35 floral designs with bold lines – printed one side of page

Floral Fantasy

By: Nathaniel Wake

Rating: 4.5 of 5

This is my first floral books by Nathaniel Wake publishing. It is definitely an interesting take on flowers and some fantasy creatures. As with many Nathaniel Wake designs, many of the images seem to be slightly menacing. In some designs, I’m reminded of Audrey II in “Little Shop of Horrors.” It’s not what I generally look for in a floral coloring book but it is fairly fun change of pace.

The designs have detailed areas but do not have full scale backgrounds. Because of this, I don’t find it a difficult book to color in.

This is what I found in this coloring book:

35 Unusual floral inspired designs.with 10 bonus designs from other Nathaniel Wake coloring books.

Printed one side of the page

Paper is typical inexpensive quality by CreateSpace printing: thin, slightly rough and non-perforated. In this book, the pages are white on the front and black on the back.

The designs do not merge into the binding. The designs do not have framing lines at the outer edges, however, the elements are all finished with no cut off images.

Glue Binding

Create Space Paper/Media Quality

While you cannot see the bleed-through because of the back of the page is black, the ink does still bleed-through (as noted below. I test the medium on the black backed pages as well as the front pages which are white on both sides.

Alcohol-based markers bleed through the page quickly.

Water-based markers bleed through in spots.

Gel pens and India ink pens leave shadows on back of the page. India ink can bleed through if you apply heavily or multiple coats.

Coloring Pencils work fairly well with this publisher’s paper provided you don’t press extremely hard while coloring. I find that I can layers the same color for deeper pigment or multiple colors and I could blend easily using a blending stick. This is true of both oil and wax based pencils. I have also found that hard lead pencils leave dents through the paper.

I like to use a blotter when working in this type of book. I use a page of card stock or several sheets of heavyweight paper under my working page. It keeps seeping ink and marring dents from ruining the pages below.

Here are some samples from the book:

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