Hmm... I wonder .... (Excuse me, for I must go experiment). Edit: it didn't work
This is a great start Lingon!
It's really cool to see this process, I never knew you could do watercolours on canvas. It's the canvas raw or treated with gesso? In the close up it looks like it's behaving as it would on paper.
It's looking nice...and like it's lots of fun to make. Hey, does all of that salt mean your land has large salt deposits? I think my country could use some of that. And I put a large grasslands area on our border that is filled with large hairy cows.
https://www.cartographersguild.com/a...p?albumid=4718
My CC3+ Symbols https://cartographersguild.com/album.php?albumid=5194
My deviantart profile: https://crawfordcartography.deviantart.com/
Nice start and great to see your processin action Lingon!
I tend to be impatient too, hehe. The trick is to have loads of active projects at the same time, so you can take something else while waiting And thanks for the name suggestions! Some of those stray dangerously close to Lingerieland I was planning to go with something completely unrelated to my username, but you gave me some ideas there.
Ah, my bad, used "canvas" figuratively, like digital artists tend to call the empty work file a "canvas", but that was not very clear, haha. Watercolors need paper. Or wood, that works too
Sorry! See above And thanks!
Yes, totally, there's a lot of salt in the rock in this area! In fact, in the winters when the herds wander the mountainsides, the beasts like to lick the saline stones, which is why the winter cheese has a much more pronounced saltiness, preferred by many southern cheese merchants. And your cows better stay on your side of the fence! (shall we build a Great Fence?)
Thanks!
So… the masking pen didn't work… I did a test piece and it was fine, but on the real map it took so much rubbing to remove that the paint started smearing So I just scanned it and removed it in PS instead. On the bright side, that led me add much thinner branches than I could have done with the pen, as it has a quite big tip and doesn't seem pressure sensitive at all. Also stippled in some forests with a sponge before scanning, and painted mountains. Don't know if I actually invented the technique but I haven't read about it anywhere; to highlight the mountains I use my airbrush and spray clean water very close to the paper, this reactivates the paint ant pushes the pigment away. Guess there's not a lot of airbrushers here, but just in case someone finds it interesting Oh, and painted some mammoth herders because there was empty space
26 wip4.jpg
Wow that looks great! Wonderful effects.
That is a thing of beauty already Lingon
That's an interesting technique for the highlights. I've not heard of anyone doing that either. Very clever.
I love watercolor. Such a subtle medium, yet so powerful.
I'm a novice with it but have the intention to work at it more, though seldom the time.
Artstation - | - Buy Me a Kofi
Beautiful!
Sorry about the pen not working as hoped/smeared paint... that's why I generally prefer acrylic inks, which are permanent when dry... but, of course, that also means I can't use such clever techniques with an airbrush to make mountains. And they act as a permanent adhesive between paper and little salt crystals, haha.
Don't forget the WIP tag.
Oh, this is looking absolutely amazing Lingon. Can't wait too see what comes next!
Thanks guys! Yeah, different paint types have different advantages I guess, wish there was one that let you do everything but until someone invents that, the drawbacks of each type has their charm… And thanks for reminding me about the tag, Chashio.
Here's an update with some labels. It took some time to find a font that I felt matched the painting, but I think I've settled for this one called Waiting for the Sunrise. It's a bit hard to read at small size, though. Also, my lands have a name!
### Latest WIP ###
26 wip5.jpg