Tag Archives: gilding

I finished the illuminated manuscript I talked about in my first blog post, and I’m pretty happy how it turned out. It’s not perfect, but I followed the plan I outlined in that first post, and it looks decent. The paper was a little buckled from the laser printer, so I ended up having it dry-mounted so I could get a better picture of it. Here’s the final version: I’m going to talk a little about the process here. I also forgot to mention the font that I used, an Arabic-style English font called Bulan Rajab that I found online here. I love how this turned out. There were quite a few fonts available, but this was very readable and visually appealing. As far as decoration goes, I’m not sure how real illuminators worked, but I decided to put the gold and silver foil (it was the artificial stuff) down…

Read more

I’m taking Life Drawing II this half-semester term, with III coming in late August (and one more to go after that). This has been interesting, this drawing naked people thing. My instructor at Squak Art Studio in Issaquah, WA tells me that after a while, it stops feeling weird and you just see shapes. I think I’m almost there when drawing women, but not quite with men. Part of what stops me is fascination with how they could just stand there naked in front of all these people. I’m not actually sure if these models are, because I’m obviously watching videos of them and I don’t know if there are students in there when they’re recording (though they actually run the length of time we’re supposed to work, so we have to deal with a naturally-moving model).  Anyway, to liven things up, the weekly exercises are sometimes a little different.…

Read more

For my first real post, I thought I’d talk about a project I’m working on for a nonwestern art history class. This one has a studio component as part of the final research paper. For the research paper, we had to pick a nonwestern country/culture and one art medium, and discuss that. I have always loved Islamic art, with its many intricate patterns and designs. I wrote a paper a couple terms ago about a Pictish sarcophagus and compared/contrasted it to the façade of an early Islamic palace called Mshatta from about the same time (~700-ish C.E.). The façade had an intricate vegetal pattern with fantastical animals all over it. It was really cool. Although a lot of what we think of in regards to Islamic art is actually architecture, or at least building related (mosaics inside mosques and so on), but they also have a rich tradition of creating…

Read more

3/3