sruble ([info]sruble) wrote,
@ 2009-01-05 22:33:00
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Current mood: artistic
Entry tags:art day, art supplies, art tips

Art Day: Art Tips - Buying and Trying New Art Supplies
Happy 2009!

Art Day January Schedule:
1/5 - art tips - buying and trying new art supplies
1/12 - art tips - pen and ink
1/19 - art tips – ink washes and color
1/26 – illustrator Katherine Zecca

Note: Art Day features will be posted Monday evenings instead of mornings for 2009 :)

Art Tips is a new Art Day feature for the new year! Art Tips will feature tips on topics such as: art supplies, techniques, mediums, and portfolios that will hopefully be useful for new artists and established artists. I’ll post a few tips each time, and some topics may be repeated if there’s more to share.

Today’s Art Tips is on trying new art supplies.

* New Artists: It’s good to try a wide range of mediums when you are just starting out, so you’ll know what you’re good at. It might be something you never tried before.

* Established Artists: Trying a new medium, a new brand, or a new type of paintbrush can shake things up in your art. It could be enough to take you in a new direction, or just breathe some new life into your old style.

I thought it might be useful to other artists to talk about trying new mediums or art brands and buying new art supplies. I always want to try new art supplies. Going to the art store is like going to the candy store for me. I want to try one of everything. Since I haven’t won the lottery (that I know of), I’ve got to be a bit more selective than running through the store screaming, “Mine! Mine! Mine!” or grabbing items off the shelves and throwing them into the cart like it’s a shopping spree, and the first one back to the counter with a full cart wins!

So, here are my tips for buying something I want to try but don’t know if I’ll like:

1. Compare prices before you buy. Dick Blick is a great online and retail store. I’ve also shopped at Pearl Paint, Utrecht, Daniel Smith, Cheap Joes Art Supplies, and Michaels.

2. Some stores have coupons, which are good for buying things you might not have bought at full price.

3. Sets can provide a larger range of colors for a smaller price than purchasing each tube of paint or pencil separately.

4. Don’t buy the cheapest thing they have available at Target, Walmart, or Kmart. Art supplies at super low price points (usually made for children) don’t use the same pigments and materials as high quality art supplies. You won’t get the same results and might be frustrated with what you create.

5. Do try the student grade art supplies from the manufacturers of high quality supplies. These are well made and will give you a good feel for the medium. You may never want or need to move up to the professional grade supplies, or you might want to. If you look at the packaging and the website, you should be able to find out what the difference between the student grade and professional grade materials is.

6. Try different surfaces to paint and draw on. If you’ve always used Bristol, try drawing on parchment or rice paper, or if you’ve only painted on canvas, try painting on paper, etc.

7. Once you get your new art supplies and paper home, play with it like you were a little kid. Doodle, paint with your fingers or a sponge, draw something fun then paint outside the lines when you color it in. Create something fun, new, different, wild, or insane. Play.

8. After you’ve played for a while, try to draw or paint like you usually do, but with the new supplies. See what happens.

I hope you all have a happy accident that turns into a new portfolio piece or a new style!

p.s. If you have any tips for trying new art supplies, feel free to share them in the comments section. Thanks!

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[info]annamlewis
2009-01-06 05:24 am UTC (link)
Hey, great new topic and post.

I really like going into Hobby Lobby or JoAnn's with a 40%off coupon and buying an expensive tube of oil paint. Is that weird?

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[info]sruble
2009-01-06 04:01 pm UTC (link)
Not weird at all! I had a couple of 50% off coupons for Michaels while we were gone, and I made DH go with me to get art supplies :)

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[info]d_michiko_f
2009-01-06 03:57 pm UTC (link)
For me, it's all about the shopping! ;) I promised myself that I'd start drawing again (try). Watching my daughter draw over the holidays was inspirational, plus a good friend who is a talented artist encouraged me to just draw ONE thing before the end of 2008. Never did it. But now I'm ready. And the thing that has me most excited? Buying supplies! LOL All I need/want is a nice sketch book (cuz who can resist paper products?) and a good pencil or two (suggestions?) and one of those fabulous gummy erasers I used to love to use back in my high school art class. Thanks for a timely post!

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[info]sruble
2009-01-06 04:12 pm UTC (link)
I love shopping for art supplies (and lots of other things) too and I can't resist paper products either! I used to get really great art pencils, and I still sometimes too (there's a company that makes a cool shaped pencil with little black grippy dots that are really fun). I get medium or hard leads. I don't like the really soft ones for regular drawing. Stores usually have paper that you can try out the pencils on if they are pre-sharpened. If not, you just have to take a chance.

Lately though, I find myself using pencils that don't need to be sharpened. Zebra has a great mechanical pencil. I also like the pencils where there are several little leads encased in plastic, so when one is done, you just pull it off and put it in the end and a new, sharp lead pops out.

Have fun shopping and drawing!

p.s. Just checked my pencils.
* The Zebra ones are called Cadoozles, with 0.7mm leads and cool cartoony images on them.
* The gripy pencils are made by Faber-Castell and are called GRIP 2001. I have a couple of them, with different lead softness. They are awesome, even if I do have to sharpen them.

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[info]d_michiko_f
2009-01-06 04:18 pm UTC (link)
Ooh thank you! C prefers using mechanical pencils. I was resistant to that - but maybe it's that I'm being old fashioned. Plus who wants to keep sharpening a pencil? Hmmm. I'll check out both kinds!

Thanks!

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[info]sruble
2009-01-06 04:43 pm UTC (link)
Let me know what you end up with and if you like it (I hope you do).

BTW, I was resistant to mechanical pencils too, but when I travel or just go out and about, I need something I don't have to sharpen. I ended up with the Zebra pencils because I like their pens, and because they are cool looking ;) I think I like them because they are a thicker lead than regular mechanical pencils.

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