Showing posts with label my pastels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label my pastels. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2009

tracking the dusties


I've spent quite a bit of time lately trying to get my pastel collection under control. I've been painting in pastel for 3 1/2 years now, and my collection has reached a size where it requires some organization. I've developed some definite likes and dislikes, and I've used up a bunch of favored sticks.

Unfortunately, I can't replace some of my favorites because the labels are peeled off and I don't know what they are! After spending hours with the Heuchroval pastel chart, trying to identify two crucial sticks from tiny remnant crumbs, I dug out my Dakota Pastel Personal Pastel Record. I received it as a gift over a year ago and it has languished in a drawer, because who has time to go through and identify every little stick?

Deadlines notwithstanding, it appears that I do. I went through my collection and recorded every stick that still wears a label. There isn't a lot of order to it--I would do one brand's section very nicely by hue and value, then find a bunch of random sticks that I'd missed and have to wedge them in any which way--but it's finished and they're all there, even the new ones that came just the other day.

My collection isn't huge, and I'm not generally wedded to particular colors; if I run out of one, I pick up another and figure out how to make it work. But there are a couple of sticks that I really wish I could replace. I've learned a lot by substituting and improvising, and I've even experimented with changing palettes mid-series, which has been hugely educational (and frustrational), but I want that bright, bright red-orange back!

Anyhow, pastellists, get Dakota's little black book. It's great.

(Now I need to come up with a method for organizing and storing--and cat-proofing--the sticks on my worktable without spending hundreds of dollars. But that's for another post--and another weekend!)

Saturday, August 12, 2006

one of my birthday presents


Someone dear to me sent me this set of pastels for my birthday. This is the Great American Brights set. The photo doesn't do them justice. They're incredible! Now I have to come up with a subject worthy of these colors...
(don't you just want to eat them sometimes?)

Sunday, March 19, 2006

about pastels (from www.KimDenise.com)



are dry sticks of pure, compressed pigment mixed with varying amounts of binder. They are anything but "pastel". Indeed, pastels can create some of the purest, most brilliant color effects available. Because the pigment is laid down pure and dry, not dissolved in a wet medium, every facet of every particle is available to reflect and refract the light. A soft pastel painting can have an unrivaled depth of jewel-like color. Its shimmer and glow can arrest a viewer from across the room. A sensual pursuit for artist and observer alike, experiencing soft pastel is a lot like falling in love.

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