Sunday, December 13, 2015

December Paper Doll -- Mrs Claus, Outfit 6

Next in my Renaissance pair is Mrs Claus.  Like I mentioned yesterday, I didn't really want just a bunch of red and green and call it done.  One of the things I love about these Renaissance dolls is the color scheme.  I wanted rich gold tones and earthier reds & greens. I've been very aware of color schemes as I've shopped this holiday season and it's nice to see a move away from just red and green.

I'm not going to pretend that either of my Renaissance outfits are in any way historically accurate.  The necklace was created with a gemstone Illustrator brush I developed ages ago.  That's got to be the thing I love most about Illustrator is the ability to use and reuse things as needed.

The ruff was hand-drawn specifically for the Renaissance dolls.  I picked up a stylus and drew directly on my screen so yes, I'm calling it hand-drawn.  I find the lines between "traditional" and digital media have really blurred for me.  If I draw it with a pencil and paper is it any more hand-drawn than if I use a stylus on a screen? Or a stick in the sand at the beach? Or any other way of making marks?  I don't think so, anyway.

Tomorrow's set is going to be a completely different them.  My husband laughed when I showed him the next set.  A good laugh, not something malicious, so there's that.  Check in tomorrow.

If you're looking for the dolls, you can grab them here.

5 comments:

  1. lovely! i really like the rich earthy tones too. that gold is so sumptuous.

    it's interesting how digital and traditional art are really overlapping. i review comic books and i used to be able to tell the difference without hesitation, but digital art has really gotten sophisticated and i'm starting to be fooled more often. i can't decide whether that's a good thing, honestly. i'm such a luddite in some ways.

    : D

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    1. The colors really worked for me, too. Rachel has mentioned that she uses Colour Lovers & I do when I remember.

      When I was first exposed to digital art, I was in high school and the technology was just starting to develop. My art teacher really pushed for us to try everything, to develop a proficiency in several media, including digital. I didn't like digital art then but ten years later, I studied it and loved it.

      Like any art form, tools and training are important. And practice. I learned watercolor painting, oil painting, dry media (pencil, charcoal, colored pencil, and pastels), took several life drawing classes, and draw every day. All of that was long before I ever picked up a stylus. My traditional art training has improved my digital abilities, and I'm finding that my digital abilities are also helping my traditional art.

      So long story short: good training (even if it's informal or self study) and lots of practice matter to me, not the media an artist uses. Good art is good art.

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    2. i agree: good art is good art. as a self-taught lazy doodler, i'm just amazed at all the creativity and beauty people still manage to put into the world, regardless of how they do it.

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  2. Am I allowed to have favorites? If I am, this might be my favorite so far. I love the patterns and the colors are so rich.

    I do use ColorLouvers, a lot. I just tend to enjoy playing with color schemes. Some of them (most of them actually) I have no idea what or if they are going to become paper doll sets.

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    1. You are totally allowed to have favorites. This one ranks high on my list of favorites, too, and I have the advantage of seeing the whole series.

      I have a ColourLovers account I pretty much never use. I tend to go on there and use other people's color schemes. That's what I did here. Lots of great ideas there.

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