Search
Reviews by Category
-
Recent Posts
Archives
- February 2022 (1)
- January 2022 (2)
- December 2021 (2)
- November 2021 (5)
- October 2021 (4)
- September 2021 (4)
- August 2021 (5)
- July 2021 (4)
- June 2021 (6)
- May 2021 (5)
- April 2021 (4)
- March 2021 (5)
- February 2021 (5)
- January 2021 (5)
- December 2020 (5)
- November 2020 (5)
- October 2020 (9)
- September 2020 (8)
- August 2020 (6)
- July 2020 (7)
- June 2020 (11)
- May 2020 (6)
- April 2020 (8)
- March 2020 (5)
- February 2020 (8)
- January 2020 (5)
- December 2019 (8)
- November 2019 (6)
- October 2019 (11)
- September 2019 (11)
- August 2019 (8)
- July 2019 (12)
- June 2019 (10)
- May 2019 (8)
- April 2019 (5)
- March 2019 (4)
- February 2019 (4)
- January 2019 (4)
- December 2018 (16)
- November 2018 (20)
- October 2018 (25)
- September 2018 (20)
- August 2018 (26)
- July 2018 (25)
- June 2018 (23)
- May 2018 (25)
- April 2018 (28)
- March 2018 (24)
- February 2018 (23)
- January 2018 (26)
- December 2017 (12)
- November 2017 (10)
- October 2017 (37)
- September 2017 (48)
- August 2017 (19)
- July 2017 (30)
- June 2017 (30)
- May 2017 (44)
- April 2017 (32)
- March 2017 (49)
- February 2017 (32)
- January 2017 (54)
- December 2016 (29)
- November 2016 (36)
- October 2016 (39)
- September 2016 (31)
- August 2016 (49)
- July 2016 (64)
- June 2016 (52)
- May 2016 (52)
- April 2016 (66)
- March 2016 (72)
- February 2016 (60)
- January 2016 (59)
- December 2015 (72)
- November 2015 (81)
- October 2015 (59)
- September 2015 (41)
- August 2015 (33)
- July 2015 (30)
- June 2015 (25)
- May 2015 (42)
- April 2015 (40)
- March 2015 (32)
- February 2015 (25)
-
Net Galley
Daily Archives: February 15, 2016
50 Beautiful and Unusual Designs with an emphasis on Italian art and culture printed one side of the page
Romantic Italy: 50 Illustrations by a Renowned Italian Artist (Volume 1)
By: Mr. Jack R. Plaxe Sr.
Rating: 5 of 5
Romantic Italy is a beautiful book of 50 designs by artist Augusta Schinchirimini. The hand-drawn designs are divided into several chapters: Carnevale in Venice, Fairy Tale Characters, Forests and Gardens, the Sea, and Classic Ceramic Designs. I love that each of the designs have an entire scene portrayed rather than just a single character or one in which the background appears unfinished. Ms. Schinchirimini’s take on fairy tales is beautiful and unusual. I immediately sat down to color the mermaid (as different from the standrd Little Mermaid image as one can imagine lush and beautiful.) The scenes from Carnevale were what drew me to this book originally and are, again, something out of the ordinary.
The book is printed on one side of thin white non-perforated paper. The binding is glued rather than sewn, so you will have to cut out pages if you want to remove them from the book. All of the designs stop short of the binding, so you don’t have to fight that portion of the book to finish the design and you won’t lose any portion of the design if you remove the page carefully from the book. I really appreciate that the artist included a framing line around each of the designs. It gives me a natural place to finish my project and I’m not left trying to free-hand straight lines at the edge. I was not able to break the spine to lay the book flat but since the margins are large enough, I didn’t need to fight the binding to get to the inside portion of the design.
All of my markers, gel pens, and India ink artist pens leaked through this paper. My coloring pencils worked well and went on smoothly according to type; however, my hard lead pencils left indents on the back of the page. Because the book is printed on one side, I can put a blotter page behind the designs I am working on to keep ink from seeping through or dents from marring the next page of the book. I prefer card stock or chipboard but you can use heavy weight paper or file folders. Just be sure the blotter is smooth or the texture may transfer into your design.
These are the coloring medium that I use for testing. If there is something else you feel I should be testing, please let me know and I will see if I can add it to my growing pile:
Markers: 1) alcohol-based Copic Sketch, Prismacolor double ended markers (brush and fine point), Sharpies (fine and ultra-fine) Bic Mark-its (fine and ultra-fine) and 2) water-based Tombows dual end markers (brush and fine point), Stabilo 88, Staedler triplus fineliners, and Pentel markers
India Ink: Faber-Castell PITT artist pens (brush tip)
Gel Pens: Sakura, Fiskars, Uni-ball Signo in the following sizes – 0.28/0.38/0.5/1.0 and Tekwriter
Coloring Pencils: Prismacolor Premier Soft Core, Derwent Colorsoft, Prismacolor Verithins, and Faber-Castell Polychromos
Posted in Adult Color Books
Leave a comment