April Project: Day 29

I was, unfortunately, not able to do my blog post yesterday because the internet at our new place was not yet up and running. It was such a busy day, so I posted to Instagram and my facebook page via my phone, since I still had 3G on my phone. So, here is what I posted for day 29. It is a little pencil sketch of a coatimundi, an animal I was only recently made aware of. I think they are related to raccoons, but they have these adorably long snouts. I decided a profile portrait would capture that best. :)

I promised to share more colorful and playful things as soon as I was able. It is another full day of moving, though, but I will see what I can do.

April Project: Day 26

Hello! Happy Sunday! And happy birthday to my wonderful husband and bestest friend, Chris. Today I've been baking and cooking for Chris, but I put aside a little time to make a little painting. Here it is. I got a little frustrated part way through, but now I think it looks better. I'm realizing just now that there are some things I will want to change and adjust at another time, but for now, here is what I did today.

I'll keep working on my summer piece and I'll share it and the process when it is finished. :)

April Project: Day 25

Hello and Happy Saturday! Today I had so much fun painting wild flowers and weeds on this summer piece. This is as far as I got today. Hope you like it!

I'm simultaneously excited and terrified about painting the ship. We'll see how that goes!

April Project: Day 23

Happy first day of Summer in Iceland! Today is a holiday here, and so far the weather has really been cooperating! Chris and I just went for a run along the ocean and the sun was shining bright. We're not sure if it is because today is a holiday or because the weather is nice, but we were greeted by a few strangers on our run, and someone even smiled at us. It was likely a smile in response to my smile, but that is far better than the annoyed or puzzled looks I normally receive.

Because it is Iceland's first day of summer, I wanted to illustrate a phrase with the word summer in it. And what came to mind is a song I love by Kings of Convenience, a Norwegian duo that sings music that I usually describe as doodle-ie-doo music. It is super pleasant to listen to, and at times makes me think of some soft Simon & Garfunkel songs. The song is called Gold In The Air Of Summer. The video below is a bit shaky, but the song is good. The album is called Riot on an Empty Street. I highly recommend it.

These are the song lyrics...

Without giving anything away,
I can say it's by the sea.
It's a house that used to be the home of a friend of mine.
Without giving anything away,
you'll find ships inside of bottles,
and the garden's overgrown,
the house is white but the paint is coming of.

I didn't know if you wanted to,
when I came to pick you up.
But you didn't even hesitate,
and now you and me are on our way.
I think I've brought everything we need,
so don't look back,
don't think of the other places you should have been
it's a good thing that you came along with me.

Gold in the air of summer,
you'll shine like gold in the air of summer.

So I started on a larger project than I could possibly finish today, but I'll continue to work on the next few days, I'm thinking. Here is as far as I got today.

My idea is that this phrase will be framed by flowers and plants from the overgrown garden that the song lyrics talk about. I love ships, bottles, ships in bottles, overgrown gardens, flowers, gold, summer, cork, ocean, and things that shine... so I think this will be a fun project. Stay tuned for more! :) And have a great day!

April Project: Day 18

Hello, lovely friends! Today I had a very full day of sight-seeing and hiking. I came home late and gave myself a short amount of time (one hour) to put some plants into those cups. I consider them a work in progress, but this was as far as I got today. I hope you enjoy them!

I will have a bit more time tomorrow, so perhaps I'll do something completely different? Who knows. But I'll be sure to be back tomorrow to share whatever I end up creating! :)

April Project: Day 6

So, yesterday I had fun painting and decorating a variety of vases and vessels. Today I played around with photoshop, changing colors and making various adjustments. Here are some of the resulting variations. Click on any image below to page through these variations on a theme. Which do you like best?

Tomorrow I think I will start fresh with something new. I don't yet know what, but it will be fun!

April Project: Day 5

After yesterdays painted portrait, I decided to loosen up and start painting without a plan. The result? This.

I must really love vases and vessels and teapots and footed bowls because those were the shapes I started to paint. I nested them into the negative spaces between the others, and the resulting painting looks like it wants to be a pattern.

I scanned the painting and added rough white linework digitally. This is how it turned out.

This Easter I painted and decorated vessels, not eggs. It was really fun to play and create without a plan. :) I hope you have a great day and I'll be back tomorrow to play and share more art with you. Perhaps I'll even branch out into different color palettes?

April Project: Day 4

Hello again! Happy Saturday! Because I posted something black and white for the past two days, I thought I would create something in color today. I wanted to paint something for my friends, Petra and Gunnar. It was Petra's birthday last weekend, so I wanted to make something to belatedly mark the occasion. I looked for a photo of them and then created a little painted portrait in gouache, and I made the background in Petra's favorite color, too. 

I know this is not the most playful, loose, or experimental piece, so I'll return to that playfulness tomorrow. It felt good, though, to create a piece from sketch to final in a relatively short period of time. Of course, in this relatively short period of time I went through every possible feeling about my work. At first I am either nervous or excited, but partway through working on a project I am certain everything I have done is terrible and I won't be able to do it. Then I'll think I am terrible and won't be able to do it. I will either step away for a time or I'll persist, cursing under my breath and audibly sighing until once again I like what I see in front of me, relieved. If you are an artist, I know you understand this pattern well, whether or not it matches yours. Loosening up and playing is actually a challenge, as funny as that sounds. It is a privilege, of course, but it is also a challenge. And this month long project is a great way for me to strengthen my playfulness and lighten the heavy burdens of high expectations I place upon myself before I ever begin.

Have a great day and a wonderful weekend, and check back to see what kind of playful mess I might unapologetically make tomorrow. :)

April Project: Day 3

I guess I really must have enjoyed drawing potted plants, because here I am, day three of my playful daily art posting project, still doodling potted plants! What can I say? I enjoy it.

Just for fun, I put yesterdays drawing together with todays drawing. I like it. I could just keep going and going, but to keep being playful this month, I will have to switch mediums and see what new things I can come up with, too.

Perhaps I will do something with colors tomorrow? I've really enjoyed the simplicity of pen and paper, though. I made me feel like I could just play and doodle without thinking too much. Well, have a great weekend and if you check back tomorrow, there will be something new for you to see! Don't know what, but something. I'm really enjoying this! See you soon!

April Project: Day 2

Hello! Day Two of this fun daily challenge! I found myself doodling happily at the nearby cafe this morning, and the resulting drawing is my playful piece for today. Here in Iceland, I don't own any plants, but in my previous life I surrounded myself with potted plants and hanging plants. I love plants, but for some reason, we have never purchased a plant here. Perhaps my drawing shows just how much I love and miss my plants in Minnesota, who are being cared for by many different friends and family members. And maybe it is about time we purchase a plant or two here, as well.

Feel free to click the image to see a larger version. Enjoy, and see you tomorrow! :)

Happy Galentine's Day

For those of you familiar with the show, I probably don't need to explain that I am a big Parks & Recreation fan. For those of you who aren't familiar with the show, the main character in the show, Leslie Knope, creates a holiday the day before Valentine's Day called Galentine's Day. It is a day for ladies to celebrate ladies. I had some fun the past couple days coming up with these Galentine's Day card designs, and I'm giving them to you for free (Creative Commons license information below). Ladies, let's celebrate the ladies in our lives; the poetic, noble land-mermaids that support us through thick and thin! Click on the links below the images to download printable versions! :)

Here are some printable Waffle Cards for you!

Here are some Waffle Cards that say Happy Galentine's Day on them. :)

So, Ladies! Print and sign and give some love to your lady friends this Friday. And maybe have some waffles, too.

Cheers!

Kirsten

Fairies, Flowers, and Lots of Cats

For the past few days I've been working on some new patterns, so I thought I'd share them with you. Here are a few that I especially like. I've been on a garden fairy kick lately. Could it be the darkness of winter in Iceland, or the lack of flowers in my life? Maybe. I've just had so much fun making these repeating patterns. Surely there has got to be a use for these somewhere out there!

Before my garden fairies, I did some digital illustrations based on my cat, Eyja. She finds the cutest poses as she naps and plays and wants her belly rubbed, so I decided to make a repeating pattern of her poses. Here is how that turned out.

And because I felt like it, I made some variations and matching plaids. Plaids are awesome, and so are cats, so I thought if I combined them into matching sets, that would be super awesome! 

Well, I hope you have a great rest of your week! Cheers!

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Treasure Hunt in Granada

One of the highlights of this past year was illustrating the cover of a book in Icelandic by Ólafur Páll Jónsson. It is a middle-grade/young adult book about his daughter's experience when they lived in Granada, Spain when he was on sabbatical. The title of the book means Treasure Hunt in Granada, and with the cover I tried to evoke a feeling of adventure and mystery, while also showing off the charming style and distinctive mosaic pathways of Granada.

I met with the author and his friend, Einar, for the first time on a particularly blustery and rainy Monday here in Reykjavik. I had taken my umbrella with me, which only shortly after leaving the apartment I realized was a terrible idea. My umbrella, though adorable, could not help shield me from the wind and rain, but it could propel me in any direction like a Mary Poppins gone wrong. I closed it and carried it anyway, not wanting to turn back and be in this weather any longer than I had to. I had no idea what the author looked like, so I wondered how I would find him and how he would find me. We were meeting around lunchtime at the University of Iceland's cafeteria, which as you can imagine is a busy time of day, packed with people, many of whom look like nordic relatives of mine. I found myself a seat at a table, and after only a few moments, a man approached and said, "You must be Kirsten. I'm Ólafur." I was amazed. How did he know? "I saw your umbrella and I knew you couldn't be from Iceland." Ha, ha, ha! Yes, a rookie mistake really helped me stand out.

As we talked about the project, I took notes and got many ideas that I was excited to sketch. Within a couple days, I had send multiple thumbnail concept sketches for cover ideas.

The chosen sketch for the cover design was the first one, though they really liked them all, and the fourth sketch was a close second choice. Those two were also my favorite sketches, and I agreed wholeheartedly with their decision.

<tangent> Different mediums make me create things differently. That sounds like an obvious point, but I mean that the medium dictates how I create, not just what the finished product will look like. And though I like my usual pen and ink with watercolor, I feel that medium makes me tighten up and the final pieces often lose a little bit of the life and character that the loose sketches had. I really like my sketches, and the rough quality and spontaneity in them. Likewise, lately I have found that I feel much freer when I'm working digitally. I can more easily stay loose and make bold marks without fear. This medium is often so true to my sketching esthetic that I am super happy with the perfectly imperfect result. </tangent>

Because I liked the energy and loose quality of the sketch, I decided to do something I had not done before on a project this big. I decided I would use graphite instead of my usual ink to do my linework, and I would color this illustration digitally.

I enlarged the thumbnail sketch and added some more detail.

Then I decided to do some color studies, digitally of course.

Then I created my final "sketch," which would be the drawing I would use as my final linework.

Then I adjusted levels and saturation and started to add color. Here is what the process was like.

Since many of you are unlikely to have a copy of this book in hand, here are some details that I really like. Click on any of the squares below to page through them.

I was thrilled when I got to hold my sample printed copy! Now, if only I could wrap my head around Icelandic! I have considered painstakingly going through this book with a dictionary. I am already a slow reader as it is, so I would hate to think how long that would take me! Well, I hope those who can read it enjoy it.

I hope you enjoyed this look into the process of putting this book cover together. Cheers!

Time for Ornaments

I decided to enter another competition, and this time it is for wrapping paper. With the season of gift giving and wrapping just around the corner, it was fun to work on. Right now in Reykjavik, the city is preparing for Christmas and putting up the garland and lights along the main street. I love how cosy this city gets. I'll share photos when it's up and ready for me to photograph.

So, the theme this time was ornaments, and I decided to go eclectic and crafty, with a rougher watercolor paper texture and a hand-done look. I had a very hard time deciding what color to have the background be. Perhaps you could help me decide? I like the brown, but I thought some other colors looked good, too.

Dia de los Muertos

I just decided, on a whim, to enter this week's fabric design contest at Spoonflower, a cool site where artists can upload designs and people can purchase those designs as different types of fabric, wallpaper, or gift wrap! Friends of mine have competed in these weekly competitions before, and I check in now and again and vote for my favorites, too. The topic for this week's competition was Calaveras, the sugar skulls made for the Day of the Dead in Mexico. I spent a few hours coming up with my design, and here it is. I believe voting opens tomorrow and ends on October 29th, so if you want to pop on over and vote for me, that would be swell!

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Update: I was in the TOP TEN!!!! Hooray! So my pattern is on the website in the winner's circle, and also my design is now for sale as fabric! Check out my Spoonflower shop! Thanks to everyone who voted for me!!!! :)

Sloths in Love

I was thrilled when some of my friends in Iceland commissioned this piece for Kika and Martin, an adorable couple getting married in Germany. They had come to a print sale I participated in and had seen my painting of a sloth hanging from a branch. They loved the sloth and they thought of Kika when they saw it, and really thought she would love it. My friends asked if I could create a piece with two sloths, loosely based on the single sloth. I loved the idea and ran with it. This is what the piece with the single sloth looked like.

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I am really pleased with how the final turned out. And, my friends were kind enough to give me permission to make the artwork available for sale as prints and products. If you are interested in having this piece customized for a special couple you know, please contact me. I would love to share the love of this piece with other couples by hand-lettering new names beneath the piece. And though it will be a print, it can be one of a kind and personalized.

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Next I am hoping someone wants a piece with a sloth couple and a baby sloth. Wouldn't that be adorable? And then, perhaps a mama and baby sloth. Hmm... The possibiities are endless! :)