So I'm really not trying to sound cliched here but I think that I drew this on a Fall day. I don't know..... the leaves, wind, and colors at the time made me feel like drawing a red riding hood type of person taking a fall afternoon stroll. I'm not sure where it is at the moment but I think that it was around the same time that I drew a tree with a bunch of crayon pastels that looked a tiny bit like the tree in the background. The drawing spanned multiple loose leaf papers and made for some really nice wall art. I'll post it on this blog if I find it again.
And to mix things up here is a painting of Miffy that I did one or two years ago (I think). I always liked how cute and simple the drawings in those books were, and just felt like making a larger version for myself to hang up by the crafting corner of my place. Nowadays if I want to paint I'll buy a cork board at a thrift store really cheap (up to this point I think that the most I've ever had to pay was two dollars) and just paint over that. It's perfect because once you're done you can hang it up and don't have to worry about framing it. A much cheaper option to painting than the traditional canvas route.
Another pencil drawing. It was around the same time that I was producing the other pencil drawings that I was trying to get better at drawing people. For this one I chose as my subject one of my most favorite flappers: Louise Brooks. She also inspired the dolls that I made and posted on the blog some time ago. I haven't committed to the same amount of practice that I had those years ago lately but from what I remember the most challenging thing for me was in balancing the facial features. Drawing individual components of the face are not hard: I can do eyes, noses, lips just fine. It's balancing them out that's difficult. Most of the time I space things out too closely together.
Those viewers who checked out my last blog post will have seen lots of yellow, red, black and orange lines and rectangles. Those were illustrations I created through Paint to make cleaner more polished and printable versions of the original artwork they were based off of (basically crayon colored squares on graphing paper). This one obviously follows a different color scheme and pattern than those (I was thinking of water when making this one). I would love to turn this into a painting and/or a quilt. Right below this is another example of my crayons on graphing paper art. :-)
So yeah.... that's all for now folks! ;-D