Daily Archives: May 3, 2017

Great coloring book based on the characters of the Discworld series printed both sides of the page

Terry Pratchett’s Discworld Coloring Book

By: Terry Pratchett

Rating: 5 of 5

My husband and I have enjoyed the late Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novels over the years and were very happy to find a coloring book based on those books. The illustrator is Paul Kidby whose portfolio, The Art of Discworld, is a fantastic collection of artwork based on the series. The designs in this coloring book are based on that portfolio.

There many characters and bits and pieces of various stories spread throughout. The designs are quite detailed and some have intricate and small areas to color. In addition to the line drawings, there are 16 pages of original artwork to guide your color choices if you wish to remain true to the original. Even if you go your own way with color, it is fun to have the artwork to look at (or remove if you wish as the pages are perforated.
My only small nit with the book (besides it being printed on both sides of the page) is that the two page spread designs have a white strip between the pages. In one way, I like it (as I don’t have to color into the binding. On the other hand, it does create a design that is not connected and, in my copy, there is a slight duplication of the images on both sides of the page closest to the binding. This doesn’t trouble me too much but I did want to mention that it exists.
This is what I found while coloring in this book and testing it with my coloring medium.
77 coloring book design pages based on the Discworld series and its characters. There are an addition 16 full color pictures of some of the original drawings of the designs included in the book.
Printed on both sides of the page; while most design are contained on one page there are a handful of two-page spread designs
Paper is heavyweight, white, lightly rough, and perforated
Sewn binding with perforated pages
Many designs cross over the perforations but stop short of merging into the binding. This is true of the two-page spread with results with a white strip down the middle of the two pages.
Alcohol-based markers bleed through the page. If you use these, you will have ink seep through and mar the design on the back of the page.
Water-based markers, gel pens and India ink pens do not bleed through the page.
Colored pencils work well with the paper. I was able to blend, layer the same and multiple colors using both oil and wax-based pencils with ease.

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Extremely intricate floral designs based on flowers through the year printed both sides of the page

The Flower Year: A Coloring Book

By: Leila Duly

Rating: 4 of 5

I will attach a silent, full book video flip-through (as well as a few photos) so you can decide for yourself if this book will work for you.

I must admit that my first feelings upon opening this book were of disappointment. I had expected this book to be in the same format as Leila Duly’s first book and was surprised and unhappy to see the new format.
The first book was printed in large format, single sided and on heavy card stock. This book is printed in a smaller than average format, printed on both sides of the page and the paper is considerably lighter in weight (medium/heavyweight paper rather than card stock.)
After getting over both my initial feelings and just myself in general, I looked again at the book and realized that while it was not published as fantastically as the first book, it is still a very well done book compared to most coloring books out there.
My only real problem with the book, and the reason I detracted a star, is that many of designs are so scaled down in size to fit the smaller format that it is difficult to color in the tiny spaces. The book is both detailed and intricate in scope, I cannot recommend it to anyone with fine motor or vision issues.
While those are not issues for me, finding coloring medium that works with the book requires using ultra-fine, micro-point and extremely sharp nib medium. I choose to use coloring pencils sharpened to a very fine point. I may use my Tombows and other watercolor brushes and markers as well as they did not leak through the page (see below.)
The designs are set up as a calendar of sorts of flowers which are in bloom during each month of the year. The names are generally included on the each design and there is a thumbnail listing of the designs (and flowers therein) at the end of the book.
I am also in hopes that the publisher, Laurence King Publishing, will come out with an artists edition of this book as they did with Johanna Basford when she was with this publisher. If so, I hope that they concentrate on the two-page spread designs and enlarge them for ease of coloring rather than printing large versions of the single flower designs. Ms. Duly’s first book was in the format of an artists edition, so I think there is hope that it will happen.
This is what I found while coloring in this book and testing it with my coloring medium.
95 flower designs as shown throughout the year. Some of these are elaborate and intricate while others are small designs to fill in a page of quotations.
Printed on both sides of the page. There is a mix single page designs and designs that spread across two pages
Paper is heavyweight, ivory color, lightly rough, and non-perforated
Sewn binding which can be snipped to release several pages at a time. I prefer to keep my book intact as a calendar of flowers throughout the year.
Book is smaller than average (approximately 7 x 9 inches) with a hard back cover and an attached fabric ribbon bookmark.
Alcohol-based markers bleed through the page. If you use these, you will have ink seep through and mar the design on the back of the page.
Water-based markers, gel pens and India ink pens do not bleed through the page.
Colored pencils work well with the slightly rough paper. I was able to blend, layer the same and multiple colors using both oil and wax-based pencils with ease.

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