Today went well... as far as working on Moose In Boots! But again, this is about all I did. Here is page 6
Here is the concept drawing from 16 years ago.
A few process pictures that might be slightly meaningful. This was the very first color I added. The rocks were fun. They just got blotches of gray, purple, and green. Then I worked with them later to create the rock shapes.
At that point I could "see" enough of the picture to know that I didn't like how it looked as it the landscape just falls off to nothing beyond the rocks. Lots of northwoods landscapes do fall away steeply, but there is usually a low area in the distance. I thought about just taking a chance on putting in the color. But by then, I'd invested a lot of time in the rocks and trees already, and I didn't want to ruin it if that didn't look good. So I painted a strip of ordinary paper, cut it out and laid it in to see how it looked. Yes! Much better. I knew I dared add a distant layer of color.
This is also possibly interesting. I wanted to be sure the hemlock bark was going to look OK. First I tried a couple of sample trunks on the scrap page on the left. The top one is too dark, but I was happy with the bottom one. The strip on the right is part of the actual page, but before I added the shading. Looks kinda weird, right! But I think the final tree looks good.
Have you noticed that I've been trying to add in plants that belong? Page 1 has marsh marigolds. Page 3 has Canada anemone and pink ladies' slipper. This page has bunchberry (ground dogwood). The trees on this page are a baby white pine, the tall and small hemlock, and a maple tree.
As I said, I didn't do much else. I feel good about finally getting serious about this book, but I also know I should be doing some other things too.
![]() | See Moose In Boots - page 5 |






I really enjoy seeing your process.
ReplyDelete