63 Beautiful Designs by Thomas Kinkade along with 63 photos of the actual paintings

Posh Adult Coloring Book: Thomas Kinkade Designs for Inspiration and Relaxation

By: Thomas Kinkade

Rating: 5 of 5

kinkadecoloring

This is a beautiful coloring book filled with 63 different designs by the late Thomas Kinkade who is also known as the Painter of Light. My husband and I own a couple of framed prints by Mr. Kinkade and they are beautiful pieces of art that one can look at and lose themselves in.

When I saw that Posh was coming out with a coloring book based on Mr. Kinkade’s artwork, I pre-ordered it sight unseen. Sometimes that is a big risk but in this case, I am very pleased with the coloring book. The designs themselves are well done but do lack some of the smaller details. I plan to use a variety of markers and pencils and be able to add my own details with those.

The book is so lovely to look at, my husband took one glance, tried to make off with MY book, and finally had to order his own because this is one that I do not intend to share.

The designs are printed on the right hand side of with the photo of the actual painting on the left hand side (i.e., opposite each other in the book.) This will allow me to look at the photo of the real painting while I am coloring my own. It also, in effect, has the printing of the design on one side of the page. If you don’t care about the photos, you can use markers which will bleed through the page (see my coloring medium information below.)

My silent video will show all of the pages of the book, both the designs and the photos. I will also upload a few pages in photos to show how the book is put together.

Here is what I found in this coloring book:

63 Thomas Kinkade designs with 63 color photos as well.
Designs printed on one side of the page with a photo on the back of the page.
Paper is white, very slightly textured, non-perforated and medium weight.
Designs stop before the binding area
Glue Bound
You can cut the pages out without loss of designs. I don’t plan to do so as I really like having the photograph together with the design and you will lose that if you cut a page out.
Book lays fairly flat if you break the spine to flatten it out.
Alcohol-based markers bleed through freely.
Water-based markers leave spots of color or shadows of color on the back of the page except for the brush end of Tombows which did not leak through.
India ink pens leave shadows of color on the back of the page.
Gel pens do not bleed through.
Coloring pencils work well with one exception. All of the types of soft lead pencils I tested (you can see the full list in the comments section below), put down good color and layered well. Derwent Colorsoft was the only pencil that did not blend at all well for me. The color mostly stayed where I first put it down with only light blending at the edges. Hard lead pencils worked well and did not dent the page.

If you decide to use markers, you will probably have some amount of bleed-through onto the back of the page. I recommend using a heavyweight sheet of paper or card stock below your working page. That will keep ink from damaging the next design below.

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