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I know a couple members are learning this script. Beautiful resource!Some nice alphabets here. Thanks for posting.
German Archive Current Script
Go to Page 8.
What a compliment, @AnasaziWrites - I think you really like the way these inks break to make sky-scapes (kind of like with Ghost). You should give it a try - it's not hard to do: start with quality water color paper, wet it down on both sides, get some puddling on the front side, and then brush some ink on in concentration and let it bleed out. When it's "damp-dry" you can dab on more ink to make those trees you liked from the Dusted Truffle picture.@K-2
21. Cosy Up (standard) - Rosy red, evenly shading down to blushing pink. Good line control for broad edge and pointed pen, but a little difficult to draw with. Sharp white reaction to bleach.You certainly have a multitalented family. Good action shot. Other hockey players in the family? These days, every goalie in the NHL wears a mask, but that wasn't always so, as you possibly recall. "Jake the Snake" was (one of) the first. Such a good idea. Probably saves a lot of faces/teeth.
The drawing shows my youngest a few years back, cozying up to the post. The mid-tone pink is one of his favorite colors, and the bright-red in saturation is the color of the first hat he ever knitted, taking a cue from the legendary goalie and dedicated knitter, Jacques Plante. So there's your "cosy" two ways.
The "Arctic Blast" drawing celebrates the John Beargrease Dog Sled Marathon. At 400 miles, it's the longest dog sled race in the lower 48 and a qualifier for the Iditarod. The race starts on the last Sunday of January at Billy's Bar, just up the street from us here in Duluth, then runs along the North Shore of Lake Superior, through the Sawtooth Mountains, and finishes at Grand Portage, up by the Canadian border - it's named after John Beargrease (Makwabimidem in Anishinaabe), a winter mail carrier up in these parts who ran his postal route in a dog sled during the late 19th century. The starting festivities are always a blast with the cutest puppy contest, the ice sculptures, day drinking at Billy's, and a community that enjoys the winter.This drawing one of my favorites in the series. Great snow, aurora borealis? Even feels chilly, @K-2
19. Silent Night (standard) - a dark, heavily saturated indigo blue-black ink with gorgeous chromatography, bleeding out violet, cyan, and smokey grey, with a clean white reaction to bleach. Nice line control for broad edge and pointed pen. Some hints of a dark red-black sheen in the most heavily saturated spots.Portraits are, to me, the hardest thing to draw. Very well done. How do you come up with your subjects for these drawings, @K-2 ? Always topical.
A perfect drawing for this ink. Beautiful, @K-2
The drawing depicts the Erechtheion - the Temple to Athene in the Athens Acropolis, with its sacred olive tree, said to be the spot where the goddess Athene herself planted the first olive tree.
I'm back! And while I will still be somewhat pokey about posting, I'll keep going until the end!
Very nice drawing--so peaceful.
15. Pick Me Up (scent & sheen) - smells (sort of) like coffee! A rich, saturated, warm dark brown with green sheen, bleeding out a gorgeous array of cocoas, salmons and pinks, with mint green haloing in the chromatography. A white-gold reaction to bleach, decent hairlines on the pointed pen script, and good definition on the broad-edge scripts.
What a lovely ink to draw with! Check out the tonal variation and chromatography here! Despite having a brown base, it is not one of the "boring inks". I'm smitten! In consideration of the coffee themed/colored/scented ink, I did a drawing of the Kona coast - where my favorite coffee comes from. My aunt & uncle lived on the Hilo side of the Big Island, and it was always a special treat to get 100% pure Kona coffee when we visited them.
@Estefa - I have a German colleague who is looking at documents in Sütterlin for her work in music history. She's not familiar with the script, and the writer was a native English speaker who was living in Germany, writing in German, so there are lots of errors in the German text. Maybe I can refer her to you?Yep, still here, and following your wonderful drawings.
@Aries M @AnasaziWrites - and to anyone else still following along... Thank you for being patient with me!
16. Serendipity (shimmer & sheen) - a dark teal (teal! @Erica McPhee ), saturated enough to make shading a bit difficult, with some very slight hints of chromatography, bleeding out pale blue and pigeon grey. Red sheen and rose gold shimmer! white-gold reaction to bleach! steady line control with broad edge and pointed pen scripts! What's not to like?
[cw: pedantry] @Zivio
The drawing honors the etymology of "Serendipity" which first enters the English lexicon in 1754, coined by Horace Walpole in a letter to Horace Mann, as a reference to a Persian fairy tale known in English as "The Three Princes of Serendip" (an English version was published in 1722) whose heroes "were always making discoveries, by accidents and sagacity, of things they were not in quest of" [Walpole]. Serendip, (also Serendib), attested by 1708 in English, was an old name for Ceylon, now Sri Lanka, from Arabic Sarandib, from Sanskrit Simhaladvipa "Dwelling-Place-of-Lions Island." /pedantry
So this is a picture of Danuka Ariyawansa, an award winning Kandyan dancer (a symbol of Sri Lankan heritage) from Sri Lanka
One of my daughters (it was actually her husband’s idea…bless his heart) gave me an engraver for Christmas!!… and my youngest daughter is getting married this fall!…so I think I have too many goals to count! LOL!That's very interesting. At the Iampeth convention this summer, I tried one of Kestrel's engravers (inkmethis.com) and was thinking this past week I might get one. Which one did you get?
Anyone setting some new year’s calligraphy goals? Mine is to continue working on Copperplate and Spencerian and do more off-hand flourishing.Specifically, I would like to work more on composition and creating finished pieces.