I have always thought that if I was going to be a bird I would be a red tailed hawk because when I see them they take my breath away, they are my favorite feathered friend here in East Dallas. With that said, today while listening to NPR I discovered a bird that I may truly have the most kinship to and that is the male Bower Bird. He is an artist and an interior decorator. Although their distribution is centered on the tropical regions of New
Guinea and northern Australia, some species extend into central,
western, and southeastern Australia. They occupy a range of different
habitats, including rain forest, eucalyptus and acacia forest, and shrub lands.
The male bower bird decorates his bower with brightly colored found objects that range from natural berries to plastic toys and bottle caps. He arranges them all meticulously to attract the female. He even understands perspective and will in fact arrange objects in a way to make himself appear larger. They arrange objects in the bower's court area from smallest to largest, creating a forced perspective
which holds the attention of the female for longer. Males with objects
arranged in a way that have a strong optical illusion are likely to have
higher mating success.When you go in and move the items around he will return to his bower and put things back in their proper place.
I love this bird ... he looks like a natural mosaic artist to me ... finding bits and pieces and placing them thoughtfully in the perfect spot. He often will work in one color scheme.
Here is a video that shows a Bower Bird in action:
You might also want to check out Tim Laman's amazing photos of Bower Birds and their decor.
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Monday, March 17, 2014
Mosaic Monday / Xerces Blue Beta An Artificial Pollinator
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| Xerces Blue Beta / An Artificial Pollinator Work In Progress © rebecca collins |
You can see more of this project and hear my thoughts on it by watching the video below.
Friday, March 14, 2014
Robot Invasion Workshop
Robot Collage Class
Materials : Recycled packaging, metal eyelets, cardboard, spray paint, metal washers, found objects, gems, glue.
Yesterday I taught a class over at Pigment School of the Arts here in Dallas. It was a kid's workshop and I had 5 students that varied in age. We had a lot of fun and I was very impressed with all of the creativity and imagination these young artists demonstrated. The kids were all a breeze to work with, they were each very focused and enthusiastic. Here is a real quick little slideshow I created with some cell phone pics of our projects. My assistant Brittany and I did a couple that you will also see in here as samples ...
Below are just a few things I learned yesterday about working with young artists:
• Younger hands are not as strong as mine and simple tools like a hole puncher may be difficult on sturdier card stock and cardboard.
• A little conversation and asking questions before you start creating can stir the imagination and ideas will emerge easily for them. We talked about Robots a little and what types of jobs they do ... even what types of hobbies they may have.
• Kids use a lot of glue when making collages. I told them to use a lot to get things to stick and boy they did! I had plenty, and I am glad I took the big jug of weldbond.
• I took some acrylic sleeves for them to place their finished projects in ... the same sleeves we send our little 8 x 10 Etsy prints out in ... the sleeves were a big hit! Giving my students a way to neatly protect their finished works gave them additional pride in their creations and taught them at an early age about presentation.
• I should have taken my good camera to get decent photographs of all of the projects. My cell phone pics captured the day, but the image quality does not do justice to their terrific Robot collages.
Materials : Recycled packaging, metal eyelets, cardboard, spray paint, metal washers, found objects, gems, glue.
Yesterday I taught a class over at Pigment School of the Arts here in Dallas. It was a kid's workshop and I had 5 students that varied in age. We had a lot of fun and I was very impressed with all of the creativity and imagination these young artists demonstrated. The kids were all a breeze to work with, they were each very focused and enthusiastic. Here is a real quick little slideshow I created with some cell phone pics of our projects. My assistant Brittany and I did a couple that you will also see in here as samples ...
Below are just a few things I learned yesterday about working with young artists:
• Younger hands are not as strong as mine and simple tools like a hole puncher may be difficult on sturdier card stock and cardboard.
• A little conversation and asking questions before you start creating can stir the imagination and ideas will emerge easily for them. We talked about Robots a little and what types of jobs they do ... even what types of hobbies they may have.
• Kids use a lot of glue when making collages. I told them to use a lot to get things to stick and boy they did! I had plenty, and I am glad I took the big jug of weldbond.
• I took some acrylic sleeves for them to place their finished projects in ... the same sleeves we send our little 8 x 10 Etsy prints out in ... the sleeves were a big hit! Giving my students a way to neatly protect their finished works gave them additional pride in their creations and taught them at an early age about presentation.
• I should have taken my good camera to get decent photographs of all of the projects. My cell phone pics captured the day, but the image quality does not do justice to their terrific Robot collages.
Tuesday, March 04, 2014
Jade The Cow Dog is Hungry
I am just about caught up with orders. I am currently fine tuning Jade for a terrific repeat client in Australia. I have one more project to do for her and then I will be totally caught up with commissions from Feb. I did hear from a nice gentleman this morning that may send in a Golden Retriever for me to play with. I hope he does, I have not done many retrievers yet this year and I love their strong lines.
Below are a few proofing samples of Jade. My client wanted to see more green options in the backgrounds to match up well with her kitchen. I went a little crazy and gave her 20 new options to choose from. I usually do not go overboard like that on revisions as it can often just make the approval process tougher, making it very hard for clients to choose. I love Sarah though, she always gives me great photos to play with and she is pretty good at knowing her favorites and drilling down to what she likes best. All 20 revision proofs can be found on my proofing site.
Oh ... and yes it is pretty wonderful and appropriate that this food bowl portrait will grace her kitchen walls ... pet people are really the best you know. I do love it when folks send me pics that tell a story!
Below are a few proofing samples of Jade. My client wanted to see more green options in the backgrounds to match up well with her kitchen. I went a little crazy and gave her 20 new options to choose from. I usually do not go overboard like that on revisions as it can often just make the approval process tougher, making it very hard for clients to choose. I love Sarah though, she always gives me great photos to play with and she is pretty good at knowing her favorites and drilling down to what she likes best. All 20 revision proofs can be found on my proofing site.
Oh ... and yes it is pretty wonderful and appropriate that this food bowl portrait will grace her kitchen walls ... pet people are really the best you know. I do love it when folks send me pics that tell a story!
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| "Jade With Food Bowl" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Jade With Food Bowl" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Jade With Food Bowl" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Jade With Food Bowl" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Art Paw Proofing Archives
Today I am browsing through old client proofs to get ready for Terrier month in March on my Facebook fan page. I started using Smug Mug way back in 2008 as a proofing platform for my clients.
I just looked at my image upload totals and discovered that
I have uploaded 20,787 proofs to Smug Mug in the last 6 years. That does not mean I have had that many clients, keep in mind each single client gets around 10 to 14 colorful proofing samples to choose from. Still, that is a lot of work to be proud of I would say.
In looking over my past pet portrait projects I enjoy seeing how my digital painting style changes and evolves over time. Some months I experiment a lot with different new backgrounds, sometimes I use color turned up all the way until it screams and other times I am more tame in my approach.
Below are just a few old favorites.
Beast had some very bright and bold background options.
Sunny is one of my all time favorite Boston Terriers. This image is on a postcard and is also for sell at my Etsy shop.
I just looked at my image upload totals and discovered that
I have uploaded 20,787 proofs to Smug Mug in the last 6 years. That does not mean I have had that many clients, keep in mind each single client gets around 10 to 14 colorful proofing samples to choose from. Still, that is a lot of work to be proud of I would say.
In looking over my past pet portrait projects I enjoy seeing how my digital painting style changes and evolves over time. Some months I experiment a lot with different new backgrounds, sometimes I use color turned up all the way until it screams and other times I am more tame in my approach.
Below are just a few old favorites.
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| "Beast" 2009 © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Beast" 2009 © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Angus" 2008 © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Sunny" 2008 © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
Monday, February 17, 2014
Mosaic Monday / Flower Workshop
On Saturday I took a terrific workshop at the Dallas Creative Arts Center from Katrina Doran called Petite Fleurs: Bejeweled Mosaic Flowers.
I had so much fun and it was just the jump start I needed to get my hands busy with mosaic again. I added screws and washers to my flower making it a wee bit mechanical looking. I hope to eventually place it in the hand of a large 3-d mosaic Robot that I am working on.
We worked with a 2 part epoxy clay that dries rock hard and so there was no wet thinset, no grout ... and no stress. We worked largely with beads and jewels so there was very little cutting involved. If you think you might be interested in taking Katrina's next Petite Fleur workshop it is offered in May at the Dallas Arboretum. Katrina can also be hired to work with your own private group in your residential or commercial setting, you can contact her through her website Doranstudiomosaics.com.
Back in 2010 Katrina worked with several of her students creating very large flower mosaics for the Texas State Fair and this workshop is her brain child that sprung out of that experience. She creates petite, medium and large flower sculptures and she is working on a book that will outline the process so she can share her knowledge with more mosaic artists. Each of the 3 different sized flowers are created with different armature techniques that she engineered herself and each has a different level of difficulty. I would love to do a medium sized flower next. I never thought I would want to tackle a huge flower but after doing a small one who knows, maybe my confidence on the 3-D work will bloom some day.
I had so much fun and it was just the jump start I needed to get my hands busy with mosaic again. I added screws and washers to my flower making it a wee bit mechanical looking. I hope to eventually place it in the hand of a large 3-d mosaic Robot that I am working on.
We worked with a 2 part epoxy clay that dries rock hard and so there was no wet thinset, no grout ... and no stress. We worked largely with beads and jewels so there was very little cutting involved. If you think you might be interested in taking Katrina's next Petite Fleur workshop it is offered in May at the Dallas Arboretum. Katrina can also be hired to work with your own private group in your residential or commercial setting, you can contact her through her website Doranstudiomosaics.com.
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| We made our flower forms from scratch. |
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| Flower Mosaic Rebecca Collins |
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| Flower Backside Rebecca Collins |
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| Flower Mosaic work in progress Rebecca Collins |
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| Flower Substrate work in progress Rebecca Morgan |
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| Flower Mosaic work in progress Rebecca Morgan
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Back in 2010 Katrina worked with several of her students creating very large flower mosaics for the Texas State Fair and this workshop is her brain child that sprung out of that experience. She creates petite, medium and large flower sculptures and she is working on a book that will outline the process so she can share her knowledge with more mosaic artists. Each of the 3 different sized flowers are created with different armature techniques that she engineered herself and each has a different level of difficulty. I would love to do a medium sized flower next. I never thought I would want to tackle a huge flower but after doing a small one who knows, maybe my confidence on the 3-D work will bloom some day.
Friday, February 14, 2014
My Funny Valentine
Today I want to share photos and artwork of my sweet girl Pixel ... ( our Pickle). Back in Feb. of 2006 we adopted this sweet Scottie girl and she was a Valentine's present. She was rather aloof and stand offish for a very long time and so I like to think of her as my funny Valentine. We really adore her and I am proud to say we have won her heart over.
The Value Of Teething
Big girl teeth are in!
Splinters rain on the carpet
No hiding antiques
Haiku by Dan Collins
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| "Pixel Chiffon Pie" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
| "Please Don't Eat The Daisies" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Winter Pup" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
| Pixel Chewing |
Big girl teeth are in!
Splinters rain on the carpet
No hiding antiques
Haiku by Dan Collins
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Recent Dog Portraits
Below are a couple of recent pet portrait projects that have shipped.
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| "Trudy" 16 x 20 on stretched canvas © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Jo & Red" "Trudy" 18 x 18 on stretched canvas © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
Friday, February 07, 2014
Who Let The Dogs Out?
Hey local Dallas dog lovers ... do you have cabin fever yet from all this snow? Well the good news is that it will be in the upper 50's tomorrow and that means that it will be perfect weather to drop by the Lot in East Dallas to celebrate the opening of their dog lot and take a peek at my art on their walls!
I will be there from noon to 5:00 pm handing out postcards and canvas bookmarks. Come see me and have a bite at the Lot!
The East Lake Pet Orphanage will be there so come on by and support animal rescue and animal art all at the same time.
I will be there from noon to 5:00 pm handing out postcards and canvas bookmarks. Come see me and have a bite at the Lot!
The East Lake Pet Orphanage will be there so come on by and support animal rescue and animal art all at the same time.
Enjoy food and refreshments for you and your furry friend. What could be better?
The LOT
7530 E Grand Ave
Dallas, TX 75214
Tuesday, February 04, 2014
Drawing Exercises
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| "3 Figures" © Dan Collins |
We both enjoyed this 25 minute exercise. I found an image of Einstein and turned it upside down, set it to full screen on Dan's imac and we drew the image upside down, not knowing until we were done and flipped our drawings around just what we had.
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| Our upside down drawings |
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| "Einstein" Left: Rebecca's drawing Right: Dan's drawing |
If you ever have the chance to take a drawing class from Susan Giller at the Creative Arts center I highly recommend it. Susan is a terrific teacher, she is encouraging yet challenging. At the end of the day it is not about creating pretty pictures of nudes, it is about learning to see and I realized with my first class that I have gotten very lazy about really seeing. If you are not able to take a course and want to learn to draw I do suggest you pick up a copy of Betty Edwards' book Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain
Friday, January 31, 2014
Raining English Bulldogs
Bulldogs, Bulldogs, Bulldogs!
Here at the end of the month it seems be raining English Bulldogs and you will not find me complaining about that. I love working on this wonderful breed.Notice in this first sample of Lulla Bell how her eyes droop just wee bit in the original photo. That is a normal thing with Basset Hounds and many other pups like the Bulldogs as they age. As an artist I always want to flatter my subjects without totally altering any normal breed characteristics. In this case I used the liquify tool to slightly reduce that droop just a tiny bit without eliminating it. Then I added in a white highlight for sparkle. If you compare the eyes in all of these before and after shots I think you will find that each pup ended up with a little more brightness and twinkle in their digital paintings.
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| "Lulla Bell" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Rainger" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Samson" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
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| "Ashley's Pup" © rebecca collins / artpaw.com |
Friday, January 24, 2014
Pet Portrait Business Models
Pet Portrait Business Models/ One Size Fits All?
Today I had lunch with one of my Photoshop students. She offered to buy me lunch if she could pick my brain a wee bit about getting started in the world of pet portraiture and the ins and outs of commission work. We had a great conversation and hopefully I was able to give her some good advice and direction. She already seems to have a very good handle on things and I know she will do great.Whenever I help someone or teach something I always walk away learning a lot myself. Today in asking a lot of questions I realized that there is no one size fits all formula when designing a business model for anything and it is especially true with art. My student and friend really wants to approach her adventure, initially anyway, as more of a part time job and she is not really concerned with earning a full time income from her portrait work. Her business model will end up looking a bit different from mine. I try hard to put in 40 hours a week, it does not always happen, but that is usually the goal. In my earlier years it was much more like 60 hours per week. That brings me to another point ... a business model is never set in stone. What worked for me at the age of 36 may not be the same as what is working for me today and what will work for me way down the road when I am 60 or 70 or 80. I do not plan to ever retire and yet I do not want to be working 40 hours a week for the rest of my days.
So How to Design the Perfect Art Business Model?
I think the first place to start is to identify your goals. Again, these goals can change. If you want to create a business that will serve as a full time income you need to do the math before you do anything. How many pet portraits do you need to create each month at what price point and can you even work fast enough to do that? Say you have production down and you can paint relatively fast, well can you market yourself and get the orders you need in order to buy groceries? Often you will never know the answers to these questions until you try, but these are all questions that you need to consider. I was two or three years into my own adventure with Art Paw before I started asking myself these questions, and yet I figured it out.Nitty Gritty Details?
What about accounting, copyrights, web design, credit card processing and so on. Well the good news is most of the information you need to run a business, any business is on-line and free info. You just have to start googling.Shop Other Artists ... Then do your own thing.
This is a very important point. It is only natural to want to see what other pet portrait artists do about proofing, about delivery turn around times, and yes about pricing. Do your research, take your notes, and then create a business model that makes sense for you and for your unique lifestyle. An oil painter that creates canvas portraits that are 4 feet wide by 6 feet tall is going to have a very different looking business model than a watercolor painter that is creating small 5 x 7 paintings. As a digital artist my way of working and taking care of my clients is going to be different from both and yet there are common things we all share, and business practices that are just good common sense.
My next Photoshop Class is April 12th & 13th here in Dallas. E-mail me if you are interested in pushing pixels with us ( my e-mail: artpaw.com@gmail.com) .
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Tutorial Thursday/ Clone Stamp tool
Going to try and get back to posting tips and tutorials for other artists on Thursdays. Today I am sharing my trick for dealing with over exposed areas on your client photographs. I am using the clone stamp tool in Photoshop to fill in blown out areas.
The clone stamp tool, (sometimes called the rubber stamp tool) is a terrific and often over used tool in the Photoshop arsenal. When you are new to PS you can find yourself reaching for it to fix every problem that comes your way. Much of my painterly style work involves the smudge tool and so often a simple swipe of the smudge tool will obliterate small hickies. When you have a large overexposed area however, nothing beats the clone stamp tool for adding in some texture and color.
If you enjoy the video please post a comment and let me know. Thanks for watching!
The clone stamp tool, (sometimes called the rubber stamp tool) is a terrific and often over used tool in the Photoshop arsenal. When you are new to PS you can find yourself reaching for it to fix every problem that comes your way. Much of my painterly style work involves the smudge tool and so often a simple swipe of the smudge tool will obliterate small hickies. When you have a large overexposed area however, nothing beats the clone stamp tool for adding in some texture and color.
If you enjoy the video please post a comment and let me know. Thanks for watching!
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Metal Parts For Mosaics
The cool thing about doing Mosaics, and specifically Robot themed mosaics ... is that people will give you the oddest metal bits and pieces. In the last week I have received machine parts from both a student and from one of my teachers. I do love my life and my friends.
I am so eager to start a new Robot Mosaic very soon.
Below is "B1", Ithink I am on B30 by now.
I am so eager to start a new Robot Mosaic very soon.
Below is "B1", Ithink I am on B30 by now.
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| "B1" © rebecca collins for purchase at Etsy |
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