Daily Archives: August 30, 2016

Beautiful Third Coloring Book by Daria Song plus comparison to Thailand version printed on both sides of page

The Night Voyage: A Magical Adventure and Coloring Book (Time Adult Coloring Books)

By: Daria Song

Rating: 5 of 5

I was so looking forward to this coloring book that I also purchased the version printed in Thailand. While I like things about both versions, for me, the US version is the clear winner. Why? Simply put it has more designs to color. I’ll go into some of the differences at toward the end of this review.

The Night Voyage is the story of a young girl and her cat, Phoebe, who go on a night adventure giving away presents to others. Or did they? That is the question left unanswered at the end of this story.

The coloring book is filled with Daria Song’s beautiful artwork and imaginative design concepts. From paper crane airplanes to old-fashioned bicycles to gorgeous air balloons, each page is a wonderful opportunity to color.

In addition to the 64 pages of designs, there are thumbnails of each and a bonus coloring page as well as a card that can be cut out and colored. (with both cutting lines and folding line included.)

This is what I experienced while coloring in this book and testing the page with my coloring medium. In the comments section below, I will list the coloring medium I use for testing and coloring.

64 pages of Daria Song designs plus bonus page and card

Printed on both sides of the page

Paper is bright white, very lightly rough, heavyweight and non-perforated

Binding is both glued and sewn not the type that is easy to snip threads to remove pages. I don’t recommend this as so many of the designs spread across two pages

Designs merge into the binding area

Most designs spread across two pages

Separate dust cover which has coloring opportunities on the inside and an attached cover which can be colored as well.

Alcohol-based markers bleed through this paper

Water-based markers, gel pens and India ink pens do not bleed through and do not leave shadows on the back of the page. Some gel pens require additional drying time.

Colored pencils worked very well with this paper. I tested oil and wax based pencils. I was able to get good pigment lay down with both types. Layering the same color for deeper color, multiple colors and blending with a blending stick worked well and easily.

US versus Thailand printing:

Both versions have their advantages. The Thailand version was printed on a slightly off white when compared to the US one (thought I originally thought of it was simply white.) It also had colored images and colored cards included with some single page versions of designs which were on two-pages spreads. You can see my review and video of this version from May of this year on Amazon under the name The Present by Daria Song.

For me, the US version was the better of the two but I am happy that I have both. The US version is printed on bright white paper that was able to take all but alcohol-based markers without showing through. There are many pages of designs not included in the Thailand version at all. The detached dust cover, which is different from the original two books by Ms. Song, was a nice new touch with coloring opportunities as well. While the books are approximately the same size and the US version actually has less pages overall, it weighs more which leads me to believe that the paper is thicker.

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Great Pop Fashions from the 1960s Coloring Book printed both sides of page

Vogue Goes Pop: Coloring Book

By: British VOGUE

Rating: 5 of 5

The Pop culture fashion of the 1960’s is the theme for this Vogue coloring book. Iain R. Webb is the illustrator for this book as he was for the prior Vogue coloring book. He does a lovely job of interpreting the actual fashions of the time into line drawings. Along with each fashion is a particulars of the fashion, the designer as well as odd bits of info (such as how it could be ordered, etc.) This information is generally off to the side of one of the fashion designs. The designs range from fairly simple lines to highly detailed with small intricate parts to color.

The fashions of the 1960’s showed a jump from the cute matching outfits with gloves to wild colored mini-skirts and men’s ware for women all the way to the hippie-inspired caftans that were popular as the decade wound to an end. A number of the models have a Twiggy quality to them, with thin almost young boy figures with eyes with heavy fake eyelashes.

While my preferences in fashion coloring books are from the decades before the pop culture period, I appreciate the fashions that I recall seeing when I was a little girl. As an adult, I now appreciate how the fashions of this period reflected the social changes which were occurring at the time. Women were becoming more free to express themselves and to show the expression in how they dressed.

The one issue I had with the prior book is much better in this one. I did not like the squiggly lines that were placed on the models mouths as I prefer to color the lips in my coloring projects my own way. The few that do appear have more of a highlight look to them rather than the caterpillar look I found in the first book.

This is what I found as I colored in this book and tested the paper with my coloring medium. In the comments section below, I will list the coloring medium I used for testing and for coloring.

93 pages of Fashion Designs from the Pop Culture Period

Printed on both sides of the page

Paper is heavyweight, white, smooth and non-perforated

Sewn Binding (you can snip a few threads to remove a few pages at a time if you wish.)

Designs do not merge into the binding area and do not spread across two pages

Coloring book can be opened to fairly flat for coloring by breaking the spine with some effort.

Alcohol-based markers bleed through this paper

Water-based markers, gel pens, and India ink pens do not bleed through and did not leave shadows on the back of the page.

Colored pencils worked well for the most part. I could get good pigment color and layer the same or multiple colors easily. Blending with a blending stick sometimes resulted in a slightly smeary look rather than a clean blend. Using a liquid blender worked better for me. I tested both oil and wax based pencils with similar results.

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52 Full Page Letter inspired Designs plus 10 additional pages printed one side of page

Letters to Live By: An Inspirational Adult Coloring Book

By: Christian Art Publishers

Rating: 5 of 5

Letters to Live By is a Christian coloring book which goes through the alphabet A to Z with a design for each letter and a design which focuses on a word beginning with that letter and which has a Bible verse and cite(both Old and New Testament.) The ten additional pages at the back include small monogram size letter designs and several postcard size designs as well.

While the designs are licensed by Shutterstock, they are all new to me. The designs are detailed without being too intricate. I think it is a lovely book and one that I will be buying as gifts for family and friends this holiday season as well as enjoying for myself right now.

I plan on opening the book to a random page and then coloring both the letter designs and the associated page in tandem. I like to feel that I am being led to the pages that I need at a particular time when I am working with my Christian coloring books. There is always something I need to learn or to be reminded of on a daily basis.

The scripture translations used in this coloring book are as follows: Holy Bible, New Living Translation, Holy Bible, New International Version NIV, Holy Bible, English Standard Version, Holy Bible, Contemporary English Version, and the New King James Version.

This is what I have found while coloring in this book and testing my coloring medium on the paper. I will include a list of my coloring medium that I use for testing and coloring in the comments section below.

52 Full Size Letter and Letter Inspired Christian Designs plus 10 additional pages of designs

Printed one side of the page

Paper is heavyweight, white, somewhat smooth and perforated

Sewn Binding

Some Designs merge past the perforations and into the binding area. Nothing essential to the designs are lost into the binding.

Bonus pages do not include cutting lines but have perforations at the binding area

Book can be opened fairly flat for coloring if you break the spine with some force.

Alcohol-based markers bleed through the page. I suggest either removing these pages from the book before coloring or using a blotter page under your working page. I use card stock but a couple pages of heavyweight paper work well, too.

Water-based markers, gel pens, and India Ink pens do not bleed through the page. Some gel pens require additional drying time.

Colored pencils work well with this paper. I got good results with both oil and wax based pencils. I found that I could get good pigment, layer the same or multiple colors and blend easily using a pencil style blending stick.

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15 Fantastic Two page Maze Coloring Designs printed on both sides of page

Pierre the Maze Detective and The Great Coloring Adventure

By: IC4DESIGN

Rating: 5 of 5

This is a really fun coloring book for anyone who likes to solve puzzles or mazes. There are 15 two-page maze designs which detailed and intricate elements to color. I’ve often worked puzzles with this style of tiny detail and have worked a few mazes so this coloring book is one that appeals to me on a variety of my hobbies.

The mazes included are: Pierre’s Garage, The Museum, The Town Makes Merry, Open-Air Cafe, Downtown, Balloon Festival, The Castle in the South, The Forest Village, The Haunted Mansion, The Forgotten Town, To the Sea, The Harbor Town, The Mine Cart Course, The Mysterious Market, and The Giant Maze Town. Also included are pages which show the answers (note, I did not include those pages in my video of the coloring book.)

The point of the book is to find the person to guide through the maze. You color that person blue and the end point in red. You can color on your way or go back after solving the maze and color the page. My plan is to color the pages after I solve a maze one at a time.

The only thing I wish I could change about these mazes are the big blurb boxes which show the starting point. For a regular maze, this may make sense. For a coloring book, I wish that they had put a simple small circle (pencil eraser size) near the starting point or simply pre-colored the person you are to guide. That way, the entire maze is available to color and does not have a big instruction box (some approximately 4 x 3 inches) blocking parts of it. Just a thought for any future publications of this sort.

This is what I experienced while coloring in this book and testing my coloring medium on the paper:

15 Two-page Maze Coloring Designs

Printed on both sides of the page

Paper is heavyweight, white with green borders, slightly smooth and non-perforated.

Larger format book at 13 by 10 inches

Sewn Binding

Designs merge into the binding. My book is extremely well lined up with no loss of elements into the binding area.

The book opens fairly easily to a flat position for coloring.

Alcohol-based markers bleed through the pages. I don’t recommend this medium for this book as they will bleed through and mar the designs on the back of the page.

Water-based markers, gel pens, and India ink pens did not bleed through or leave any form of shadows on the back of the page. Some gel pens required additional drying time.

Colored pencils work well with this paper. I was able to get good pigment, layer the same or multiple colors, and blend easily with a blender stick.

Because of the extreme detail in this coloring book, I don’t recommend it do anyone who has vision or fine motor skill issues.

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32 Holiday/Christmas Designs by a variety of Design Original Artists printed one side of page

Deck the Halls Holiday Coloring Book

By: Thaneeya McArdle

Rating: 5 of 5

Deck the Halls is the one of the two holiday coloring books by Designs Originals this year. The other book is called Merry and Bright Both books are collections from a variety of artists who publish books from Designs Originals. The designs are fun and festive and have a focus mostly on Christmas but there are a few that are holiday season generic. The designs range from chalk-style (with black backgrounds) to detailed and intricate to the fun and funky designs of Thaneeya McArdle.

While the designs in the book seem to have been included in prior or future publications from the single artists, it appears that there are no duplications between the two collaborative books. Something different about these books are that there are no full size color sample pages though the back inside cover has nine small colored samples. I think this helps keep the book so affordable.

While I own a number of the books that these are pulled from, a huge plus for me is that this book contains the full size version of some of the pages which are provided in medium size in the original books. I really dislike the smaller design pages and am happy to get these designs in a more easy to color size in this book. It has actually convinced me to buy at least one other book as I won’t be missing out on larger designs since they are included in these two.

The artists in Deck the Halls include: Thaneeya McArdle, Robin Pickens, Angelea Van Dam, Valerie McKeehan and Jenny Newland.

This is what I experienced while coloring in this book and testing the paper with my coloring medium. In the comments section below, I will list the coloring medium I use for testing and coloring.

32 Full Size Christmas/Holiday Designs from a variety of artists

Printed one side of the page back of page has journal lines and a quote

Paper is medium weight, white (though some are printed with black background), slightly rough and perforated

Glue Binding

Designs stop well before the perforations

Alcohol and water-based markers bleed through the page

Gel pens and India ink pens leave shadows on the back of the page and can spot through as well depending on how heavily they are applied.

Colored pencils work well with the paper. Both oil and wax based pencils provide good color, layer the same or multiple colors well, and blend easily using a blending stick. Hard lead pencils can dent through the page.

I like to use a blotter page below my working page to keep seeping ink and dents from marring the pages below. I use card stock but two sheets of heavyweight paper work well, too. You can also simply remove pages before coloring to keep the rest of the book in good condition as well.

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