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Susan C: pencil whisperer, coloring book illustrator

Kicking off Monday with a new design for coloring Kicking off Monday with a new design for coloring on my website and in my Etsy shop! I started coloring Pretty Poulet with a mix of #fabercastell Albrecht Durer and Polychromos pencils along with some Irojitens and Copic acrea pens for the details. And I used the Caran d’Ache Luminance Buff Titanium for blending the vines I drew around the circle. This design has three different versions so you can color whichever one you like best - links in bio! 
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#rubycharmcolors #hen #poulet #adultcoloring #coloringpage #coloredpencil #etsy
A lovely coloring of the Teapot Birds by @coloring A lovely coloring of the Teapot Birds by @coloring.with.ana - thanks for working your magic! 🥰 
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Posted @withregram • @coloring.with.ana 🐦‍🔥Book: Birdy by @rubycharmcolors inspired by the awesome artist @colorartbybettyhung 
🍃Colored with: #holbeincoloredpencil 
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 #coloringbookforadults #coloringbook #adultcoloringbook #adultcoloring #coloringforfun #addictedtocoloring #adultcoloringbooks #coloring #colourmanic #coloringforfun #coloringmasterpiece #coloriage #colorear  #colorearadultos #livrosdecolorir #colorindo #colorindolivrostop #coloringpage #colouring #colouringforadults #colouringpages #colouringbooks #colouringbookforadults #rubycharmcolors #rubycharmcolorsbirdy
Happy Friday! Flashback to 2019 when @colorartbybe Happy Friday! Flashback to 2019 when @colorartbybettyhung worked her magic on my dragonflies from the Insectimaginary coloring book - one of my all-time favorites and I think, ironically, it’s because of the pinks she used. I’ve always thought pink was not one of my favorite colors, but this makes me question why. I love this! 
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Posted @withregram • @colorartbybettyhung First piece of 2019 - dragonfly by Susan Carlson @rubycharmcolors 
Done with Sakura Koi Watercolor, Tombow Irojiten, Finetec Pearl colors.
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#rubycharmbybettyhung #rubycharmcolors
#colorartbybettyhung #coloringtechniques #adultcoloring #coloringforadults #creativecoloring #wonderfulcoloring #artecomoterapia #bayan_boyan #topcoloridos #coloringmasterpiece #coloringtechniques
So fun to see @barbara_colouring working on some d So fun to see @barbara_colouring working on some designs in the Big Book of Color Charts! I am loving the sun she added behind the horse and her colors and shading are just lovely! 🥰 
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Posted @withregram • @barbara_colouring A couple quick colourings of small illustrations in the Big Book of Color Charts by Rubycharmcolors.

Different colouring pencils and some metallic watercolours for the highlights on the horse

#bigbookofcolorcharts 
#rubycharmcoloringbook 
#rubycharmcolors
What’s on your desk today? I’ve got ideas and proj What’s on your desk today? I’ve got ideas and projects - lots of ideas and projects and little time to work on them until tonight. All too often I just have to leave things to marinate. 

If you haven’t seen my latest blog post (or tried the Copic acrea paint markers yet) visit the links in my profile for a quick review. They are quite wonderful to work with.

Oh how I wish I could do art all day! 
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#mondaymood #rubycharmcolors #illustrator #coloringbookartist #coloredpencils #copicacrea #paintmarkers #adultcoloring
Have you tried the new Copic acrea paint pens yet? Have you tried the new Copic acrea paint pens yet? I just reviewed them on my blog (link in bio). Happy art supplies! 
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#rubycharmcolors #copic #copicacrea #copicacreareview #adultcoloring #artsupplies #paintmarkers #coloringtips
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Kicking off Monday with a new design for coloring on my website and in my Etsy shop! I started coloring Pretty Poulet with a mix of #fabercastell Albrecht Durer and Polychromos pencils along with some Irojitens and Copic acrea pens for the details. And I used the Caran d’Ache Luminance Buff Titanium for blending the vines I drew around the circle. This design has three different versions so you can color whichever one you like best - links in bio! ...#rubycharmcolors #hen #poulet #adultcoloring #coloringpage #coloredpencil #etsy ... See MoreSee Less

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Illustrations for Adult Coloring, Home Goods & Accessories

  • HOME
  • BLOG
  • BOOKS ON AMAZON
    • 2025 Creative Companion
    • Birdy: A Fanciful Bird Coloring Book
      • Birdy Flip-through
    • Big Book of Color Charts (the original)
      • Video tour through the book with Paula
      • Video Review by Colour with Claire
      • Black Widow Dragon pencil chart
      • Chart Additions & Addendums
    • Oceanimaginary
      • Oceanimaginary flip-through video
    • Insectimaginary
      • Insectimaginary flip-through video
    • Coloring Art Journal, Volume 1
      • Coloring Art Journal V. 1 flip-through video
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      • Coloring Journal, Volume 3 flip-through video
  • SHOP DIRECT FROM THE ARTIST
    • Downloadable, printable PDF coloring pages
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Ruby Charm Colors Adult Coloring Art Journal, Volume 1

Ruby Charm Colors September 7, 2018

If there were a space for a subtitle, it would read: The Making of a Book – How I Nearly Lost my Marbles

The past few months, I have been diligently working on producing a two-volume collection of the art I created especially for coloring over the past year or so, and I can finally hold the fruits of my labor in my hands—the very first proof copy of Volume 1.

It is equally exciting and terrifying.

Exciting to feel the velvety, matte black cover and finally be able to flip through a professionally bound version of my book instead of the messy draft I cobbled together in a 3-ring binder. Terrified because my work is headed out into the world, and what if I missed a stupid typo, or what if there is a quality problem with Print-on-Demand I can’t control? What if people hate the paper? So many what-if’s, yet an overwhelming feeling of accomplishment holds me steady and keeps me moving forward. I finally did what I set out to do, and I can now offer my art on Amazon to a wider audience as a less-expensive version of the locally-printed, hand-made books I currently sell on Etsy.

Mapping out the draft of the book took a lot of time and loads of paper and printer ink. My poor old Epson was put to the test this summer and it’s tired. And I used an awful lot of tape. In addition to each of the 22 plates (full illustrations), I recreated isolated parts of the plates to build the art journal pages. I could have used simple boxes or circles colorists could use as swatches to test out their colors, but thought it would be even more useful if people could experiment with the actual parts of each illustration before working on the plates if they wanted. In the video below, you can see how I built mock-ups of the pages. The ring-binder and tape method worked pretty well because it allowed me to move things around as needed.

Once the draft was in good shape and I knew the final page count would be at about 140, I used Adobe InDesign to build the file I would need to submit the book to the publisher. I had to keep Illustrator and Photoshop open on my computer (and keep my iPad with all my illustrations on it handy) since I was adding in so many smaller designs to my pages and they all needed a little fussing and nudging. I work on a small MacBook Air I’ve had for ages and it’s plugged into a second monitor, but it’s not very big either. I think this is partly why I felt I needed a physical copy to work with so I could see whole pages at their actual size.

The cover design went through a few different iterations and I finally settled on a black cover with a circle of colorful art in the center. I also spent a ton of time searching for the perfect title font and found it through Emily Spadoni. And then once I committed to and paid for it, decided to go back into the interior of the book and change all my headings to that playful font, too. Seemingly little changes can sometimes take hours of work.

Once the interior and cover were done, I submitted my files to CreateSpace and held my breath. The digital proof came back with errors. So many errors. A bunch of my graphics had somehow converted to a lower ppi between Photoshop and Illustrator before making it into InDesign, and the margins and bleeds were mucked up in spots. I had to redo a bunch of graphics and fiddle with the margins and bleeds which was tricky for some of the graphics since they overlapped and purposely fell off the pages in areas. And I intentionally rotated some of the images so that caused even more chaos during the review process. It was a lot of excruciating nit-picking to get it all right. When the proverbial light turned green after a few more rounds of submissions (days and days of back-and-forth), I ordered physical proofs with expedited shipping. Whoo-hoo!

As soon as I got the proofs in the mail, I sent copies to my trusty coloring team so they could take their own book for a test drive and help me with a little feedback. Their comments were incredibly useful and reassuring, and I’ll be forever grateful to them. Paula, Lora, and Lucia—you are a dream team—thank you!

Since July, I have put in an average of 8 to 10 hours a day planning the layout, writing text for the introduction and “coloring tips” pages, creating smaller versions of my illustrations to build the art journal pages, and designing the cover. It’s been a long process and I’ve learned so much along the way. Not only about how to create a book, but about what makes me tick and how dedication and hard work can turn into something tangible—something to be proud of seeing through from inception to reality, start to finish.

RubyCharmColors_Papers_draft

Notes and binders during the planning stages of the Ruby Charm Colors Adult Coloring Art Journal (with Starbucks – coffee was a critical part of the work process)

This book is a little different from other coloring books. A lot of thought went into the concept and layout. I didn’t want the book to be a simple collection of drawings to color, I wanted it to be an art journal—a place where colorists could play and experiment and exercise their creative muscles. I am fairly new to coloring (I really only started when I began creating line art specifically for coloring last year) and admittedly have very few coloring books.

What I noticed about my coloring habits, though, is that I always needed a few scraps of paper nearby to test my colors. I would jot down notes about which pencils I was using, and had lots of scribbles and color swatches. A lot of times, those swatches and notes would get lost, so if I went back to finish a piece days or weeks later, I’d have to try to retrace where I started and what I used. I knew that others had the same issue and this is where the idea of a coloring art journal came into play.

RubyCharmColors_SunMoon

My marked up proof of the Ruby Charm Colors book showing the art journal page on the left and the full plate for coloring on the right.

I want colorists to have a place to keep their ideas together—all those little notes and blended color swatches. A go-to journal that can store ideas and coloring discoveries that can be applied not only to my art in this book, but to other pieces of art in other books as well. Each art journal (or worksheet) page is a little different from the others and directly relates to the illustration from the full plate. And colorists can fill these pages out however they see fit. There are no rules for how something is colored, what is tracked or what is scribbled—it’s all up to the colorist.

Since I knew going into this project using CreateSpace meant the book’s paper would not be ideal for everyone (some love it, some hate it) I decided to back each plate with a black page to help obscure color bleed-through. It’s not an issue with colored pencils at all, but some markers (especially Copics and Sharpies) can make a huge mess. I had my daughter try her Copics in the book, and though the effect of the bleed looked pretty cool through the black back, it’s probably not ideal.

RubyCharmColors_heron

So fair warning: I do not recommend heavy markers for this book at all. Watercolors can be used sparingly. It’s thin paper, and there is not much independent coloring book artists can do about it until CreateSpace hears our pleas for thicker paper, perforated pages and spiral-binding (which in my opinion would be ideal).

Here is a sample of Caran d’Ache Muesum and Faber-Castell Albrecht Durer watercolor pencils using a Kurtake waterbrush (easy on the water). The paper warped a little, but not terrible. And while it was damp, a little of the black from the page behind it showed through. But once it completely dried, it was fine. Coloring over it with regular colored pencils helped flatten it back out. I wouldn’t recommend washing an entire page with water, but in small doses, it seems to be fine. This is partly why I encourage colorists to copy plates from the book onto their favorite type of paper or card stock if they would like. It also saves them a clean version to copy again if needed.

RubyCharmColors_lion

 

RubyCharmColors_Black plate2

Each plate has a dark background on the reverse side and includes the name of the plate and room for you to add your name if you like to give your art away, or if you like to cut it out of the book and store it in a binder.

While testing out different media on my proof copy (I really beat it up a bit) I discovered that though thin, the paper has decent tooth and is actually pretty tough. Even while applying pressure while burnishing. No rips so far. I spent about an hour coloring the beetle (above) and was very pleased by the way my pencils put down color and blended. I used a mix of Caran d’Ache Luminance, Prismacolor Premier and Verithin, Polychromos and Irojitens, plus a few Sakura Souffle and Gelly Roll Moonlight gel pens.

I also tried coloring a fiddlehead fern design on the back of one plate and yes, coloring on black works pretty well and is a lot of fun. Don’t be surprised to see a Black Magic Art Journal before too long.

RubyCharmColors_Black plate

I couldn’t resist coloring on the black page

The final book proof should arrive in the mail any day and I am anxious to go through it one last time before bringing it to life on Amazon. In the meantime, I am working my way through Volume 2 (same format but with 24 full illustration plates to complete the collection, and new, more advanced advanced coloring tips) as well as ideas for a Journal, a “Just the Plates” companion (with all 46 plates), and a Black Magic volume. Will I make it for the holidays? Only time will tell!

Below is a quick flip-through of my first proof if you want to take a peek. It shows the color charts at the end of the book, the plates and art journal pages, the tips pages and the front matter. I may have skipped a few pages—I am not the best flipper. 😉

 

Volume 1 of the Ruby Charm Colors Adult Coloring Art Journal is now available as of September 13, 2018!

Give my blog a follow for updates, and I promise I won’t fill your inbox up with spam. You can also find me on Instagram and Facebook @RubyCharmColors and, pssst! My coloring team is hosting a Color-Along from September 7 to October 7 if you want to get your hands on an excerpt from the book to color … Autumn Cat! Join the RubyCharmColors FB group, look for the Color-Along event, download the file, and happy coloring!

 

 

 

 

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Silly old bear . . .

Ruby Charm Colors August 16, 2018

There’s a new addition to the RubyCharmColors Etsy shop and I really enjoyed completing the line art for this one. I had roughly sketched the bear months ago, but then it sat neglected in a folder on my iPad. A few days ago, I pulled it up and was inspired to finish it off for inclusion in my new set of books which will be offered on Amazon soon.

The Bear with Fish will be included in Volume 1, but it is also available on Etsy right now as an instantly downloadable PDF for coloring. Two pages are included in the file–the black line illustration and also a grey-line version in case you enjoy working with lighter lines.

Here’s a sample of the color test I did of this design – it is still a work in progress and might be for some time since I’ve really got to get back to the books and finish them up for a September release.

I used a mix of Caran d’Ache Luminance, Polychromos, Prismacolor Premier and Irojiten pencils so far, plus Sakura Souffle gel pens for the dots on the fish.

I started with lots of light layers with the Luminance pencils, then worked in my Polychromos for variations in color and more blending. The Irojitens pencils were used to burnish and set my colors. When I have a chance, I plan to use Neocolor II pastels for the background.

Silly old bear

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Every day I draw lines and color

Ruby Charm Colors August 4, 2018

The past month has been busy for the Ruby Charm Colors project. In addition to working on an upcoming book (which has somehow morphed into two 100+ page volumes) I’ve created a few new illustrations for my Etsy shop and have released several sets of cards for coloring.

The first illustration I completed was actually started a few months ago and was a special request by a fan, Lucia, who is now on my coloring team. Lucia’s Crestie gecko, Nacho, was the inspiration for this illustration and I finally got around to finishing up the background in July. The gecko itself was done quite some time ago, but as with several of my mini projects, sometimes they fall by the wayside until I have a reminder to git ‘er done, as they say. The line art, if you would like to color this finished design yourself, can be found here in the RubyCharmColors Etsy shop.

I started coloring this illustration using a mix of Caran d’Ache Neocolor II pastels and colored pencils. I had ordered about 8 individual (open-stock) pastels from Blick to try them out as I had seen a number of beautiful colorings on Instagram and Facebook using the Neocolors. I was attracted to their intense hues and how they appeared to blend really well. I used Turquoise, Chromium Oxide Green, Olive Brown, and Fast Orange for the background, sun and leaves for this piece. Though it was my first time using the pastels and I was still getting the hang of blending them with my Kurtake and Aquash Pentel water brushes, I was pretty happy with the outcome and decided to order a set of the Neocolors through Amazon so I would have more colors to work with in future projects.

gecko 2 RubyCharmColors

Gecko line art for coloring books and pages (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by the artist

Once the pastels dried, I started going over different areas of the illustration with a mix of colored pencils – mostly Caran d’Ache Luminance and Pablo pencils, Polychromos, and Prismacolors. Once my overall colors were in place (lots and lots of layers as usual) I started burnishing the colors using my Irojiten pencils.

gecko RubyCharmColors

Close-up of Gecko line art for coloring books and pages (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by the artist

The final step for the gecko was to add small embellishments with Sakura Souffle gel pens. This piece has a long way to go before it’s complete, so it’s now living in one of my “unfinished projects” folders for safe-keeping. I am sure I’ll pull it back out again when I have some free time.

Below is the same line drawing which has been colored by Lora King, who is also on my coloring team. She used Guanghui and Holbein colored pencils, Arteza and Zig watercolor brush pens, Neocolor II pastels, and Koh-I-Noor and Conte pastel pencils. I adore the way her heavy use of black really makes the spots and stripes pop off the page.

Gecko by Lora RubyCharmColors

Gecko line art for coloring books and pages (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by Lora King

The next illustration I completed recently was the Toutterkoi. It started out as a butterfly but I added a toucan’s face to the tips of the wings on a lark. It was weird but I liked it enough and decided to work in some koi on the bottom wings and tail. I really enjoyed fitting creatures into the butterfly and had fun color-testing this piece with a mix of Polychromos, Prismacolors and Irojitens. I really appreciate the sharp tips I can get on the Irojiten pencils for small details.

Toutterkoi 1 RubyCharmColors

Toutterkoi line art for coloring books and pages (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by the artist

Once the line art was done, I emailed a copy to my coloring team so they could have a hand at coloring this whimsical creature. The first coloring, by Lora King, was completed with Guanghui and Holbein pencils, Zig Real Brush pens and Derwent pastel pencils. Again, she has a nice use of black that draws your eyes to the toucans and koi.

Toutterkoi by Lora RubyCharmColors

Toutterkoi line art for coloring books and pages (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by Lora King

The next Toutterkoi, colored by Lucia Brown, was completed using Derwent Coloursoft and Faber-Castell Polychromos pencils. I like her balance of warm and cool colors, and the way she blended turquoise into bluish purple on the fronds.

Toutterkoi by Lucia RubyCharmColors

Toutterkoi line art for coloring books and pages (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by Lucia Brown

Vanessa Black printed her Toutterkoi on linen card stock and used Chameleon Dual Color pencils, Sharpie brush tip pens, and a Prismacolor colouless blender pencil. The oranges, greens and magentas work so nicely together – very playful.

Toutterkoi by Vanessa RubyCharmColors

Toutterkoi line art for coloring books and pages (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by Vanessa Black

Paula Leach used Schpirerr Farben pencils for her Toutterkoi.  Using a blend of greys moves her fronds to the background while the brighter colors move the Tourrtekoi forward.

Toutterkoi by Paula1 RubyCharmColors

Toutterkoi line art for coloring books and pages (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by Paula Leach

Here is a close-up of Paula’s work including her signature sparkles as embellishments on the body and wings – lovely color choices.

Toutterkoi by Paula2 RubyCharmColors

Close-up of the Toutterkoi line art for coloring books and pages (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by Paula Leach

My next project consisted of modifying some of my line art to make greeting cards that can be printed at home, colored and given away. There are 6 designs in the first set: Little Bird; Horse with Flowers; Insects; Lion, Hare and Moon; Mice in Freesia; and Spring Hare.

RubyCharmColors Cards1

Little Bird line art for coloring books, pages and greeting cards (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by the artist

After that, I modified a collection of my moth and butterfly illustrations and turned them into greeting cards, too. This set of 8 designs can be printed at home (card stock is best), trimmed to size and colored with your favorite media.

So about the Caran d’Ache Neocolor II pastels …. I did order a set of 40 off of Amazon and I was so excited to get them in the mail. After opening the box and grabbing a few pastels to try out of a scrap of paper, though, my heart sank. They did not blend at all with my water brush.  What the hell? And then it dawned on me … I had mistakenly ordered the Neocolor I pastels (which happen to be water-resistant) instead of the Neocolor II pastels which are meant to be blended with water! The Neocolor I pastels are beautiful, don’t get me wrong, but they were not what I needed. I repacked the box and sent them back.

If you order Neocolors through Amazon, be sure you are ordering the correct type of pastel you need (I or II)! The item description did not specify which set I was ordering, and since there was a picture of paintbrushes next to the pastels, I assumed I was getting the watercolors. Nope.

Just a few days later I opened my mailbox to discover a rather large and heavy package inside. I carefully slid it out (because I didn’t want the ginormous black spider who has taken up residence in said mailbox to hitch a ride on my package). It was a full set of gorgeous Neocolor II pastels gifted to me by a dear fellow artist! I can’t tell you how much it meant to me that someone would send me art supplies – such a thoughtful and generous gesture and I am still in awe. i got to work right away using the pastels (and some colored pencils) to color in one of the greeting cards I designed as a thank card.

Caran d'Ache Neocolor II pastels

Horse with flowers line art for coloring books, pages and greeting cards (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, colored by the artist

The base colors of the card were colored with Neocolor II pastels and a Kuretake water brush. I then added more depth to the image with a mix of colored pencils (mostly Caran d’Ache Luminance and Pablo, Polychromos, Prismacolor and Irojiten) and of course, some Sakura Souffle and Moonlight gel pen embellishments.

Horse Card

Horse with flowers line art for coloring books, pages and greeting cards (c) 2018 by S. Carlson / Ruby Charm Colors, finished card colored by the artist

So that’s what I’ve been up to the past few weeks. My gardens are going wild and I really need to do more weeding, my tomatoes are finally ripening, the cicadas are buzzing, and I have fresh flowers in the kitchen each day.

Now back to the business of making the book(s), and I’ll have a teaser about that in the coming days ….

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Flowers from my gardens-gone-wild: Tree Lily, Phlox, Lavender, Day Lily, Crocosmia, and Jerusalem Artichokes

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Summertime coloring

Ruby Charm Colors July 11, 2018

Last year, I painted a collection of 6 fruits and vegetables in acrylics on 24″ square canvases, and I’ve been wanting to convert them into line drawings especially for coloring. I finally had a chance to do this over the past few weeks and am happy to announce they are ready and listed in the RubyCharmColors Etsy shop. If you enjoy coloring, gardening or cooking (or know someone who does) these illustrations might be a perfect way to while away a rainy day!

There are six designs in this first collection: pears, peppers, pumpkins, beets, tomatoes and garlic. The beets illustration below was tested out by two members on my coloring team, Paula Leach and Lora King (thank you, ladies!). To see the full collection, take a look at the samples included in my Etsy listing.

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Here is a close-up of the pumpkin illustration I started coloring. I used a mix of colored pencils including Caran d’Ache Luminance and Pablo, Faber-Castell Polychromos, Prismacolors, Verithins, Derwent ProColor and Irojiten. In the drawing above, you can see where I used the Irojiten pencils to blend and burnish the other layers (many, many light layers) of pencil. The burnished areas are much more blended and saturated.

Happy summer and happy coloring!

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From one comes many: a growing gallery of colorists

Ruby Charm Colors June 14, 2018

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how one piece of art can multiply and transform into many different versions as colorists (people who love to color in coloring books) approach the same line drawing with their own color preferences, creative vision, tools, technical skills, and experiences.

The tools or media a colorist chooses to work with plays an important role in the overall appearance of a coloring. Some colorists like to mix things up and use not only a blend of different colored pencils, but also other media like watercolor, markers, chalk, gel pens, pastels and even eye shadow. Others prefer to stick with their favorite pencil brand. Either way, gorgeous results are within everyone’s reach— it just takes is time, practice, and a willingness to learn and experiment. And sometimes a little luck!

Lisa Duggan (below and here for a close-up) colored her version of Mice in Freesia using Faber-Castell Polychromos colored pencils. She tackled the background with a few layers of Tombow Dual Brush markers and a little more colored pencil over the markers. Marilyn Reading opted for a more limited choice of media and used Prismacolor colored pencils for her version of Mice with Freesia. To see more details of Marilyn’s coloring, click here.

Vanessa Black opted for Tombow Irojiten Colored Pencils, Printworks Super Soft Colored Pencils, and then Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Brush Pens for her high-intensity background. Click here to see the details in Vanessa’s piece.

Lora King used a mix of Hero and Holbein pencils. I don’t have great links to Hero and only one for Holbein (which can be hard to come by as far as purchasing goes). Lora also used Jane Davenport pencils and Prima watercolors, Tombow markers and even Derwent Artbars. For a closer view at how she combined all her media, click here.

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Lisa Duggan, Marilyn Reading, Vanessa Black, and Lora King’s varied palettes and beautiful techniques used to color the Mice in Freesia illustration (© 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

Each version of the Mice in Freesia has its own unique feel, and different elements of the design are brought forward (or pushed back) through use of color, shading, pattern, and different applications of the media.

The next set of drawings are examples of colorists seeing past the lines of the original  Insects illustration into completely new and original creative territory. Some may be worried by the idea of altering an artist’s work (and I have seen colorists on social media flip out on other colorists about how they don’t think it is okay at all) but I think it is fantastic!

I don’t mind being the catapult if someone has a vision they want to reach in their own coloring. If my work can inspire new ideas, then I feel I have accomplished something special. I include the simple black and white illustration above the work of Fumiko and Valencia (below) so you can see how they altered the original work to fit their individual visions.

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Fumiko and Valencia pushing their creativity with the RubyCharmColors Insects design and coming up with two vastly different interpretations (illustration © 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors).

Fumiko Tsutsui, coloring in the “Black Magic” coloring book, veered away from the simple circles and and created her own galaxy using the circles merely as guides for her tiny dots and stars. This gives her Insects a timeless, almost alien feel as they float through space. I believe Fumiko works mainly with Prismacolor and Irojiten pencils, but I am not positive. I believe she also uses Sakura gel pens to add embellishments. You can take a closer look at her work here.

Valencia Venter Van Zyl took her coloring of the same Insect design (but printed on white card stock) in a completely different direction by adding strawberries and roses. The way she approached the circles by adding borders and tiny flowers is reminiscent of an heirloom teacup saucer which gives the design a more antique feel. Here is Valencia’s coloring up close. And I am sorry I don’t which pencils or other media she used …

Hot off the press! I also wanted to share Allison Capelle’s version of Insects which she just posted today. Allison used all Polychromos for the insects and Caran d”ache Neocolors II for the background. She achieved an intensely saturated, jewel-like feel to her completed work (and you can view a larger version here).

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Allison Capelle’s coloring of the Insects (illustration © 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors).

All of these colorists have beautiful, individual approaches that bring the original art to new levels. As an artist, I find this very exciting and feel that there is a collaboration between creatives not typically found in other art forms. When we see a painting in a gallery, or a sculpture on a table, or view photos or films, we participate to a degree, of course. But not to the extent people interact with the art in the adult coloring book world. Colorists take the line art—the basic framework—and transform it through their own creative lens. They truly involve themselves—physically and mentally—in the art.

Adult coloring as a hobby is sometimes ridiculed for being childish, but those who ridicule may not be looking close enough to see the beautiful art that’s being produced by colorists around the world. And they may not understand the truly therapeutic effect putting a pencil (or other media) to paper can have. For me, coloring or drawing puts me in a state of focus I don’t find elsewhere. Keen focus. And at the same time, a state of catharsis. My mind feels clear and sharp, and overall I feel relaxed and more centered. A sort of yin and yang effect.

Sometimes I think that we are too bombarded by distracting “little bits” that throw us off track. Every waking moment. Cell phones are continually dinging at us, we see a flash of the “news” on TV or one of our other devices that barely scratches the surface of a story before jumping to the next “bombshell”, we read newspaper and magazine articles that are so short it’s a wonder anyone gets paid to write them. I sometimes worry that our ability to focus and think deeply about much of anything will someday disappear. So yeah, I get the adult coloring craze that surfaced a few years back, and those who dismiss or ridicule it are missing out. I think a lot of people crave something real and tactile—something they can start, see their progress, make their own decisions, hold in their hands and say “I did that.”

Coloring can be “mindless” but it can also be mindful.

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Lion Fish illustration colored by Lisa Duggan, Lora King and Nateko (illustration © 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

This next batch of colorings (above) have unique qualities, too. Lisa Duggan colored two different versions of the Lion Fish design. Her first version (a close-up here), was colored in September of 2017, and she used Prismacolor and Polychromos pencils. In her second version (completed more recently), Lisa used Derwent Inktense, a little layering on top of that with Polychromos, and then added embellishments with gel pens. Click here for a close-up of Lisa’s second coloring. Her color choices for the Lion Fish and the background uniquely alters the mood of each version.

Lora King, fairly new to coloring on black, colored her Lion Fish (click here for close-up) from the “Black Magic” coloring book by using five different pencil brands—Pablo’s, Polys, Prismacolors, Irotijen, and Heroes—plus she experimented with chalk, Caran d”ache Neocolors II, Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Brush Pens, and a Zig Clean color brush. While chatting back and forth about the piece through social media, she expressed a little frustration about the learning curve when coloring on black (it is not easy) but I absolutely adore her Lion Fish and the rich, almost metallic pops of color she’s got going on. It almost looks like a painting!

Nateko used aquarelle pencils for her version of the Lion Fish though I am not sure if they were Faber-Castell or Staedtler aquarelles. You can view her close up here.

Again, the media we work with can make a huge difference in the overall look and feel of a piece. And I probably say this more than I need to, but never be afraid to experiment! Even if a coloring turns into a disaster, there were probably some useful skills learned in the process.

Here’s another set of colorings that beautifully highlight the variety of work being done by colorists working with the RubyCharmColors illustrations. This is Gazelles.

Gazelles

Lisa Duggan and Fumiko Tsutsui used different colored papers, varied palettes and beautiful techniques to color the Gazelles illustration (© 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

Lisa’s warm hues, blending of the sky with a few hazy clouds hanging in the air, and her coloring technique effectively brings us to the African savanna (see close-up) while Fumiko’s blue gazelles and and striped planet looks like a mystical scene from Avatar (here’s her close-up). On Instagram Lisa commented that Fumiko’s coloring looks like night photography and I tend to agree. Both colorings are uniquely beautiful!

Now this is pretty cool … same colorist, different versions of the original line drawing: one was printed in black while the other was printed at about 50% grey-scale. Colorist Beth Hovey told the RubyCharmColors group on Facebook that she used the Sun & Moon illustration as an art lesson for her granddaughter!

After coloring the black line version, she printed out the grey line version to help her granddaughter understand how black lines and gray lines can have an affect how a coloring turns out. She used the same color palette for each version—and even though she said the purple pastel chalk on the black line coloring was applied a little heavier—we can still see the nuances between the two different versions.

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Beth Hovey’s black line and grey line version of Sun & Moon by Ruby Charm Colors (© 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

Coloring the grey line version (which I include with all of the PDFs I offer on Etsy as a bonus) puts more emphasis on shapes and colors and less emphasis on the sometimes heavy black lines themselves. Working with grey line versions can also make it a little easier to veer from the original design and add more of your own details since the lines are much lighter and easier to color over. And you don’t have to have a grey-line PDF to do this. Depending on your printer’s settings, you can can either choose “Greyscale” or even print at a lower “economy” setting which spits less ink on the page (if you have an inkjet printer). Laser printer? Not sure … but you can always poke around your printer’s settings and try a few experiments.

The next three images are from colorists Sandy Kinzer, Lucia Brown and Paula Leach, each working their own magic on the same image. Here, it’s all about the color combos. The simple butterfly design was offered as a freebie through the RubyCharmColors group on Facebook (you need to join and participate to get the freebies) as a teaser and as a practice run for the more complicated “Butterfly with Spheres” design that was released shortly after as a downloadable, printable PDF.

Butterflys

Sandy Kinzer and Lucia Brown both colored the butterfly design (© 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

Sandy’s butterfly feels like spring with a lovely mix of pastels and a few bright colors we associate with the season of growth and awakenings. Lucia’s butterfly uses a pallet that is a little more limited, and her use of pinks and turquoise create playful, modern looking contrasts.

ButterflyPaula

Paula Leach’s version of the Butterfly with Spheres design (© 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

The close up of Paula’s butterfly in more muted tones above shows the metallic, glittery pens she used to embellish some of her detail work. Below is her coloring of the full version of “Butterfly with Spheres.” Her color pallet is intentionally limited and gives the piece a soft, romantic unified look.

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Paula Leach’s completed version of the Butterfly with Spheres illustration (© 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

Having a little time to think about colors before approaching a final piece can be helpful. And being able to experiment with different media on a more simple piece before committing to the final can take away some of the pressure, too. Not everyone is concerned about the final outcome (and that is perfectly fine), but there are a lot of colorists who are, and who want to keep learning and pushing themselves creatively.

Now how about these rabbits? Again, color changes everything! These three colorings below are of the Spring Rabbit illustration.

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Spring Rabbit colored by Lisa Duggan and Lora King (illustration © 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

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Spring Rabbit colored by Frankie Davis (illustration © 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

Lisa (close up here) used Polychromos pencil over her layers of Derwent Inktense, and also used Prismacolor pencils for the rabbit and flowers. Lora (close up here) used a mix of Hero, Holbein & Caran d’Ache Pablo pencils with Royal Talens Angora watercolors. Both colorists created compelling, balanced and lovely final pieces. Frankie used Conté à Paris Pastel pencils and Polychromos along with a white Posca pen to complete her beautiful rendering of Spring Rabbit. If you’d like to see a larger version, click here.

The Coyote & Fox illustration (below) is one of my favorites as it is one of the first I drew specifically for coloring book pages. Both Allison and Lucia approached the design with different visions—Allison and her Tombow Irojiten Colored Pencils created a mystical evening scene (close up here) and Lucia, using a mix of Derwent Colorsoft and Faber-Castell Polychromos pencils, created a brighter scene where the mandala-like “sun,” the fox and the leaves pop out of the background (close up here).

I can’t tell you how exciting it was for me to see these appear on Instagram when I was starting my Etsy business last year—so inspiring!

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Coyote & Fox colored by Allison Capelle and Lucia Brown (illustration © 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

Horse with Flowers is a more recent drawing, and I have three colorings I’d like to share though I know there are more floating around out there. Betty Hung, a colorist and blogger (check out her beautiful and helpful blog about coloring here) used Chameleon pens and Colortone pencils in her beautifully balanced piece. Her blending of the background is soft and exquisite (zoom in here).

Alexandra used a wide variety of media including Caran d’Ache Museum watercolors, Luminance, Prismacolor, Faber-Castell Polychromos and a Wink of Stella to achieve her highly saturated coloring (close up here).

Below Betty and Alexandra is the Horse with Flowers colored by Sabine Juergenmeier. Sabine used gold watercolour for the background and a collection of different brands of pencils including Faber-Castell Polychromos to achieve a beautiful muted color pallet that almost looks like it was painted on a marble wall–a very lovely effect than can be seen more closely here.

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Horse with Flowers colored by Betty Hung and Alexandra (illustration © 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

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Sabine Juergenmeier’s Horse with Flowers (illustration © 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

Last but not least I wanted to share this collection of Luna Moth colorings. Not only are there wide varieties in color scheme, but also some departures from the original Luna Moth illustration that make each one unique and attractive. The process Betty Hung used for her Luna Moth is detailed in her blog, Color Art, and is worth a visit and subscription.

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Collection of Luna Moths colored by Betty Hung, Michelle Caraway Herren, Fumiko Tsutsui, Lisa Duggan and Nateko (illustration © 2018 Susan Carlson /RubyCharmColors)

There are so many other colorings I’d love to include in this post, and so many wonderful colorists that I’d love to tip my hat to, but I’ve run out of time. I would love to do this again in a few more months, though, so keep those colorings coming, please use the #RubyCharmColors hashtag on Instagram, and please tag RubyCharmColors on Facebook.

I’d really love to see your work!

A big THANK YOU to all the colorists willing to share their work and joy of coloring with us all! Show them some love and give them a follow on Instagram!

Alexandra @addictedtocoloring

Allison Capelle @allisoncapelle

Beth Hovey @bethhovey

Betty Hung @colorartbybettyhung / https://colorart.ca

Frankie Davis @francesmarionz

Fumiko Tsutsui @fumiflying

Lisa Duggan @duggan.lisatide

Lora King @dukewife

Lucia Brown @kindacolouring

Marilyn Reading @mzreading

Michelle Caraway Herren @gizmokids

Nateko @nateko

Paula Leach @pstonecolors

Sabine Juergenmeier @sabinejuergenmeier

Sandy Kinzer @sandrafkinzer

Valencia Venter Van Zyl @valencia_van_zyl

Vanessa Black @vmblack68

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My kind of plein air

Ruby Charm Colors June 11, 2018

This post is a little off the beaten path for someone who spends her days with pencils in hand and her bum planted on a five-wheeled twirly chair in the studio. But sometimes following a new road can be provoking.

A few nights ago, my husband and I hopped on his bike and took a ride to see his sister a few hours away. We left around 2:30 in the afternoon and the weather was perfect for riding–not too hot (a heavy black leather jacket can be torture)–not too cold (said jacket might as well be made of cobwebs and tissue paper when the temps drop). It was just cloudy enough to keep the glare from the sun at bay.

We made our way though Traverse City (which during the summer months is never fun due to the explosion of tourist traffic and a string of red lights) and then headed north on a few less traveled roads that connect a smattering of tiny towns that, after winter naps, spring to life to service and entertain the summer cottagers. Farms and lake houses. Woods and fields, A visual delicacy for an artist, but it was all the smells that turned the ride into a sensory feast.

Every turn and dip and hill along the road–every change in wind speed and direction and temperature–brought a rush of different smells: honeysuckle, newly cut grass, a blast of freshly laid asphalt, lake, pasture, tilled soil, cows, BBQ, cherry blossoms, pine trees, diesel exhaust, dry meadow weeds, fish, someone’s campfire … a kaleidoscope of odorifics.

You miss all of this when you are encased in the sterile bubble of a climate-controlled car.

Being on a motorcycle, plein air, changes everything. There is no buffer, no protection. No window to peer from. No knobs to adjust the air flow. The wind is loud and in my face. My senses are heightened and I feel weightless as we pass by trees, fields and rolling hills. Fancy houses, dilapidated shacks, stores, bars, cars, tractors and semis. We glide past them all and only hear the rush of air around our helmets and the glorious hum of the boxer.

I feel secure on my seat all the while knowing I could literally fly into the air at any moment. Scrape my hands and elbows into hamburger. Never be able to draw or paint again. Maybe worse. But perhaps being on a motorcycle, mere inches from the unforgiving pavement and just one mishap away from oblivion, is a righteous and needed wake up call. We are mortal. Everything could end in a second. I turn my head and and give the tail-gaiter behind us the evil eye even though I know he can’t see my face. I try to tell him, telepathically, that I have more art to create, a young daughter to raise, a son who’ll be getting married before too long. I vow to stay on the course I recently set for myself. Reaffirm that dying with regrets about the should’ve-would’ve-could’ves is, for me, worse than living the safe, un-examined life.

Those fleeting thoughts make me feel alive and appreciative of having what I have in this world.

After stopping for dinner and then finishing off the last hour of the trip, I got off the bike, pulled that tight helmet off my head, and unzipped my jacket. I could see our dogs at the front door, excited for our return. I felt exhilarated. And after sitting at my desk an awful lot the past few weeks, I felt recharged.

Please take care this summer and always watch out for motorcycles – you never who who’s under that alien-looking helmet. Somebody’s mom, dad, best friend, son or daughter. Or maybe just a girl who loves to draw.

 

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Shih Tzu Mania – Contest Announcement!

Ruby Charm Colors June 7, 2018

To celebrate the release of a new PDF Bundle of Shih Tzu illustrations, I am running a contest on Facebook and Instagram! There will be one winner on each platform, so visit soon – contest ends Sunday, June 10, 2018 at noon ET. And you may enter on both platforms – twice the chance to win!

Click here to enter on Facebook or visit RubyCharmColors on Instagram — look for the official Shih Tzu contest post in the feed, and be sure to follow the instructions. There are only 4 steps and it should take take a few moments.

The Shih Tzu bundle started out as a challenge. One of my favorite colorists, Lora, asked if I had ever thought about drawing a Shih Tzu (she has three) … and before too long I was happily sketching this cute little dogs. With my crazy swirly twists, of course. I sent a few to Lora to try out, and she posted a lovely coloring of her rescue dog, Lilo, on Instagram and FB. She used grey paper, and it is just adorable! My sister has a rescue Shih Tzu, too, and so I had plenty of photos of the dogs to work from. I ended up with four drawings to complete the bundle on Etsy.

Check it out when you have a chance!

ShihTzuBUNDLE

 

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Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon
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Lion, Hare & Moon: Lesson Learned

Ruby Charm Colors May 16, 2018

My latest illustration for coloring, the Lion, Hare & Moon, was a learning lesson once I starting filling it with color, so I thought it might be useful to share my mistakes with those of you who use (or want to try) watercolor pencils in conjunction with regular colored pencils.

The illustration itself was inspired by wondering about our perceptions of strength and weakness, the fierce and the tame. And do we always know which is which?

After the illustration was complete (drawn on my iPadPro using the Procreate  app and an Apple pencil) I printed it on Georgia-Pacific “Image Plus” 110 card stock and pulled out my pencils. I started with the moon using a Derwent Turquoise Blue watercolor pencil to lay down a base layer. I often do this for larger spaces and use Pentel and Sakura Koi water brushes to blend the watercolor pencils. So far so good.

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

I wasn’t thinking ahead about doing a blog post about this piece until I was nearly done, but I usually try to snap a few pics of my work in progress. The lighting is a little off in the pic above (my apologies) but you can see how pale the first layer is on the moon.

I also used watercolor pencil for a base layer on the lion (Faber-Castell Albrecht Durer, Bistre), then once it dried, started working it over with colored pencils (mostly Polychromos Bistre , Burnt Ochre and Sepia, plus Prismacolor Premier Black, Light Umber, and Pumpkin Orange, Sienna Brown, then Polychromos Dark Chrome and Naples Yellow.

Once the basic colors were down in a few light layers, I used  Caran d’Ache Luminance pencils (Brown Ochre and Yellow Ochre) to blend in the body. For the mane, I used one of my favorite pencils, a Derwent Studio (Rexel Cumberland) Burnt Carmine, which has deep wine undertones. I also used a Luminance Buff Titanium pencil to work in highlights under the eyes and cheeks. I then used a Crimson Irojiten pencil (which I order individually as needed through Blick) to work in the reds I put down in the mane and the sun ray lines with Prismacolor Tuscan Red and the Derwent Burnt Carmine (see below). I probably grabbed a few other similar colors during this process as well.

The colored pencils went down quite smoothly over the Faber-Castell Bistre watercolor once it dried. Per usual, it gave my colored pencils a nice “tooth” to grab onto.

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

Next: the grass. No watercolor pencils, but a variety of Prismacolor (Kelp, Prussian, Artichoke, Moss and Olive), Luminance (Moss, Olive Yellow and Olive Brown 50%) and Polychromos (Permanent Green Olive and Chromium Green Opaque) were used in multiple layers and then I burnished the colors using Irojitens (Cactus, Lettuce, Verdi and Forest).

Because the Irojitens are harder than other pencils, they work well for burnishing since they push the pigments around and, depending on how hard you press, deeper into the fiber of the paper. This helps to get rid of the small white dots that can appear in the coloring.

I try to work in small circle to avoid streaks, but sometimes my fingers get cramped and I get anxious and more concerned about finishing an area than making sure my colors are smooth. I am sure this happens to a lot of colorists. Sometimes time is running out and you just want to finish. Or move on to the next thing.

I also get a little sloppy (especially with watercolor layers) but that’s okay. I am constantly going back to areas that need a little more work and yep, sometimes I need a break from the larger, more monotonous parts of a page (like when I was coloring the grass).

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

Here’s when one of the biggest issues came in with this piece. Once I started working on the moon with regular colored pencils, I noticed that the turquoise Derwent watercolor pencil started flaking off in spots. It was most noticeable with the darker blues. The painted pigment would come up and leave small white flecks that were really difficult to color over, blend back in, and burnish.

My fix? I used small dabs of watercolor to help fill in the white spots in the dark areas, and I also realized that once I added my gel pen embellishments at the very end, the white flecks probably wouldn’t stand out as much. And I figured small dabs of ink would work too, so I tried not to panic and overwork those darker areas. With all of the pressure I had already used, I didn’t want to risk damaging the paper.

I used Titanium Buff again (Luminance) to work in the highlighted areas and blend my lighter blues and greens together. The flaking was not as noticeable with the lighter colors, thankfully.

The lesson here is that it really does pay to test out your ideas and tools before working on a final piece–especially if you are using a brand or color combo you haven’t tried before.

In this case, I used my Derwent Watercolour which is a fairly old pencil (15 years?) and got unexpected results. It could be the age of the pencil, or it could be the pigment in this particular pencil that doesn’t like being colored over with regular colored pencils. Hard to say. I have used lots of Derwents and have not noticed this issue until now. I have an even older collection of Staedtler Aquarelle pencils that all seem to behave beautifully.

But again, the point it … unless you are certain you’ll get the results you want with whichever tools you are using (paper included), try it out first on a scrap page of the same paper. There have been many times a design colored beautifully on one type of paper, but then total crud on another.

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

As I was working on the moon, I decided to try something a little new (for me, at least). I didn’t want the the rays coming off the moon to be a solid color, or just use a gradient, so I grabbed an Indigo Irojiten and drew a paisley-like pattern in that space after very lightly coloring a layer of Prismacolor Black and Indigo closest to the edge of the moon.

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

I then used Holbein Ice Green (aren’t they just the most dreamy pencils!?!) to add small dabs of color to the shapes I drew. I didn’t take my time drawing the paisley shapes or coloring them in perfectly because I thought that if everything went as planned, it really wouldn’t matter….

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

Here’s where the fun part comes in–blending these simple little lines and shapes with the Luminance Buff Titanium pencil. I colored with lots of small, fairly hard, circular strokes to push the color around and soften up the paisley lines and shapes. I also followed up with Irojiten Eggshell and Cascade (a light aqua hue) for more blending and burnishing after this pic was taken to smooth things out even more. The overall effect looks like fabric or even batik in spots.

My wheels are turning and I’d like to experiment with this technique even more in the future.

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

Here’s where we are at so far (below and about 6 or 7 hours into it). I also added some rainbow colors to the rays, and somewhere along the way I colored in the hare. I forgot to mention that little guy! Same pencil brands, same technique using the Irojitens to burnish.

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

Here I go again saving the background for last! A few colorists on Facebook and Instagram have been chatting about this dilemma, and I really don’t know what the answer is. Sometimes I can picture the color scheme of the entire piece in my mind when I start–other times I just grab pencils and start working on a focal point.

I considered a black background for the contrast it would provide, but then thought that would be too harsh and might even obscure the lion’s mane and tips of the grass if it was too dark. So I settled on a combination of Black, Indigo and Grey. The Prismacolor Black was used in the U-shapes closest to the moon. Just a few light layers but progressively darker as I worked toward the center…

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

Then I added a few layers of Prismacolor Indigo (again layering progressively deeper toward the center and blending into the Black).

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

The layers started looking a little streaky as my fingers were cramping up again and I just wanted to get all of the blue filled. I am sure many of you can relate!

To avoid streaks, it does help to keep turning your paper so that you are not always coloring in the same direction. For this piece, though, I planned to burnish these areas and go back over them a few times so I didn’t worry about the streaks too much.

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

And that’s what I did–first with the Irojiten Indigo pencil pushing the Black and Indigo Prismacolor layers around and blending them together …

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

… and then with Irojiten Taupe. I also went over all the sky areas yet again with Pigeon Grey, which is a little lighter than Taupe, toward the outside areas.

Using Irojiten shades close to the original layers of colored pencil you put down can provide rich saturation levels and also slightly change the tint of your original layers depending on what you choose.

The Pigeon Grey gives the Indigo a nice smokey look, for example, while using Eggshell will inject a slight yellow tint into your original colors. Don’t be afraid to experiment with this if you decide to use the Irojitens the way I do. And remember that I am not a colored pencil expert–I am still learning as I go and still making mistakes!

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

Here is a quick video of blending and burnishing with the grey Irojiten over part of the sky. You can see how it really adds depth to the existing light layer of Indigo:

Once I finished the sky, I was left with the mostly blank white circle inside the moon shape. Another dilemma. I settled on trying out the soft paisley-effect again, but with a few slightly different colors including Faber-Castell Permanent Green Olive. I kept the tip of my Luminance Buff Titanium pencil fairly blunt, but again, used lots and lots of circular blending as you can see in the video below:

I did a few touch-ups in spots, but once all the colored pencil work was complete, I added a bunch of dots using Sakura Souffle gel pens (and a darker Turquoise Moolight pen). It can be tricky to work with these pens because they take a few minutes to dry and can smudge easily until then, so I usually work on a small few sections at a time and let it dry under my hot little Halogen desk lamp before moving on.

And here you go … the finished piece! Except that I just realized I never colored the stars … hmmm. For another day! I think they should be dark Indigo, yes?

Ruby Charm Colors: Lion Hare & Moon

If you would like to try this design on your own, I offer a downloadable, printable PDF through the RubyCharmColors Etsy shop as well as a bunch of other downloadable single and “bundle and save” designs, and have copies of the Artist’s Edition of my spiral-bound book if you don’t have access to a printer.

Feel free to share your questions or comments about this post and give me a follow (if you don’t already) and find some of my posts helpful.

As always, happy coloring!

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