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acrylics colour chart |
I had no idea how matte medium, the pen work & my specific acrylic colours would react to one another on the substrate I was using so I made a colour chart incorporating the different aspects before I even started painting. I knew that some colours were more opaque than others but didnt know how visible my my pen work would be so I included a column to show that as well. The columns are as follows:
- 1st - one coat acrylic;
- 2nd - one coat matte medium followed by one coat acrylic;
- 3rd - pen work coated by matte medium & then one coat acrylic;
- 4th - two coats acrylic.
I decided that with the colours I have it would be best to stick to an analogous colour scheme running from the reds through to the greens. However, much of my painting was a matter of trial & error & I ended up applying many coats of colour in places - either to darken or to obscure a colour. When I had finished my layers of green for example, despite my adding yellow to the blue-green, it just didn't look right.
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outside of journal with green leaves |
There was nothing for it but to try adding layers of brown - finally it looked OK. At that stage I decided I would have to define my pen work by going over it all (except for the quote) again. I'm actually rather thrilled with the result. I have a few patchy areas where I'd applied insufficient matte medium or the acrylic pooled & dried but now I know to be mindful such things in the future. My attitude to this whole project was that it had to be a learning experience not a work of perfection.
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outside of journal, after applying brown layers & redefining pen work |
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flap closed |
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flap open |
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close-up showing part of shaped edge |
Although I had a rough idea of the range of colours I was going to use on the inside I found I was again making decisions as to what to put where as I went along. At one point my husband, seeing the length of time it took me, suggested I think of the monks who in times gone by would sit for hours creating illuminated books.
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inside with flap open |
For those interested this is the text that I used
And then, from the way it is built it does not stare with newness; it is
not new in any way that is disquieting to the eye; it is neither raw nor
callow. On the contrary, it almost gives the impression of a comfortable
maturity of something like a couple of hundred years….. But it is designed and built in the thorough and honest spirit of the
good work of old days, and the body of it, so fashioned and reared, has, as it
were, taken to itself the soul of a more ancient dwelling-place. The house is
not in any way a copy of any old building, though it embodies the general
characteristics of the older structures of its own district….. the whole house, has
that quality – the most valuable to my thinking that a house or any part of it
can possess - of conducing to repose and serenity of mind. In some mysterious
way it is imbued with an expression of cheerful, kindly welcome, of restfulness
to mind and body, of abounding satisfaction to eye and brain…..
Gertrude Jekyll writing of the house she commissioned Edwin Lutyens to build for her.