Wednesday, 29 November 2017

I'm sure I am not the only one waiting for Christmas to finally get my hands on some Derwent Procolour! I decided now was a good time to seek advice from someone who has had a lot of experience using Procolour. Judith Selcuk has very kindly shared her experience.

Judith first explains that it takes a couple of days getting used to using Procolour. Sounds like it is time to get out the sketchbook or scraps of our favourite papers and start playing! Judith also says it is important to keep the pencils super sharp and use lots of light layers. Procolour layer better than burnish as they are quite hard. Judith uses lots of light layers like glazes. Good news for those like me who love layering colour over colour!

As a pencil Procolour come closest to Polychromos, both being quite hard. Judith tells me that they are extremely pigmented, so like the intensity of pigmentation of Prismacolor but with the consistency of Polychromos. Procolour come with a colour chart that is very well matched to the pencils. A very useful tool to tape to your desk as you learn the new colours.

Procolour are suitable for a variety of surfaces. They work particularly well on drafting film, hot pressed paper, smooth and vellum,uart 800, Pastelmat and regular laid Ingress paper.

I am sure that has whetted everyone's appetitie! Bring on Christmas!

Thursday, 23 November 2017








Head over to www.ukcps.co.uk to see our first ever online exhibition. This is a taster of the winners and highly commended. As well as these superb paintings there are lots and lots of other equally wonderful paintings to view!

Sunday, 10 September 2017

UKCPS 1st Online Exhibition 2017- Entry Form
Closing date for entries 5th November 2017
UKCPS 1st Online Exhibition 2017- Entry Form


















UKCPS 1st Online Exhibition 2017- Entry Form
UKCPS 1st Online Exhibition 2017- Entry Form
Submission is open to all members of the UK Coloured Pencil Society. The work must be original (concept, design and execution by the artist), at least 50% coloured pencil, demonstrate compositional and drawing skills, and ability to use coloured pencil. Entries must not have been shown in a previous UKCPS annual exhibition, nor been an award winner at our Regional or Keswick exhibitions.
 
All pictures entered, subject to complying with the rules, will be displayed on an Online Exhibition from 30th November 2017.
 
If you are not a member of the society and would like to take part you need to first join the society via our membership page.
 
To Enter
 
1. Ensure you have read and understood the rules.
2. You will need the following information ready when you complete the entry form:
 
  • Image file(s) in jpg format, max size 5MB.
  • File name of image to include your surname and title of picture
  • Title of picture
  • Unframed size - height x width in cm
 
Note there is a fee of £6 per picture submitted, maximum of 3 pictures per artist. Payment instructions are given on the entry form. Fees are to be used for the prize money.

Sunday, 3 September 2017

The Pencil Box is a section in Ann Kullberg's COLOR magazine dedicated in featuring artists and artworks from our Facebook partner groups. Selected artworks will be featured in the Art Showcase video or in COLOR magazine.  — Call for entry will be posted every month in participating FB groups — Only members of our partner groups are allowed to join — Open to advanced, advanced-intermediate, and expert skill levels  Please read the guidelines for more details https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B1y7UQ3-ZLBpdnZPOE1xMHZCTUE/view  Links to the blog and videos https://annkullberg.com/blogs/ann-muses/the-pencil-box-featured-artists-august-2017 https://www.facebook.com/COLORmag/videos/1385354694894597/ https://www.facebook.com/COLORmag/videos/1385362608227139/
The Pencil Box is a section in Ann Kullberg's COLOR magazine dedicated in featuring artists and artworks from our Facebook partner groups. Selected artworks will be featured in the Art Showcase video or in COLOR magazine.  — Call for entry will be posted every month in participating FB groups — Only members of our partner groups are allowed to join — Open to advanced, advanced-intermediate, and expert skill levels  Please read the guidelines for more details https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B1y7UQ3-ZLBpdnZPOE1xMHZCTUE/view  Links to the blog and videos https://annkullberg.com/blogs/ann-muses/the-pencil-box-featured-artists-august-2017 https://www.facebook.com/COLORmag/videos/1385354694894597/ https://www.facebook.com/COLORmag/videos/1385362608227139/

Wednesday, 30 August 2017

International Open Exhibition 2018

An extra blog this week to bring everyone up to date!
The UKCPS International Open 2018 will take place at a new venue:
The Arts House
14 Rother Street
Stratford upon Avon
CV376LU

The hand in day and Private View will be on 1st May. The exhibition will be open from 2nd May to 11th May. The pick up for pictures will also be 11th May.

We are looking for stewards for the exhibition, all members are welcome, it is a great opportunity to meet other colour pencil artists and see the demonstrations taking place.

We are also looking for demonstrators. This is the perfect opportunity to meet the public and profile your own work along with the society.

The beauty of the new venue is that there is also space for workshops. With only eleven days available, please book your workshop in early!

Sunday, 27 August 2017


Mulling over the advice that Malcolm gave us in the last blog entry, I have been wondering what advice I would give to newcomers to colour pencil. I think the advice I would give would be to invest in a sketch book. Your sketchbook becomes your best friend as an artist. You hang out together and play with new media and different ideas, try markmaking and colour mixing, experiment with approaches to different textures . Like your best friend, it also helps you solve problems you come across.

 As Malcolm pointed out, it needs to have good quality paper. My most recent one was a Daler Rowney and the paper was 150g/m. It is a very smooth paper, lovely for graphite and ok with Polychromos pencils, but easily clogged when layering with wax based pencils. I got around the problem by using off- cuts of other papers and sticking them in my sketch book. This time around I have upgraded to a Strathmore journal, more expensive but better paper. As you will already know, colour pencils take time and patience, as a result, you don't need a large sketchbook as you will be probably trying things out on a small scale. An A5 book is probably plenty big enough and easy to carry around with you when you want to go out drawing. Your sketchbook is the perfect place to put into practice the advice and ideas you find along the way. It's private and nowhere near as intimidating as that new sheet of expensive paper waiting for your next drawing!

Remember too, that those colour pencil artist you admire did not achieve those results over night. There was a lot of learning, playing and mistake making going on, and a lot of that happened, and no doubt still happens, in the privacy of their sketchbook.

 


An example from my own sketchbook showing experiments with colour mixing, graphite and colour pencil drawing from life.

 

Monday, 14 August 2017


The UKCPS Blog is taking a slight change in direction and for the next few months we will be sharing hints and tips for using colour pencils provided by long standing users of the medium. It may be that some advice gets repeated, but that will just show how important it is. The aim is to provide support for newcomers to the medium, but I am sure we can all learn something new and I, for one, am looking forward to seeing what people have to say.

 

The first person to share their expertise is Malcolm Cudmore. Malcolm's first advice is to buy fewer pencils but better paper. I think we are all junkies when it comes to colour pencils, forever finding room for just another set! Well, we all need to know which pencils suit us best, but buying a few loose stock to test would probably save us a fortune, which we can then invest in quality paper, which is Malcolm's next  advice. The paper we use can make all the difference  to colour pencil, and different pencils and techniques require different papers, so there is no easy answer to which paper to use. Follow your favourite colour pencil artists. Most colour pencil sites on social media require artists to list both pencils and paper used, so this can give you an idea of which papers to try. It is trial and error though to find the best one for you. Although good paper isn't cheap, it is a good investment.

Malcolm also advises that light value is more important than colour. Try half closing your eyes to identify tonal contrasts. Remember also to keep shadows consistent over patterned areas.

Another piece of advice is to work in muliple, light layers. The further from the point you hold your pencil, the lighter the layers will be. For me, mixing layer on layer of colours to achieve the colour I want is one of the joys of colour pencil.

When working from a photograph, don't stress over replicating the surface of the photo, concentrate on the appearance of the subject depicted in it. At the end of the day, people will see your drawing, not the photograph.

Finally, Malcolm advises drawing from life whenever possible.  Useful advice for a medium that often leads to artists being reliant on reference photos. Regular drawing from life improves your ability to see and understand the world around you. For those new to drawing, don't worry, it needn't be an ordeal. Start small, a twist of paper,a  half tied ribbon, a few grapes. Start with line drawings of the same object from different angles. Fill a page with studies so each drawing is less precious. Don't worry about creating great art but try to understand the object in front of you. As your confidence grows you can become more ambitious with your subject matter.

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