scissors and knives. (In case you were wondering: I don't use any expensive tools for this. My favorite scissors came from the Euro Shop, and I really love break-off cutter knives. The only not-super-cheap tool I own is a Japanese swivel scalpel I wouldn't want to miss.)





These are actually okay-ish: I notice all the ways in which I could have done that better, and I shudder, but I guess all artists do that. LOL (I have somewhat better technique these days, but I haven't made any Scherenschnitt ATCs lately. Should probably do that again at some point...) Anyway... These pictures, unfortunately, were made at home, so no one got to watch the process, which is a total waste if you ask me. I think I have mentioned how the making of this stuff is soooo much more interesting than just pictures? Also: traditionally, it's inextricably linked with storytelling.

A famous example of papercut performance art are the papercuts by Hans Christian Andersen who is (unjustly) mainly known as a writer these days, but who was a storyteller really - his performances involved telling stories while cutting paper pictures. (He started his career at a theater, actually was into singing and acting before he began to write, so it's safe to assume he was extremely good at entertaining an audience!) Of course, having really good stories helped. (I mean, how many films are there of the Little Mermaid alone? I believe they recently made a new one though I haven't watched it yet.) Only the written versions lasted until today, but... From a storyteller standpoint it's really obvious his stories were designed to be told - I'll spare you the structural analysis of Andersen's fairy tales and a discussion of storytelling techniques vs. short-story writing techniques, and the (deliberate) use of colloquial vs. 'literary' language, but Andersen's stuff firmly falls into the first category. Just believe me, I would pay a shit ton of money for an opportunity to watch one of Andersen's performances... (Wrong century, alas.)

Later, as soon as film began to be a thing, silhouette animation also became a thing, especially in Germany - I simply have to mention Lotte Reiniger here, who pioneered that art form (and created the first feature-length animated film, before Walt Disney did, but got a lot less public credit due to being, well, female), but since this is getting long-ish again, I guess I'll save an in-depth discussion for another post. I will note, though, that her famous 1922 version of Cinderella (and, nope, absolutely not a coincidence she did fairy tales, too - people come with cultural backgrounds!) not only involves animated silhouette figures, but also animated silhouette hands cutting silhouette figures. She simulated the effect of hands appearing on a shadow theater screen nicely (and used it for effect!), which means she was absolutely aware of (and likely also personally experienced with) the cutting process itself as a performance technique in storytelling.
eller: iron ball (Default)
2023-03-28 01:18 pm

Shadow theater: the process

So, shadow theater is a thing again! :D I haven't done this at all for over a year (and I never did this very often, anyway), so I'm seriously out of practice, but I got an invitation to an event (amazing this person remembered my existence at all), and I have kind of missed this, so... Yeah. I'm accepting though the conditions are not ideal. And, since a shadow theater performance like the one I'm going to do ideally looks spontaneous but is, in fact, very carefully prepared, I'm taking this opportunity to write down the process.

Behind a cut because I guess not everybody is interested in the specifics of preparing a shadow theater performance. )

....okay, wall of text again. Whatever. I expect no one to read this. LOL
eller: iron ball (Default)
2021-12-24 07:47 pm

Celebrations: The Ultimate Advent Picspam

Merry Christmas, to all who celebrate – and a wonderful time to absolutely everyone!!!

I haven’t posted much lately – I’m very busy with science. This is a good thing, of course. Still, I really regret not showing you all the woooonderful things I’ve received during the Advent time. I had three Advent calendars this year (from smilestack, linaly, and Sam_Linnifer) and also received some lovely unrelated Christmas mail… So, this is going to be a picspam post – you have been warned. (Pictures are behind the cut.)

I can’t show everything I received, although all my gifts were awesome: there was a lot of fanart involving my own characters (YAY!!!), tea (I’m drowning in tea!), chocolate, other fascinating foodstuff, a virtual museum tour of a mineralogical exhibition, conducted by my own characters (double YAY!!!), and art and craft supplies to last me a lifetime. :D Also, I made some stuff for other people, but that will have to go into a separate post. This one is just for awesome handmade things I received!

Sooo - these craft projects were all made by other people for me; I’m giving the appropriate credits, of course… And I’m amazed (and, in some cases, shocked) how well people know me, my taste, and my occasionally odd preferences.

Here are the pictures: )

THANK YOU!
eller: iron ball (Default)
2021-02-11 11:13 pm
Entry tags:

CHESS SOCKS!!!

Look at what doublebass made for me! She knitted me socks! Very special socks! Chess socks!!! Chess socks are the best socks!

Schachsocken-von-doublebass-kll

They even have the letters from A to H and the numbers from 1 to 8!

And KING BUTTONS! Made from FIMO! I simply have to show a close-up of the kings...

Schachsocken-Koenige-kll

The attention to detail is incredible. I'm in awe.

(There's a grey king, too, but it's glued to the accompanying card, and I'm obviously not posting that. I appreciate it all the same!)

...okay, I'm crying. Just thinking of knitting - I love all kinds of craft, but knitting is one of the things I'm just not able to do, and I regret that fact. I'd love to be able to make stuff like this! (Note: please don't link me any "beginner-friendly" tutorials. I know how this is theoretically supposed to work! It's just that knitting offers infinite opportunities to miscount and to confuse left and right. I suspect it's the world's least-dyscalculia-friendly activity, and the one thing I've never been able to compensate for. Uni level math is easy in comparison! XD) So I'm just the tiniest bit jealous of that skill.

Needless to say, I'm super happy about having chess socks now! :D I was very surprised by that fat envelope in the mail, like, I wasn't expecting mail from doublebass at all, but... then I unpacked these. WHEEEEE! I mean... Does it get any more awesome? XD

NEVER AGAIN cold feet when playing online chess! ;)
eller: iron ball (Default)
2021-01-26 08:21 pm

Selfmade Watercolor: Blood Red

I did it again... After my last ill-advised watercolor experiment I decided to try color-making again.

This time, I was aiming for a transparent dark red with granulation effect. It even kind of worked... :D

Blood-Red-kl
eller: iron ball (Default)
2020-10-18 07:00 pm
Entry tags:

Chess: Wooden Board

Sooooo this is the "reasonable" side of the board for [personal profile] yhlee! The acrylic paste is dry and I'm doing some varnish tests on wood veneer leftovers already. :)


Holzbrett01-kl


Objectively, really bad woodworking, but I'm super happy about it! I managed to build a chessboard, YAY!!! (On the other side, there's the Butterfly Board, so it has one mostly-sane and one really weird side.) And I didn't even have to read any instructional texts for it, either! (I don't do that when I can do the trial-and-error approach instead: I mean, knowing one or two things about woodworking might have resulted in a better board, but more likely, I would have read up on that stuff, realized it's really difficult, and not built the board at all, and because a flawed board is better than no board, clearly, avoiding demotivational instructions was the way to success, here... XD) I definitely learned some things about wood veneer while making this, so, it's all good. XDDD


Holzbrett02-kl


The board runs nicely, too: I've tested it by running through some variations of the Ruy Lopez opening (purely for emotional reasons) and despite its size and its numerous crafting f*ck-ups inaccuracies, it feels almost like a tournament board. A bit low on contrast between light and dark squares for my taste, but, uh, I tend to prefer extreme contrasts, so this is probably not a problem for most players - it feels very normal, anyway.


Holzbrett03-kl


Oh, and of course, the square b4 is my absolute favorite! XDDD I managed to break a piece out of it while polishing - have I mentioned that I learned a lot while doing this thing? - and I fixed it with acrylics, and it looks almost okay now! XDDD I'm (irrationally) super proud of b4! LOL


Holzbrett-b4
eller: iron ball (Default)
2020-10-16 06:04 pm
Entry tags:

Chess: Butterfly Board

This is still the backside of the board I'm making for [personal profile] yhlee. It's glued together and almost finished now! I'm super happy with it, too! :D (Objectively, it's crappy papercrafting, but hey, chess players aren't objective about things, because objectivity is an attitude problem that loses games...)


Butterfly-Board-01-kl


As you can see, I decided on a really, really bold design. XD My boyfriend, whose artistic expertise I trust perfectly, calls it gaudy and exaggerated, but then, he doesn't play chess, so he can't actually judge board design. LOL I will admit the red border is extreme! It was, well, an entirely unreasonable decision to go through with this. The outer border is again selfmade marbled paper, this time in black-and-gold. I think it matches the cream-and-gold light squares nicely. Same style of acrylic abuse, anyway.


Butterfly-Board-02-kl


I'm calling this the Butterfly Board, because I put these tiny paper punch-outs in the corners... I figured, I'm going for "19th century representative board style" anyway, so why not add some decorations? It's already glittery, so it wasn't going to be a particularly sedate design, no matter what! Also, I vaguely remembered [personal profile] yhlee likes butterflies. The numbers and letters are handwritten because I didn't have any black stickers like that and I didn't want to use the golden ones again. (Boring! Also: ugly. I tested the effect and didn't like it.)


Butterfly-Board-03-kl


Of course, I did a bit of a sanity check! Before I varnish this (which will take at least a few days of drying before I can do that) I decided to test what the board behaves like, that is, how well (or not-well) it supports the typical eye movements that happen when evaluating a chess position. In my opinion, that's just as important as having the board look nice. And anyway [personal profile] yhlee doesn't have many boards yet so I wouldn't have given him an entirely unplayable one that's decoration-only... I'm not that mean. XD

(Yes, I was prepared to just overpaint that border if it turned out it made the board unfit for actual chess... I may be unreasonable and erratic in my choices, but I do learn from mistakes and correct them if necessary! LOL)

I used the pieces from my travel set for this: not optimal, because they're slightly too large, but I don't have pieces that exactly match the size of [personal profile] yhlee's. (Also, I think it will look much better with cream and actual black pieces rather than these wooden ones. Anyway: can't change that right now.)


Butterfly-Board-04-kl


This is a position from Adorjan - Mukhin 1973, a game that's featured in the Stean book pretty early, so, [personal profile] yhlee, you've either already seen it or you'll see it soon. XD Also, the opening is the Ruy Lopez, which I like.

Anyway: turns out that hey, this board works perfectly fine! Better than it reasonably should, actually! (But then, again: chess is not a reasonable process...) Playing through that game, the red didn't distract me at all. Rather, it... kept my gaze from running off the board?!? Which means it actually helped me focus. This is an interesting and funny effect! XD (Also: I might have to make a similar board, with some modifications obviously, for myself... LOL)

The board still has one issue, and that's some areas being glossy while others aren't, but varnish will fix that.

[personal profile] yhlee, I guess you'll have to just test if it also works for you. (No way of telling without actually using the board, unfortunately.) LOL Either way, you'll have a board with one semi-reasonable (the wooden one, which is just bad woodworking but a sane design) and one entirely unreasonable (this one) side, and I hope this will be FUN!
eller: iron ball (Default)
2020-09-25 04:10 pm
Entry tags:

Chess: Crafting Project - Part I

I needed a completely mindless side project I could do in my work breaks to clear my mind... So... I had threatened I was going to make my own chess set! What I want is a travel-sized analysis board that is magnetic and non-foldable without the annoying line in the middle. Unfortunately, despite all the chess sets on the market, this is impossible to buy. The very few "high-class" non-foldable travel boards are all non-magnetic! So...

What I have is a really crappy chess set (Amazon link).

craft01

I was really close to throwing the thing away: while the size is correct (one square is 3,5 cm - that's perfect as a side board for analysis) and the shape of the figures is perfectly fine, the board is simply horrible. (Note the really obtrusive middle line!) Also, I strongly dislike plastic figures, and even for plastic figures, the colors of these are just... NOPE.

If I, however, paint these figures... It just might work! I have acrylic colors! Also, I obtained ferro foil that magnets stick on... So I can now proceed to make my very own improvised chess set that involves first modifying the pieces into something acceptable and then making a magnetic board for them. (In that order, because it's less difficult to predict what the finished pieces will actually look like.)

Painting the pieces actually went quite fast. It was all done on the same day, and only in my work breaks, so... maybe 2h of work in total?

I started with the white pieces. Their sickly yellow color reeeeeaaaaallly annoyed me! But how to improve on that? I decided to keep the base yellowish tone and just make it less intense. Also, I wanted some texture, because otherwise, the pieces look boring.

craft04

Maybe I went a bit over the top with that... Anyway, I decided on first adding some "marble" texture with a mix of Burnt Umber and transparent acrylic paste (a technique that proved much more difficult than it looks), and after that had dried, I added an irregular, semi-transparent layer of zinc white over it. Now the pieces look like cream-colored marble... Sort of. If you squint. XD

craft02

The black pieces were even worse. I mean, there was no way I'd keep that horrible fake-wood texture! Nor that particular shade of brown. So I decided to completely overpaint them. Because the white pieces already had this fake-marble look, I decided to go with sort-of-black marble for the black pieces. And what do you do if you want black marble chess pieces?

YOU PAINT THEM PINK.

craft05

Not a joke: I knew that I'd have to stick to very thin layers of paint to keep the shape of the pieces intact. I also knew that any color layers would be transparent or semi-transparent. So if I wanted black pieces with a wine-red undertone, I couldn't use wine-red paint, because that would just result in reddish brown on that brown background. No... To end up with a real wine-red, I used a very nice stronk pinkish red, aptly called ruby. I then completely destroyed that nice red by overpainting it irregularly with a mixture of black paint and transparent acrylic paste.

craft03

I still need to varnish the pieces but I thought I'd wait at least a few days with that. I want the paint to dry not just superficially! (Also, I'll need to replace the felt protection thingies on the underside, but I think that's the thing I'll do last.) Because I'll use spray varnish anyway, it might be most efficient to just do the pieces together with the board that will also need some protestion.

The as yet nonexistent board, that is. I have all the basic things: a plywood panel, ferro foil for magnets, at least fifteen different types of glue, and all kinds of wood veneer and construction paper. I just... haven't decided on a design - or even a basic color scheme - yet. I might go for cream and wine red, just in lighter shades than the pieces?!? (And also with less... visual excitement? Maybe book linen or similar?)

Any suggestions? :D
eller: iron ball (Default)
2019-10-17 08:39 pm
Entry tags:

Dragon bracelet

No inktober today... But a local art supply shop had a sale and I stocked up on stuff for jewelery making! I haven't done this in a very long time, but oh, I had totally forgotten how much fun it is! Aaaand I made something for my colleague:

armband1w

armband1detailw

Well, technically, today's Inktober topic was supposed to be "Glass Beads", so, uh, it kind of fits anyway?!?

Beads, elastic nylon string, and a cabochon with a tiny drawing (ink pen and watercolor) of a dragon and some crystals.
eller: iron ball (Default)
2018-09-20 10:42 pm

Yora playing chess



Here, I was not only painting, but also playing with some craft materials! My friend Anke sent me those lovely die-cuts in the shape of chessmen (she knows my taste almost TOO well; I suspect she got these things more for my sake than for her own) and obviously, I had to start making something with them immediately (or as immediately as possible, anyway, with actual work distracting me). Even more obviously, the picture had to be Yora, a character from one of my stories. She's ever the chessmaster and she doesn't even have to distract her boyfriend with one of those outfits to win the game. (Though I have to say - these giant sequins make a nice bra.) I used all kinds of other craft materials (stickers, several origami papers and other craft papers, rhinestones, washi tape, ...) so the overall impression stays somewhat coherent.