Playing with colours and comics!
I thought some of you might like to read about my process in making diary comics with watercolours.
In the diary comix 19th-22nd May (below) I pushed further with layout than I had before, influenced by the work of David Mack. I think I threw a bit of Robert Crumb in there as well, strictly in regard to a comment he made in this documentary (well worth watching) where he reminded me of the pleasure of drawing without controlling, and of allowing yourself to be surprised by the end result. I also splashed some blue ink around, prompting me to push a little further in colour.
210mm x 297mm. 70gsm Canson Bleedproof paper. Watercolour, ink and copic markers.
My next attempt at pushing boundaries came immediately after, this time using watercolours. As my first attempt I was quite cautious and I used them here in a limited way, shy to push the possibilities of this medium. However, although watercolour was previously unexplored it felt familiar due to my experience in using ink-washes, and the end result produced some quite lovely touches; the way the paint dries, the patterns and fusions of colours it makes are greater than I could have created intentionally. I set out the next day to purchase proper watercolour paper!
210mm x 297mm. Watercolours on 110gsm Mont Marte archival paper.
Here I’m playing with the watercolours, seeing how the paint dries, playing with mixing, not attempting to form any kind of image. I learned a lot here but was playing it quite safe by not putting paint over an existing drawing.
Luckily I was able to make use of this in one of the diary comics…
23rd – 26th May. 210mm x 297mm. Watercolour, graphite pencil and ink. 270gsm Canson watercolour paper.
This lovely chap below was based my experience at the Free Comic Book Day and the technique is from in-class exercise that I talk about here. The image was developed by drawing in ink over dried watercolour contours, an informative and enjoyable exercise.
2nd May. 210mm x 297mm. Watercolour and ink. 270gsm Canson watercolour paper.
11th May. 210mm x 297mm. Copic marker and ink. 110gsm Bleedproof paper.
What a learning experience this one was. I sketched it all out and see what happens, using up the full page and making a bit of a ‘meta-page’. These were first pencilled in using blue animation pencils, loose washes of watercolours are applied over the top. That was mistake number one. Once I realised this didn’t look so great I tried erasing the blue lines once the ink had dried a little. This was mistake number two, as the paper ripped, softened by my excessive water application. Eventually (with some modification of my erasing technique) I managed to soften some of the lines to the point of bearability. My third big mistake was in heavy application of green and blue washes to the girl’s face, while the fourth mistake was in trying to make it better by layering more and more paint on top.
23rd – 26th May. 210mm x 297mm. Watercolour and ink. 270gsm Canson watercolour paper.
Of course, all of these ‘mistakes’ are actually blessings, as each one makes it clearer the next time what to do and what not to do. By happily wrestling with this for a whole day longer than I was supposed to I learned a ton about application, brush technique, and colour mixing. The learning never stops.
I hope you enjoyed this and that it gives some view into the creation of these images.








Your image links are broken. I would love to see them, so just wanted to let you know :)
EDIT: I refreshed the page, and now they show. They look really amazing, my favorite is the second illustration. Great work, hope to see more in the future :D And now I really want to try out watercolors, I only use markers and some color pencils, started out drawing a year ago. Just dreading the "learning a new medium" phase, and painting seems so difficult.
Thanks, just getting the hang of this, should be working now :)
Yeah, I refreshed and they were there. Awesome work man, upvoted :)
Painting was a real block for me too, until I finally got over myself and tried it. It is really just a matter of slapping colours down and watching them do their thing. Even kids can do it! As adults we tend to psyche ourselves out of creative things, thinking the result has to be a certain way. We lose touch with the ability to play. So get the paint out, get some on your fingers and clothes. You won't regret it.
@dcfisher this is amazing, loving your use of watercolours. Also in the last series, the expression captured the moment perfectly - that sense of ecstatic twitchy relief is brilliant.
Cheers Krystle, I always try to capture the little things. Cool of you to point that out :)
Wow amazing use of watercolors!
Thank you! The good thing with watercolour is, no matter what you do with it the result is always surprising, and beautiful.
Nice @dcfisher
Shot you an Upvote :)
Upvoted
Upvoted
Nice @dcfisher
Shot you an Upvote :)