Tag Archives: sheiladelgado

Pastel Practice and Fast Fabrics

Desert Bush. 4 x 5 pastel.   © Sheila Delgado 2014.

Desert Bush. 4 x 5 pastel. © Sheila Delgado 2014.

I recently completed these two small pastels. They were gifts for my parents. I am going to call them successful, because I learned from them and because the receivers liked them. Honestly though, they did not turn out like the image in my head.

I am happy with them. And I know what I can do better next time.  For this first one, I did not have a pre-cut mat, so I mounted it on a textured paper with threads and wrinkles. I know there is a name for it, just is not coming to mind.

Seascape. 5 x 7 pastel. © Sheila Delgado 2014

Seascape. 5 x 7 pastel. © Sheila Delgado 2014

The seascape was a lot of fun too. For each of these, I realized I do not have the right yellows or oranges. (My clearance set of pastels is missing sticks.) I am really happy with my water. My dark clouds look like Tootsie rolls instead of cotton candy, so yeah, more practice needed.

Close up, Seascape. 5 x 7 pastel. © Sheila Delgado 2014

Close up, Seascape. 5 x 7 pastel. © Sheila Delgado 2014

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I also completed a fabric collection for Spoonflower’s Sewing Notions contest. The challenge was to create four coordinating designs. I don’t consider these particularly strong designs, but I completed all four in a two day span. That is a first for me, and I was really happy reaching that goal. I had to keep the designs simple due to the time frame.

Chevron Pattern, needles.  © Sheila Delgado 2014. Available on Spoonflower.com

Chevron Pattern, needles. © Sheila Delgado 2014. Available on Spoonflower.com

Oh and… a computer glitch lost three of the designs, and I had to do them a second time from scratch.  I started with the needles, I knew I was going to do a chevron from the beginning. It was one of those ideas that came to me before I was even fully awake. The palette was there too.

Pin cushions. © Sheila Delgado 2014. Available on Spoonflower.com

Pin cushions. © Sheila Delgado 2014. Available on Spoonflower.com

That led to the pin cushions. I tried to make them abstract flowers. This element actually took the longest, lots of little parts in there, but due to the scale, the detail is really lost (another lesson). Still it is a useful design.

Cushion close up.

Cushion close up.

The contest was guest judged by Denyse Schmidt of Love Patchwork & Quilting Magazine. With quilting in mind, I added a bright check to the mix. (see the sampler below) I pulled colors from the pin cushions, knowing that I needed to wake up these two very subdued patterns.

Buttons.  © Sheila Delgado 2014. Available on Spoonflower.com

Buttons. © Sheila Delgado 2014. Available on Spoonflower.com

The last design pulls in the same  bright colors, and adds new shapes in a basic toss pattern.  That red packs a punch right?  The buttons were really fun to work on.

You can click on the pattern images to see a larger view, or get a glimpse of how they would look in the yard view. Each design is available individually, or as a one yard sampler. I’d love to hear what you think. You can see the fabulous winning designs here.

Sewing notions collection. © Sheila Delgado 2014. Available on Spoonflower.com

Sewing notions collection. © Sheila Delgado 2014. Available on Spoonflower.com

 

 

 

Blossoms in Blue Complete

4 x 6 postcard, watercolor, Nupastel, oil pastel, crayon.

4 x 6 postcard, watercolor, Nupastel, oil pastel, crayon.

I placed this on a shelf to look at it from a distance. I decided to up the volume, adding more white, a brighter yellow, and a brighter pink.  I added a bit of dark blue pastel which is reading almost turquoise on the scan. I also added a few more blue splatters to replace what was under the pastel work. I still think the front stem needs work, but I am calling this done.

Deadline is looming, I need to finish one or two more, and make a decision.

Enjoy your evening~

 

 

Blossoms in Blue

Postcard #1 is complete. I think. I will look at it with fresh eyes tomorrow. I did some subtractive painting, adding spots of yellow, and a light wash of white acrylic. Next I scraped away some of the white wash to show the yellow, and create some grassy texture.

mixed media, sheilascorner

Added some yellow, and a light wash of white. Scraped and scratched the wash.

The stems were already there. They were part of the first blue layers. I added the flower center, some petal detail on the smaller blooms, and scribbled in some grass. Two blue splatters look like distant flowers, and one of them even has a stem. Pure luck that.

mixed media, sheilascorner.com

Adding details.

OK, I know this is a bit blurry. I couldn’t get a decent shot, and I was anxious to see how it would scan. I need to seal it, so I experimented and used Saran wrap to cover the scanner bed. (You can see the wrinkles.)

mixed media, sheilascorner.com

I used oil pastel to add more yellow, and bits of pink and purple. I added nupastel to add more white, and some sky blue, I softened some with a Q-tip, and left some marks rough. I tried to bring back some of the white crayon marks that were in the under painting.

Maybe I will add more yellow. Or more white. White splatters?

I am not thrilled with where the two stems are meeting. I tried to bring one stem forward by making it brighter. Didn’t quite work. I need to darken the background a bit I think.

What do you think? I would value any opinions on how I can improve this. It may not be the one I send in to the Gallery, but I do really like it. On to create another…