Category Archives: Adult Color Books

37 Creation Designs with Scripture Focus – printed on one side of the page

Color God’s Creation: An Adult Coloring Book for Your Soul (Color the Bible)

By: Caroline Simas

Rating: 5 of 5

This is a lovely Christian coloring book by artist Caroline Simas. The theme of the book is God’s creative power. The scripture verses remind us about the inherent goodness of what He created and our role in appreciating it and taking care of it. The verses are taken from both the Old and New Testaments but the primary focus is on the Old Testament. The original, hand-drawn designs show lovely flowers, animals, including birds and fish, the earth, and even the stars.

The artist, Caroline Simas, is known for her brand, Multiple Blessings, and her work is well known in home decor and the gift industry. Her primary work is done in watercolors, gouache, mixed media, abstract and pen and ink. Based on the thickness of the lines, the designs in this book are line drawings that appear to have been done with a mixture of both regular ink as well as markers.

The translations used in this coloring book are: Holy Bible New International Version (NIV), ESV Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version), New American Standard Bible, and the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible.

I chose my first three projects based mostly on the verses. I enjoyed coloring the designs but I really needed to think about the words and what they meant to me. It was fun to color as I meditated on the glory of creation. In a very slight way, I got a feeling of the creative spirit at the same time.

This is what I found while coloring in this book:

37 Scripture Based Creation oriented designs

Designs are printed on one side of the page

Paper is medium weight, white, smooth and perforated

Glue Bound

Alcohol and water-based markers bleed/spot through on this paper

Gel pens and India ink pens leave shadows on the back of the page

Coloring pencils also leave a slight shadow and the the hard lead pencils dent the page of the page. I found that colored pencils went on well and layered and blended easily.

I recommend a blotter page below your working page to keep ink and/or dents from marring the page below.

This is a series of Christian coloring books that I really appreciate. The designs are all really nice but the focus is on the Scripture. I really enjoy coloring in these books and have given them as gifts as well.

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56 Abstract Organic style Designs in somewhat Kaleidoscope fashion large designs printed on one side of page

Magic Scope: Coloring Book

By: Irina Vinnik

Rating: 5 of 5

I was first introduced to Irina Vinnik’s coloring book designs in Manic Botanic. I so enjoyed that coloring book, that I purchased Magic Scope without seeing a preview of what was inside. While the artwork is unmistakably Ms. Vinnik’s, it is different enough that it warrants a closer look when making a purchase decision. While I appreciate the abstract and rather organic look to the designs, the subject matter is quite different. Where Manic Botanic concentrated on animal and plant life, Magic Scope seems to be more about the flow of lines and other elements one into the other.

I find it to be a quite detailed book of designs, often with elements that are intricate and small to color. In one design that I colored, I chased a tiny thin line around the design as it wove in and out amongst all the others. I also saw this in her previous book as well and it is this type of detail work that I appreciate and enjoy. The designs in this book have more detailing and in some cases, remind me almost of grayscale coloring.

The paper used in the coloring book is standard CreateSpace paper. It is thin, white, slightly rough and non-perforated. It is not the best of papers to work with. If you have an especially juicy marker, you may find it feathering outside of the lines fairly easily. I’ve gotten used to this type of paper as a trade-off for getting to experience so many different independent artists. I’m still not thrilled with it but I have accepted it for these books and I know what I will be getting when I place my order (though hope still springs eternal that Amazon (who owns CreateSpace) will improve the paper quality.) I also find that it works better for colored pencils than for markers so a lot of my work in CreateSpace books involves pencils.

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65 Imaginative Bicycle and Cat Design pages plus two foldout pages printed on one side of the page

The Bicycle Coloring Book: Journey to the Edge of the World

By: Shan Jiang

Rating: 5 of 5

This is a wonderful and imaginative coloring book about the adventures of a bicycle and a cat. I’ve never seen anything quite like this before and was really impressed by the scope and detail of the book. It is like a visual story book with lots of interesting locations. There is a twist at the end that I wasn’t expecting, so be sure to look for that. The illustrations are quite fun to color but are detailed and have small and intricate spots to color.

In addition to the regular coloring pages there is a two page, two sided fold-out in the middle of the book. On the inside is the colored version of the design. On the outside is the line drawing of the same design. Other than wishing that the reverse had been done (so my colored version would be on the solid page, I think it is a fold addition to the book. Because of the switch in positions, you can never see your colored designs in whole as the colored one is presented.

There is also a really fun flip-page motion story of the cat. It is in the lower left hand corner of the backside of each page. You see the motion by flipping through the pages rapidly.

I had some fun coloring my first project in this book. I decided to try the Sargent’s 50 pencil set that I leave out for guests to use when they come to visit. I had never colored a full design with these pencils before and I was surprised at how well they worked (though the color went on extremely light and took several layers to show up the way I wanted them to.) I will certainly be using a wide range of medium with this book (as it is printed on one side of the page.) I will also switch colors on the cat and bicycle to suit my imagination on that day.

This is what I found in this book and by coloring and testing with various medium:

65 single page designs plus two foldout pages for a total of 69 pages of coloring designs

A Flip-page motion book of the cat (reverse side of the page in the corner

Designs printed on one side of the page

Paper is white, smooth, heavyweight, and non-perforated

Sewn Binding

Except for the fold-out pages, designs do not merge into the binding area and have a framing line around the outside of the design edge.

Book is quite thick and the spin must be creased in order to get it to lay somewhat flat for coloring

Alcohol-based markers bleed through this paper in a spotty fashion. I suggest a blotter page under your working page to keep ink from spotting through to the next design.

Water-based markers, India ink pens, and gel pens do not bleed through the paper. Gel pens require extra drying time.

Colored pencils had mixed results. Wax-based, oil-based, soft lead and hard lead all put down good color and layered well though Prismacolor Premier pencils needed several layers to get good solid coverage. None of the pencils I tested did a great job of blending though my best results were with Caran D’Ache Luminance wax-based pencils. It was still great but it was better. The blending issue was not of as much importance to me in this book as the details are so small, I will not be doing blending too often.

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Another Beautiful Beginner level Grayscale book with 20 Fantasy Designs in Dark Contrast Grayscale with how-to tips

Spellbinding Images: A Grayscale Fantasy Coloring Book: Beginner’s Edition (Volume 2)

By: Nikki Burnette

Rating: 5 of 5

This is my second volume of Nikki Burnette’s Spellbinding Grayscale coloring books at the beginner level. I am just learning how to do grayscale, having started with it just this year. Because of issues I have had with another book, Ms. Burnette’s book was recommended to me. I’m so glad I followed everyone’s advice because Ms. Burnette not only has great designs to color, she also provides many how-to tips that have challenged me to try new ways of coloring both grayscale and with my regular coloring books as well.

Before getting buying this series of books, I only used colored pencils with grayscale. Because of the suggestions in these books, I am now using water-based and alcohol-based markers and even gel pens with my grayscale not only in these books but in my other grayscale books as well. I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in learning grayscale as the tutorial is so well-written.

This is yet another beautiful set of fantasy designs. In addition to the 20 designs being printed on one side of the page, Ms. Burnette has included thumbnail color samples of each design along with two additional thumbnails in which you can test your own colors and mediums. I am definitely using the thumbnails to try out colors and find that it is extremely helpful It feels like the artist has done just about everything but color the design for me to help me with my choices and coloring methods.

The artist also has a tutorial on her website which has proved invaluable as well. If all of this wasn’t enough, she has graciously provided permission to copy her designs onto other forms of paper if your coloring medium doesn’t work well on the paper in this book. The paper is a medium weight that has what she calls a satin sheen and to me, a glossy feel to it.

The designs are printed on one side of the page. The page is non-perforated but I find it opens to a flat position very easily. The designs all stop well before the binding, so you won’t have to twist and tweak the page and book to color in it. You also have room to remove pages if you choose to do so.

I was so impressed with my first purchase of Volume 1 of this series, I knew that I would be buying future books when I found them. I now have volume 2 in both the beginner and advanced form (definitely more challenging) and will be looking forward to more grayscale books by this artist in the future.

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Great Grayscale Fantasy Coloring book with Advanced lighter Grayscale images with how-to tips

Spellbinding Images: A Grayscale Fantasy Coloring Book: Advanced Edition (Volume 2)

By: Nikki Burnette

Rating: 5 of 5

This is my third book of Nikki Burnette’s Spellbinding Grayscale coloring books though it is the first one that I have purchased at the advanced level. After working with both beginner versions of her first two books, I felt that I wanted to try the advanced version. I’m fairly new to grayscale coloring and as most of the work I have done previously involved light colored images, I was comfortable with the idea of the lighter prints in the advanced book.

What surprised me (in a good way) was the the how-to and hints at the beginning of the book were geared to the advanced prints. There were additional ways of working with markers that I was really pleased to see. I am utilizing those hints in all of my grayscale books whether the prints are lightly printed with light contrast or heavy in contrast with bold printing. Before getting buying this series of books, I only used colored pencils with grayscale. I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in learning grayscale as the tutorial is so well-written.

This is a beautiful set of 20 grayscale designs. They are the same designs as are included in the beginner version of the same volume (2) but are printed in a completely different way. They are much lighter in tone and in contrast and it makes for a much more involved coloring process. I am doing much more shading, both with markers and pencils, than I did in my first projects in the beginner books. The end result is also much lighter but with much more detail that I have added. The projects also take more time. I think the artist has rightfully named these as advanced but I think that anyone could attempt these, especially with the tutorial included in the book.

In addition to the 20 designs being printed on one side of the page, Ms. Burnette has included thumbnail color samples of each design along with two additional thumbnails in which you can test your own colors and mediums. I’ve found these thumbnails even more useful in the advanced version as I am doing samples of shading for almost every portion of the design.

The artist also has a tutorial on her website which has proved invaluable as well. If all of this wasn’t enough, she has graciously provided permission to copy her designs onto other forms of paper if your coloring medium doesn’t work well on the paper in this book. The pages in this book are medium weight and do not have the glossy look that the beginner version of the book has.

The designs are printed on one side of the non-perforated page. The designs all stop well before the binding and the book easily opens to a flat position for coloring. There is plenty of room to work if you plan to keep the pages in the book as I am doing (though I absolutely have to use a blotter page below my working page when using markers.) If you wish to remove pages, there is also room to cut the pages out.

I am really pleased with these grayscale books and plan to buy new volumes as they appear. The artist has really given a lot of thought and attention to details that make it easier for me, at least, to have a fun and successful coloring experience with her books.

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49 Designs including 39 in Grayscale Pointillism and 10 line drawings by Nadiya Vasilkova printed on one side of the page

Magic totem: Coloring Book for Grown-Ups, Adult. Beautiful decorative animals, birds, flowers

By: Nadiya Vasilkova

Rating: 5 of 5

I’m fairly new to working with grayscale coloring and Nadiya Vasilkova’s designs are the only ones that I have done in pointillism grayscale. It was with great pleasure that I discovered that she had recently published a large number of her beautiful animal designs in this coloring book. In addition to 34 wonderful animals, there are an additional 5 similar designs in a variety of subjects as well as 10 great line drawings with slight amounts of pointillism that I can use for regular coloring.

The majority of this coloring book is printed in pointillism style. This is the style that was developed by Georges Seurat and Paul Signac during the 1800’s. I’m not as familiar with Mr. Signac’s work but I have seen (and studied in art history) some of Mr. Seurat’s works such as A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte.

In pointillism, the image is created by using very small uniform dots of color in place of the brush strokes we are used to seeing in paintings. Similar to Impressionism, the further you stand from a pointillism painting, the more you see the overall effect. The designs in this book are not printed in color but rather in varying shades and density of gray.

As with regular with grayscale coloring, you choose your colors based on the design. Light colors with light dots or areas where there are no dots, medium with medium, and dark with dark or densely dotted areas. I’ve mostly used colored pencils with my grayscale but have recently begun using a variety of markers as well.

For my first two projects in this book, I used markers. With the lion, I then went over the entire designs with colored pencils as well. Using markers has given me a very different look to my projects and is something that I am pleased to be trying and learning.

This is what I found in coloring and testing this book:

49 Beautiful Designs with 39 in pointillism style

Printed on one side of the page

Paper is typical CreateSpace paper thin, white, slightly rough and non-perforated.

Glue Bound

Designs do not merge into the binding area

Alcohol and water-based markers bleed through the page (I suggest you use a blotter page under your work.)

Gel pens and India ink leave colorful shadows on the back of the page.

Coloring pencils work well with this paper both oil and wax based pencils lay down good color, layer and blend well. Hard pencils dent the back of the page.

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51 Lovely Hand-drawn Sea Form designs printed on one side of the page

Drawn to the Sea: A Colouring Book of Sea Forms

By: Sabrina Impieri

Rating: 4 of 5

Drawn to the Sea is my first coloring book by Sabrina Impieri. She has a lovely free-flowing design style that suits sea forms. The designs in this book are line drawings of sea creatures and plant life. I find them open and easy to color without an extreme amount of detail or tiny spots to color.

The designs were fairly free-form rather than realistic. I like to see an artist’s interpretation, so this is something I do appreciate. There were a number of designs that used circles or bubbles. There seemed to be three types of use for these: 1) as part of the design (as with my project, I used them to show water without having to color the entire background), 2) some use as a form of pointillism to give the shape of another object, and 3) decorative and without as much meaning. In the first two uses, I would showcase the circles. In the last one, I would try to blend them in rather than bring attention to them if they were too distracting.

In my first project, I used Tombow water-based brush markers to color a crab in the ocean. I really liked the way the designs looked with watercolor and it allowed me to layer colors and blend them to get the effect that I was looking for.

This is what I found in coloring and testing this book:

51 Hand-drawn artistically interpreted Sea Form Designs
Printed on one side of the page
Paper is typical CreateSpace paper thin, white, slightly rough and non-perforated.
Glue Bound
Designs do not merge into the binding area
Alcohol and water-based markers bleed through the page (I suggest you use a blotter page under your work.)
Gel pens and India ink leave colorful shadows on the back of the page.
Coloring pencils work well with this paper both oil and wax based pencils lay down good color, layer and blend well. Hard pencils dent the back of the page.

While I could wish for thicker, perforated paper, it appears that this is the quality that comes from CreateSpace (which is an Amazon company.) What I really like about the CreateSpace is it is a way that independent artists can get their work self-published. That way, I get a huge choice of design styles albeit with not the best paper.

I was provided a free copy of this coloring book for test and review purposes.

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Another beautifully illustrated classic storybook coloring book printed on both sides of the page

Color the Classics: Beauty and the Beast: A Deeply Romantic Coloring Book

By: Jae-Eun Lee

Rating: 5 of 5

t the time I am writing this review, there are now three classic storybook coloring books released by Jae Eun Lee. I was less pleased by the number of simply story book pages as compared fully coloring pages in the first release Anne of Green Gables. In Alice In Wonderland and now again, in Beauty and the Beast, I appreciate that there are more coloring pages and that some of the story is inset in those pages instead of taking up a lot of the book with story. Of the 72 design pages in Beauty, only 14 are simply illustrated story book pages. Note that the book is listed as having 85 pages but that includes title pages, the foreward, and the thumbnails images at the back of the book.

To be clear, the story portrayed in this book is not the happy, feel-good version that we have seen on the big screen. This story goes back to the roots of the tale and includes some less than happy characters (for instance, Beauty’s sisters apparently plot to have the Beast devour Beauty.) While the story harkens back to the original, it is in no way complete. You may want to pick up a classic telling of the story to keep along side the coloring book for future reading and reference.

I really love the illustrations in this book as I have the two prior ones. Artist Jae Eun Lee has a beautiful ability to draw and make the scenes highly romantic. I found that the designs were open and flowing and easy to color without resorting to specialty pens to get into tiny spots.

For my first two projects in this coloring book, I chose to do first a design of Beauty with the Beast and then for the second design, I chose a lovely design of hands in lace partial gloves. I used Caran D’Ache Pablo oil-based Colored Pencils. While I found that these, as well as other oil-based pencils did not blend as well, I liked the way the pencils worked with the paper otherwise and I used them more for layering colors than for any blending. I might have used Verithins for the lacework but I am trying to keep my coloring pencils consistent within each book in this series. For fun, I will use a different brand of colored pencils for each book going forward to give each one a slightly different appearance.

Here is what I found in a brief overview:

72 pages of Designs and Story Book Illustrations

Printed on both sides of page

Pages are heavyweight, slightly smooth and non-perforated

Glue Binding

Some Designs merge into the binding

Some Designs spread across two pages

Alcohol-based markers bleed through the page

Water-based markers do not bleed through

India ink pens do not bleed through

Gel pens do not bleed through but require extra drying time

Coloring pencils did well in laying down good color with this paper. I was able to use them with a light touch as well as with multiple layers for a more solid appearance. Colors also layered well over other colors. Wax-based pencils did better at blending than did oil-based colors but both were acceptable for my use. Hard lead pencils did not did through the back of the book.

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31 Cute and Adorable Dog Designs by Marjorie Sarnat – printed on one side of the page

Creative Haven Dazzling Dogs Coloring Book

By: Marjorie Sarnat

Rating: 5 of 5

dazzlingdogs

I am a big fan of Marjorie Sarnat’s animal coloring books. In the Creative Haven line, “Dazzling Dogs” is her third such book following her highly successful Cats and Owls coloring books.

In this coloring book, once again Ms. Sarnat provides a wonderfully and whimsical look at the world of dogs. Her hand-drawn designs are highly detailed with lots of fun coloring elements. So many of the designs take almost a collage look at each dog with items surrounding them to give you the whole picture of what that particular dog(s) is involved with.

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63 Beautifully Drawn Images of Traditional and Vintage Cuba by Marty Noble – printed on one side of the page

Creative Haven Hello Cuba! Coloring Book

By: Marty Noble

Rating: 5 of 5

hellocuba

“Hello Cuba” by Marty Noble contains 63 designs which is a great value as most Creative Haven coloring books contain 31 or less. I really like that the artist and publisher grouped more together in the one book rather than to spread it out over two books as well as over time. I hope to see more of this expanded subject style coloring book in the future.

The designs are beautifully drawn as all of Ms. Noble’s designs are. There is a wide variety of subjects, including: dancers, advertising (including vintage magazine covers), workers, vintage cars (which are still what are used in Cuba today), animals, flowers and plant life, beautiful landmark and other daily scenes, and of course, tobacco.

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