Color Small Line Art and Tiny Details with Large Markers: Tips & Tools
DEPTH AND DIMENSION IS NOT REALISM
You tried alcohol markers because… well… you weren’t sure about your art skills…
And markers looked soooo easy!
Now you’re kinda wondering what you’ve gotten yourself into.
Because brush nibs make you feel clumsy.
The markers feel gigantic in your hand and the brush nib is large and wobbly… Maybe you’re just not cut out to color with big ol’ markers?
Are you constantly going outside the lines and struggling to fill tiny corners without making a mess of it?
But other people are getting great results— what are they doing that you’re not???
Today, let’s look at big fat markers with big fat brush nibs
And some of the tricks I use to create teeny tiny details.
WATCH: BIG MARKERS, LITTLE SPACES
Latest Video - Small Line Art & Tiny Details with Large Markers
(supply list at bottom of this article)
Video not playing?
If your device blocks embedded video, click here to watch at YouTube.
LEARN MARKER + PENCIL COLORING TECHNIQUES
TECHNIQUES USED IN “CANDY CANE HEART”
The following techniques can be spotted in the BIG MARKERS, LITTLE SPACES video:
I printed my candy cane line art using a Copic safe ink-jet printer onto Bristol board. Bristol is almost a mixed media paper and it will tolerate some water. Then using a fine point waterbrush (Amazon), I moistened the outlines for white stripes. Once the printer ink melted, I then dabbed it with a tissue. This allows the gray stamp line to completely disappear underneath the extremely light E41 ink.
The red is 2 red markers over an underpaint of BG11. The red along the inner edges is not a clean red, it’s murky. BG11 creates the necessary muddiness to make the candy cane look rounded.
The fine red stripes are messy on purpose. With this many stripes, the odds of me drawing them all perfect are close to nill. Instead, I draw them wobbly and even criss-cross them— Now they’re creatively artistic instead of a pain in the rear.
Instead of shading the white stripes with gray, I chose a medium turquoise pencil. It’s an artistic choice which adds shade with style.
The cast shadow took about 35 minutes to color. I think it’s time well spent! A good cast shadow gives life and depth to a project while a rushed shadow detracts from the final results. Give it time and use more than boring old gray!
CHRISTMAS SWEETHEART?
Let’s be honest, we’ve seen a ton of candy cane stamps, right? They’re ubiquitous at Christmas but when I spotted a heart shaped kindergarten craft project on Pinterest, I thought to myself— “you know, I haven’t colored candy canes like that before!”
So I made a stamp of it.
Candy Cane Heart is an artist-grade digital stamp perfect for realistic coloring, now available at my line art site, Sketch-Garden.com
PURCHASE INCLUDES FULL SUPPLY LIST FOR EVERY COLOR BLEND
Watch me color crisp red and white stripes with shiny accents, then color your own— use my style and supplies or develop your own unique twist.
Candy Cane Heart digital stamp comes in two line colors: black lined version for easy coloring and disappearing gray lines for realism.
FEATURED IN TODAY’S VIDEO
Full supply list for “Candy Cane Heart” at bottom of the page.
THE GIFT OF COLOR
MORE CHRISTMAS PROJECTS
(click the pic for more info)
ADVANCED COLORING
INTERMEDIATE COLORING
WE TEST COPIC INK
BEAUTIFUL COLOR PALETTES
UNDERPAINT RECIPE ARCHIVE