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Group One
In & Out of Studio 3D
Friday, 20 July 2018
Lettering Is Good For The Soul
Topic: Bible Journaling

Another week of lettering tutorials is in the books. The font I taught has the appearance of being very simple but it does have a few tricks up the sleeve.

SOUL FONT – DAY 1 – FONT INTRO

The font we are learning this week is all about the rules – or maybe ‘about the ruler’. Since it is such a precise font and the spirit of the lettering is dependent on sharp, consistent form we are going to start out there instead of just jumping into writing a word.

First, the guidelines. You’re going to want paper that has some kind of unit for you to follow. I used dot grid but you would do as well with graph paper or a narrow-rule lined paper. First line to pencil is your baseline. The x-height is one unit above this. The ascender/caps line is an additional 2.5 units above this (3.5 units above the base line). The descender line is 1 1/3 units below the base line. SEE THE FIRST LINE ON THE ILLUSTRATION FOR REFERENCE.

Next, we address the letter widths. With some exceptions which will become apparent when we see the full alphabet, letter width of lower-case letters are about 1 unit wide and upper-case about 1.5 wide. THIS IS SHOWN ON THE SECOND LINE IN THE ILLUSTRATION.

Now, for working methods. Note on LINE THREE IN THE ILLUSTRATION it is important to sketch each letter in pencil. Don’t go with your first marks necessarily but make little corrections to the form until it is just right. Ink over the final lines and then erase your pencil. You end up with perfect lettering!

And, finally, there is one special letter that takes a few extra steps to get just right. So, IN THE BOXED AREA ON THE ILLUSTRATION take note of the correct formation of the letter S. Sketch an O, make tick marks as indicated, trace from tick to tick and cross over on the x-height guideline, and erase the pencil.

READY FOR SOME LETTERING NOW?

The focus word this week is SOUL. Write it out in various upper/lower-case versions. You can also practice some of the letters used in the instructional portion since this word only has four letters to play with. None of the letters on today’s page have descenders, so we’ll see those in the full alphabet lesson tomorrow.


SOUL FONT – DAY 2 – ALPHABET

This alphabet is based on a free font called SmallTall. I added a set of numbers without referencing the original font so those are mine entirely.

Note that straight letters have a set of half-serifs to define the top and/or bottom. Exceptions are the capital ‘I’ with full serifs, the capital ‘T’ with none and the ‘Z’ with none. Curved letters do not have serifs for the most part. Exceptions on the foot of the ‘h, m, n’ and the top of the ‘g, j, u, y’. there are few descenders. Two are extensions of the straight line with a half-serif like the ‘p, q’ and the remaining three are matching gentle curves with no serif. These are ‘g, j, y’. So only 5 descenders in total.

I threw in a reminder on forming the ‘S’ so you wouldn’t have to keep referring back to page one. Note that the lower-case ‘s’ can be formed the same way. Its internal crossbar is straight across rather than a curve or slant like one would normally write.

Now, go forth and letter. It’s good for your SOUL!


SOUL FONT – DAY 3 – QUOTE OR LYRICS

I used lyrics from the song ‘Anchor’ by Hillsong for a practice sheet today. When you write out a long block of text it looks better to capitalize every word. I use all caps for key words.

You can see I used a version of this font for my reference though I condensed the height of the upper-case letters. This makes it blend in but not compete with the main text.

Practice your lettering with a quote, song lyrics or poem relating to the SOUL and share your work in the Photo Album.


SOUL FONT – DAY 4 – SCRIPTURE WRITING

Today we move into using our font for a scripture on practice paper.

I spread out the lettering on my page and used a winding rope to provide a flowing guide for the reader.

***Want to make your own rope? In pencil, sketch a looping curvy line. Add a second line beside it, making the lines equidistant all the way down. Skip the areas where the rope crosses letters. Use a very fine-line pen to make broken, dotted and dashed lines down each side (stop when you come to a cross-over and pick up on the other side of it then after the loop when you come to the cross-over continue on through it – now the rope crosses itself). With the same fine-line pen, make angled hashmarks along the length, again skipping around the letters and the back side of the crossovers. Keep the angle consistent, turning your paper as necessary to do so. Erase your pencil and color lightly with brown.***

Whether you add rope or not, letter a scripture on practice paper and share your work with us in the photo album for Lettering Lodge.

 

SOUL FONT – DAY 5 – IN YOUR BIBLE

This is the day we use our newly-learned font in our Bibles. I really wanted to use the same verse as yesterday with a drawing of an anchor but I already had done that in my Bible. So, I switched up for Psalm 119:81 and illustrated with an open book (Bible today) and a scroll (Bible in David’s time).

This font eats up a lot of vertical space so you might have to mix in a more compact font to supplement it. I did that at the bottom.


I think I will use this font a lot as it is a style with versatility. In face, I already used it on one of the watercolors I did this week (blue bottle).

When I was writing this lesson I started out to do the focus word 'anchor'. Then I discovered there were not very many scriptures with that word that were something that I would want to journal. That's when I changed it to Soul based on some of the samples I had already done.

Here is the original introduction:


Off to do more artwork. What shall I work on next????

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 8:09 PM PDT
World Watercolor Month - Bible Journaling Style - episode 5
Topic: Painting

Seems these entries are coming one on top of another. I'm doing two a day still as I have something coming up at the end of the month and don't want to be caught short.

Day 18 - Prompt: SCALE

I decided to go with fish scales for this prompt and painted the 5 loaves and 2 fish. I just by chance happened upon the scripture in Job 5:9


Day 19 - Prompt: PATIENT

I painted this one from a picture found on Pinterest and I've decided I want this place for my very own.


Day 20 - Prompt: WARM

Warm colors; warm sand; warm tropical air - yes please


Day 21 - Prompt: STRETCH

I've been seeing other people try a technique for painting galaxies that uses rubbing alcohol sprayed on wet watercolor paint. I took it up a notch by sprinkling with table salt after it was partially dry.


I am having SO much fun getting back into watercolor painting and trying out new techniques to get the result I want on each one.

Ddd

 

 

 

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 7:43 PM PDT
Wednesday, 18 July 2018
Lettering for Eternity
Topic: Bible Journaling

It was my turn to teach a lettering lesson last week on the Facebook group Creative Bible Journaling. Here's a recap:

DAY 1

This week we’ll be working with an elegant semi-script. That is, it is script formed letters but they are not connected to one another like true cursive.

The lower-cases are unusually small in comparison to the upper-case letters. The upper case may break the plane of the baseline and some descenders may unexpectedly break the plane of the standard descender line (see the t and the l). We’ll look more at the scale issues tomorrow when we see the full alphabet, but for now It’s a matter of keeping the letters/words looking flowing.

The ‘t’ is my favorite letter of this style and reminds me of the cross. It was for this reason that I called this font ‘Eternity’.

You may want to practice with the letters widely spaced like the first line in the sample AND compressed like the third line.

DAY 2

I drew guidelines for my alphabet to get all the letter heights just so since this will be a reference sheet for further use of the font.

This free-flowing semi-script is not very impressive in the mixed case alphabet page, but it really rocks when you start writing out words and phrases with it.

My favorite letters : t, s, Z and E.

DAY 3

I drew guidelines on plain paper to write out synonyms for Eternal and Eternity and erased the guides along with the pencil drafts of the letters after inking the words.

I used capitals on every word to get some practice on their forms as well. I’m not fond of this alphabet when written in all caps so I did not include any of those.

See what I mean about the elegance of writing in this font? Be sure to let those ‘t’s just go wild!

DAY 4

I love finding hymns and choruses that are direct quotes of scripture! We sing this one in church all the time and now I know where to find it in my Bible!

I did this page with the drawn guidelines on plain paper like yesterday and, again, used caps on all the words. I used my previously mentioned method of centering when tracing the text onto a clean sheet of paper.

DAY 5

With the lines alongside the text in my journaling Bible I got away with only drawing one guideline for each line of text. The top, center and bottom were already in place so I just had to mark the guide for the lower-case baseline – a little less than halfway between the two lines of the bottom half.


For the illustration I borrowed from this image found on Pinterest. It has been pinned so many times I can’t find the original poster so have no way to attribute it.

This current week I am teaching again so there'll be another set of lessons up for that.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 5:26 PM PDT
World Watercolor Month - Bible Journaling Style - episode 4
Topic: Painting

Now that I'm back from my short vacation it is time to catch up with the watercolor paintings for World Watercolor Month. I actually did the sketches for these while I was away so it was quicker to get on track here at home.

Day 15 - Prompt: REPEAT

I used a glitter gel pen over the top of my lettering. The wings and tops of the heads got a line of glitter as well for some shine.


Day 16 - Prompt: GENEROUS

I started out with the concept "if you as fathers know how to give good gifts to your children..." but when I had the gifts done I switched it up to represent giving to others.


Day 17 - Prompt: BLUE

I love this scripture and felt the theme of 'blue' represented sadness and heartache that led to tears. So I used my own hand as a model for one pouring tears into a blue bottle.

Challenge to paint daily with watercolors continues wo the end of the month.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 5:00 PM PDT
Tuesday, 10 July 2018
World Watercolor Month - Bible Journaling Style - episode 3
Topic: Painting

I found I was not going to have time to paint for a few days this month so I've beed doubling up and doing two a day for a few days to bank the paintings. I realize that kind of defeats the 'paint every day' spirit of the challenge but at the end of the month I will still have 31 paintings, so I'm good with that.

I had a bunch of watercolor papers that I had gotten as sample packs from two vendors years and years ago (maybe 20?). So I've been cutting them down into the 5x7 size I've been using for this series. Some are thick, soe thin, some smooth, some textured, some have sizing and some do not. I just grab whatever is on the top of the pile and figure out the best way to paint on that particular paper as I go.

Day 7 -  Prompt: PINK

Well, I think I got the 'pink' theme down well enough. The flowers are a rubber stamp imprinted with a very light ink. This technique is called no-line watercolor because the stamp ink disappears into the water and paint.


Day 8 - Prompt: SWEET

The background of this is made with bubble wrap! You wet the paper, put waterbased stamp ink on the bubble wrap and press it to the paper. It spreads out into the wet paper. I brushed over it with very light watercolor paint to blend and let it dry then drew in the honeycomb lines. More paint went over the background areas. I used a glue stick to adhere flecks of gold foil randomly and painted two bees.


Day 9 - Prompt: LIGHT

Not my favorite but I ran out of ideas on how to make it look like I wanted. In case you can't tell, it is supposed to be a shaft of light coming from between dark clouds.


Day 10 - Prompt: CLEAR

The three big challenges I've always had with painting are 'metal', 'water' and 'glass'. I do believe this is the first time I have had success in painting glass!


Day 11 - Prompt: ROW

The very next day I had a success at painting water! Woo Hoo! Two in a row.


Day 12 - Prompt: ELEGANT

If you've been around long at all, you'll probably recognize this hummingbird as my handcarved rubber stamp. I added stamped magnolia blooms and then had to draw in a couple to fill in. This was done in the style of no-line watercolor.


Day 13 - Prompt: DOOR

Well, look here! I've successfully painted metal. My big three bugaboos can go hang out somewhere else. I can do this! Now 'shiny' metal may be an entirely different story.


Day 14 - Prompt: STRONG

I took the prompt and added 'COFFEE' to it! Although this illustration looks like a rubber stampI actually hand drew the whole thing from scratch and used the watercolors to bring it to life.


Not quite halfway through the assignment. I'll do a couple more and then take a break for my other scheduled activity before posting.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 10:54 PM PDT
Friday, 6 July 2018
World Watercolor Month - Bible Journaling Style - episode 2
Topic: Painting

I have another three waterolor paintings completed for this challenge. Still finding it a challenge to figure out what to paint. After that part the painting has been easy so far.

Day 4 - Prompt LOYAL

I didn't use a scripture on this card, but a quote.


Day 5 - Prompt CIRCLE

The roses on this card are my own handcarved rubber stamp. The lettering is gold gel pen.


Day 6 - Prompt YOUNG

I went with sprouts as my reference to the prompt. I can listen to one disc of an audiobook while painting one card.


Postings will continue every few days.

Ddd

 

 


 

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 7:54 PM PDT
Lettering to Rock With
Topic: Bible Journaling

The lettering lesson from Ann this week (CBJ - Creative Bible Journaling Facebook group) was a great adventure through creating letters out of rocks! Ann's lesson was more basic lettering but I boosted mine up to the next level by adding little features and shading to make them more stone-like.

Day 1 - introduction to the style


Day 2 - the full alphabet


Day 3 - a hymn with the focus word


Day 4 - a scripture in my journal


Day 5 - the font used in my Bible


I won't have a separate post for the Drawing Room lesson this week as I used the lesson (How to Draw Mountains) on this same Bible page.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 12:09 PM PDT
Tuesday, 3 July 2018
World Watercolor Month - Bible Journaling Style
Topic: Painting

I signed on to a challenge to do watercolor painting every day for the month of July. A whole three days and I'm still on track! We'll see how long that lasts while I have some time away on a couple of weekends.

So far, I think the biggest challenge has been coming up with bible ideas related to the word prompts.

Day 1 - Prompt STAR

I went with a night sky in which I used salt to create random white spaces. After this was dry, I brushed away the salt and added little yellow dots to many of these spaces for stars.


After painting a grassy field to do the lettering on, I added gold glittery gel pen to just a few of the yellow dots.


Day 2 - Prompt VISION

I used my own glasses as a model for this painting. But I had to take a picture of them to work from because, with them off, I couldn't see to draw or paint them.


Day 3 - Prompt RED

I don't know why it took me so long to make the mental connection between 'red' and 'rubies'. I had been wanting to draw or paint some gemstones for a while now so this was a great time to do it.

I found a blog that gave some tips on painting gems in watercolor and used those suggestions to great effect.


It wasn't until I got these three cards lined up together that I realized that I had used the same layout for all of them.

I have been using lettering styles from the Lettering Lodge on these.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 7:30 PM PDT
Got Ya Covered
Topic: Bible Journaling

The journaling bible I have has a tooled cover in teal. I got it in my head to add some color.

I turned first to a white fine-line Sharpie paint pen. I used this to color the open flowers. This worked well because it is essentially acrylic paint.

Next I used a gole glitter gel pen to color in some striped flowers. I don't know what kind of 'paint' it is but it stuck well.

Finally I used a shimmery silver gel pen for the buds. After the ink was dry a swipe with the hand left the silver but took away the slimmer of it.


I haven't decided if I will find a green to use on the leaves. I want to see how it 'wears' the way it is as this is the bible I carry to church every week.

Ddd

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 7:18 PM PDT
Pure Lettering
Topic: Bible Journaling

And with a big sigh, I end several weeks in a row of being on duty for lettering tutorials. The other leader will take over this week.

Last week, I taught a series on the word 'Purity'. 

MONDAY LESSON

The lettering lessons this week will demonstrate and teach an elegant print font I’ve titled ‘Purity’.

The upper case is prettied up with some double lines and single and double loops. The lower case does not have any of these elements but echo the bent ends of the lines at top and bottom.

The inset box has some step-by-step directions on forming your capitals so you get the best results for your efforts:

1)      In pencil, create your basic forms

2)      In pencil, add features such as the double lines, bent ends and single and double loops

3)      Ink the whole letter

4)      Erase the pencil

AIM FOR CONSISTENCY in the size and angles of your features and in the spacing between your double strokes.

Practice with different forms of the words: pure and purity and do some with all caps and some with mixed-case.



TUESDAY LESSON

Before you start drawing your alphabet, make yourself sets of guidelines in pencil. See the ‘clouds and box’ at the bottom of the page.

The only letter I think could use some tweaking is the upper-case Y. If you have a form you like better, draw it in and share it with us.

Don’t let all those loops intimidate you! Over all, this alphabet looks complicated and hard to draw but it is really very simple – just take it one step at a time. It will look very elegant when you are using it.




WEDNESDAY LESSON

Today, use your new font to write up a word list that reflects one of the forms of ’Purity’. I made mine into an anagram but you could build a crossword or a quote.

Just play! The goal is to get some practice using the font and getting a feel for letter spacing.



THURSDAY LESSON

Let’s write scriptures!

As I’ve mentioned before, I think a phrase or verse looks best when every word is capitalized. This is especially true when the lower case is so plain. You want those caps to say, “This is what it’s all about.”

Although it would be a LOT of work, an alternative would be to use ALL caps.



FRIDAY LESSON

It’s Friday already! Time to use the new font in our Bibles.

I did part of my verse with the featured lettering and supported it with an elegant script. Except for that last word… no way did I want that to be either elegant or represented by the ‘purity’ font. It just got ugly writing.

I used a bright color burst from the feature word.

Did you notice the heart is formed from the word ‘Pure’?


Another tutorial in the books.

Ddd

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 6:56 PM PDT
Saturday, 23 June 2018
A Powerful Lesson
Topic: Bible Journaling

Yep, it was still my turn for lettering lessons this week - and it will be for next week as well.

This time we worked on a novelty font. Here are the daily lessons:

MONDAY

Today we begin a lettering style that is a combination of two alphabets – one for the upper-case (more squared) and one for the lower-case (with graduated swooshes). We’re using the focus word ‘power’ which we’re building with letters that resemble boards.

I sketch the outer shape of the letters in pencil and then define where the ‘boards’ will overlap and intersect. I wait until I have the whole word written and inked before I add the decorative lines.

You may have room for three lines internally or maybe only two. Just do what works without going down to one internal line – it just isn’t enough.

On the lower-case letters look at how the boards have become ribbons. Also notice the overlap extensions on their intersections.

I will say that this is NOT a complicated font, but it IS time-consuming. Just sayin’.

Are you ready for some POWER? 



TUESDAY

In the full alphabet you’ll begin to notice that some of the upper-case letters that are normally rounded have their corners chipped off to accomplish that shaping. The B and the S are the most complicated structures. If you can simplify them, you are welcome to do so as long as it still reflects the style. The most unique letters are the D, f, g, and Y.

Remember that the upper-case is all straight lines, the lower-case is all flowing lines.

How do you feel these two alphabets suit one another?

WEDNESDAY

This old hymn kept playing through my head as I studied this lettering style.

I think the words look better if all the letters are either upper-case OR lower-case rather than mixing them. I threw in a few words in very basic printing, as well. Don’t be afraid to mix styles. Some are just too much for a long project and can be used as a ‘key word’ accent instead.

I also used colored pencils to add some zip to my letters – colors are separate for the cases.

Choose a ‘power’ful song lyric for your own practice piece.

THURSDAY

We’ll use our new lettering style today to write a scripture in our workbook, journal or on a plain piece of paper.

I found that this style does not scale down easily as you need those spaces to be open to get the extra lines in.

(Am I the only one who doesn’t care for that upper-case ‘i’? I think I’m going to change it tomorrow)

1-2-3-GO!

FRIDAY

Well, it’s finally time to use the ‘power’ font in our Bibles.

I wanted to only emphasize a few words so I used the upper-case on those, then I surrounded those with the lower-case and completed the rest of the verse in a simple script. This script does not compete with our ‘power’ style but is still fancier than a basic print.

And, yes I did change up the letter ‘I’.

I went over all my script letters with colored pencil and colored in the upper-case of this week’s style.


Stay tuned for another lettering lesson next weekend.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 10:11 AM PDT
Sunday, 17 June 2018
A New Lettering Style 'Coming' Up
Topic: Bible Journaling

Last week I was on duty for teaching another lettering lesson. The Facebook group was also running a guided tour of the whole layout and activities of the site so there were a lot of new letterers following the lessons.

All together there were 29 people who came through and at least commented on the lessons or the work of others. Twenty of them completed at least one lesson and posted their work. Here is the lesson plan:

MONDAY LESSON

Many people on the tour may be new to hand lettering so I thought it might be time to go for something more relaxed. This style only looks complicated because of the curls everywhere but it is based on a simple print.

There are only 4 letters to practice with today – 8 if you count the upper- and lower-cases separately.

In the top two examples we are working from a 5 unit height (units would be lines on your paper or grid lines on graph paper or dots on a dot-grid paper), the x-height is 3 units. Look how the upper-case E takes up 3 units for the top half and 3 units for the bottom half. For samples 3 and 4, I worked on a 4 unit grid height and made the x-height half (2 units). Either scale works as long as you are consistent. The third set is half-scale of the second set.

Draw the basic shape of the letter first (in pencil of course) and then come back to add the unique stylings and finally, the curls. Ink only after you have the letters fully drawn out and, after the ink is dry, erase the pencil.



TUESDAY LESSON

Today the upper- and lower-case alphabets are on different sheets.

Start by working large when learning a new alphabet style. It easier to scale down after you learn it than it is to learn small and scale up.

As we did yesterday, pencil the basic shape of the letters (all of them) then come back through and add the unique stylings (like the double curls on the E, the loopy top on the M) and then go through all adding curls. This will help to get the size and shape consistent and will help you make the curls a consistent size.

Then, go through and ink each letter in its intirety in order. This will set the letter style in your mind as a whole unit. Erase the pencil after the ink is dry.

NOTE: The alphabets may not appear in the same visual size scale. Use the grids for proper size ratios.



WEDNESDAY LESSON

When our pastor related a quote from Billy Graham recently, I was struck by it and had to come home and look it up. For reasons of space, I modified it slightly, but the message is the same.

Use the ‘come’ lettering style to write your choice of a quote or song lyrics containing the word.

I like to see quotations centered on a page. I often write out the basic form in left-hand alignment and then mark the center of each line separately. Then on my ‘finish paper’ I mark the center line of the page. I use a lightbox, light pad or window to align the various centers line-by-line and trace over the basic forms in pencil. Then I go back and add the styling elements and curls.

Rather than a black pen, I used colored markers to make the finished letters. After erasing my pencil, I used a second color of marker to add shadows under and to the left of my two key words.

What will your practice page say?



THURSDAY LESSON

Today we’ll find a scripture with the focus word ‘come’ and write it up in our workbook, journal or just on plain paper.

The more you write with a new style the more it becomes fixed in your memory. With enough use, those letter forms will just flow off the pencil.

I used the same centering techniques as shared yesterday and even used the same set of markers.

FRIDAY LESSON

This is the day we take the ‘come’ lettering style into our Bibles. Don’t neglect this step in the learning process. It is, after all, the ultimate point of teaching all these awesome designer letters.

The process is the same for preparing to letter in your Bible, pencil first with basic forms to establish layout and spacing, enhance the letters with their embellishments and curls, then ink and erase the pencil.

If this is scary for you, add another step – do the designing and layout and lettering on scratch paper (grid or dot-grid) until you are happy with it and then trace it into your Bible. Do the tracing lightly in pencil and then do the inking and erasing.

For those who wish to use flowers like these, they are from the Drawing Room lesson on Wednesday of this week. But, just because I’ve done artwork on my page does not mean you have to do so. These letters are beautiful enough to stand on their own. And it really IS all about the words.

So another week of lessons is in the books!

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 10:03 PM PDT
Wednesday, 13 June 2018
Sketchy Business
Topic: Drawing

I guess I missed posting links to a couple of the Drawing Room lessons that I illustrated for Creative Bible Journaling.

We'll start with the one posted today.

Click here:  http://creative-bible-journaling.com/drawing-room-dr216-spiral-rose/  for a lesson on making this spiral rose.


 

The week prior I taught this hourglass.

You can get those instructions here: http://creative-bible-journaling.com/drawing-room-dr215-hourglass/

Now I can't remember if I posted the lesson for this waterfall! 

If I already posted it you can ignore this. If not... here is the link:

http://creative-bible-journaling.com/drawing-room-212-water-fall/

Hope you enjoy following these lessons.

Ddd

 

 


 

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 9:39 PM PDT
Tuesday, 12 June 2018
Long Time Coming
Topic: Backgrounds

I realized I hadn't made any cards for just ages. I had need of a card with a theme: 'M' is for...

I decided to use the M for Marbleing. I had several pieces left from a day when I had done a lot of shaving cream backgrounds. then in the same bits and pieces box I found two green diecut cardstocks and two metallic scallop diecut pieces.

These all layered up nicely and I put both on a seafoam blue-green card base.

I used black sentiment strips from a quote sticker book and added floral stickers from my large file of them.



On both cards I glued in a small strip of the marbled paper along with a small bit of coordinating sticker.

Ddd

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:25 PM PDT
Sunday, 10 June 2018
Double Done Double Lettering
Topic: Bible Journaling

A few weeks back someone suggested we develop a lettering style that used double lines. So I did an upper-case only and prepared the 5 days of lessons for it.

At the end of last month my co-leader was having some family health issues and needed some time off. I offered to pick up this last week for her. But when I got ready for the first post, she had forgotten about that offer and had prepped the 'teaching' font we just completed.

I had to laugh because we had both planned on the double-line fonts for the same week. Don't you love God's sense of humor?

So I did mine as a 5-hour class instead of a 5-day class and posted it in the lobby of our site instead of the Lettering Lodge thread. I posted one lesson each hour on Friday night and got lots of attention from people who don't seem to dig down into the threads for lessons.

So, here is the font I developed. Again, I did only an upper case. Mine is all straight lines where Ann's has lots of curves because it is based on a standard print.

LESSON ONE

Hello everyone it is TIME for new lettering! (The first lesson is always an introduction of the style using a focus word - the same focus word will be used for the whole lesson plan)

I had such fun developing this print style. This print style has no lower-case.

All those angles and double lines can be treated very loosely or very structured and precise. It’s your choice.

All of the double lines are on the vertical – never on an angle or horizontal. This gives a tall linear vibe. Every letter gets just one double.



LESSON TWO

Our second lesson is always the introduction of the full alphabet in the new lettering style.

We always use the same process for lettering, whether for this initial introduction or the projects we design later. We call that process P-I-E. This stands for PENCIL (use pencil to draw your letters rather than writing them which helps you break out of your natural handwriting) INK (go over the new letter forms in pencil as many times as you need to get them just how you like. Then trace over them in ink) ERASE (when the ink is dry, erase your pencil)

Note how there are no curves at all in this style. Those angular lines remind me of the hands on a clock which is what led to the focus word ‘time’. 

There is an alternate letter M as I wasn’t sure if I wanted a deep or a shallow V on the top of it, use whichever one you like best. 

My favorite letters are the G and Q.



LESSON THREE 

For our third less we give an assignment to do something creative with the new lettering style. Sometimes it is writing lyrics from a hymn or chorus, sometimes we do an anagram or crossword, other times it will be a quote. These will all use the focus word or be related to it.

 

The intention is to give ample opportunity for practicing using the letters in words and phrases to get familiar with spacing, joining letters and just seeing how the style looks when it is in common use. Some people choose to decorate their pages. This is optional.

I’ve always found this quote about time to be quite humorous. It has been attributed in various iterations to Einstein but most believe it not to have come from him at all. 

Choose your own quote about TIME to write up for lettering practice. You know why we do all these activities throughout the week, don’t you? It is to train our minds and hands in the proper formation of the letters for the style. It also gives more opportunity for you to develop the stylistic elements that will make it your own. So, it is to your OWN benefit to write longer blocks of text rather than trying to get by with as little as possible.



LESSON FOUR 

This lesson is always the day we use the new style to write a scripture with the focus word in our notebook, on plain paper or in a journal. These can also be decorated or combined with artwork if you wish

When using this letter style in a looser manner it takes on a casual feel. I used mine to write out a scripture inside an hourglass. This is a variation on the one presented in the Drawing Room this week. The scripture reference is on the brass plaque. 

Have you discovered whether you like to use this as a casual style or more regimented? It helps on the casual usage to toss and turn the letters a bit to dial down the formality.



LESSON FIVE

 

The fifth lesson is when we get to use the lettering in our Bibles.

I found a coloring book illustration that I liked for inspiration. I used the same hair style and sleeves but all the flowers are mine. 

For this scripture I went back to a more regimented usage of the lettering style as it references royalty so needed that formal touch.

Don’t forget, we are still using the P-I-E method – Pencil-Ink-Erase. 

Let us see what scripture you choose to use with the TIME font.

 


So, that's how you teach 5 days of lessons in 5 hours!

Ddd

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 10:42 PM PDT
Thursday, 7 June 2018
A Teaching Moment
Topic: Bible Journaling

This week my co-leader Ann had the lettering lesson. In response to a mention from one of the group members, Ann developed a double-line print and taught it with the focus word 'teaching'.

MONDAY

The introduction of the font/word. The straight lines get full double lines. Curves get partial double lines.


TUESDAY

Here's the alphabet. I changed some of my letter forms and where some of the double lines appear.



WEDNESDAY

The assignment was to write out words of things that teachers use to teach. I did mine on black cardstock with a Sharpie fine paint marker in white to look like a chalkboard. The marker was absorbed into the cardstock on the first pass so I had to trace all the lines a second time.


THURSDAY

This is scripture writing day in our notebooks. Once I selected my verse I knew it needed to be written out in a Bible drawing.


FRIDAY

I know from experience that we always use the font in our Bible on Friday. I was so excited about my idea that I did it back on Wednesday!

This turned out exactly like I envisioned it, too. I looked up a few references here and there on how to draw elements but the drawing itself is all mine.


What do you think?

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:34 PM PDT
On Angel Wings
Topic: Bible Journaling

Back when I did the vellum butterfly pop-up insert in my Bible I thought how neat it would be to do one with angel wings.

I found a wing I liked and printed it out as a set with one a reverse image. Then I set it aside to do later.

Later got here! 

I used to do a lot of parchment craft on cards and still had all the supplies to do this craft.

I used Tinta pearlescent ink and a dip pen to trace the wings onto parchment. Then I used a medium ball tool to burnish from the back - heavier at the wing tips and more streaked as they went toward the base. I used a 4-needle tool to pierce around the perimeter and tore away the background, leaving a bridge between the two wings.

I folded the wings together and used dry-line adhesive to glue them into the gutter of my bible.

I wrote out Psalm 34:7 in an art deco font.


I am so pleased with how this turned out - exactly how I had hoped.


I don't expect I will use many pop-ups in my Bible but this was a 'must have'.

Ddd

 


 

 


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 9:29 AM PDT
Tuesday, 5 June 2018
Listening Device
Topic: Bible Journaling

Well, I had a big surprise while teaching this lettering lesson.

Several people said it was the hardest they had tried to learn! Really??? I chose this style because I thought I'd give them a break from all the difficult ones we had been doing.

Boy, was I surprised at how hard they found it to be.

Here is the lesson - as well as some tips I shared with them to help solve their dilemma.

MONDAY

Today we’re going to learn a lettering style that is graphic – kind of cartoon-like in all caps. It is one that would be good used in sign making. But our word is still thought provoking.  We’re going to ‘LISTEN’.

I’ve shown the samples in a variety of sizes so you don’t have to feel locked into making giant letters. It is easily scalable.

Follow the steps, line by line, and you’ll be writing ‘in style’ in no time at all. I wrote the steps directly on the design page so you can print it and have them right at hand. I’ll also detail those for you here:

·          -   Even if you’re using grid dot paper, start with guidelines to keep your height consistent.

·         -   In pencil, draw base letters in a block style (elements of the letters are the same width throughout whether horizontal, vertical or diagonal, straight or curved.)

·           - Adjust the letter outline with wonkiness. The tops, bottoms, ends of letters will ‘bulge’ a little (like a dog bone)

·           -   Add a shadow line to left and bottom, using a diagonal to connect to the letter.

·          -   Ink your letters and erase the pencil (including guidelines).

·           -   Decorate the shadows if desired.

·           -   Color letters as desired.

 

TUESDAY

We’re going to use the same steps as yesterday to create our entire alphabet.

Since you won’t need to write all those instructions at the bottom of your page, you’ll have room to create a set of numbers, as well.

I didn’t decorate my shadows or color my letters as this page will be a reference sheet on letter construction in my lettering notebook.



DEBBIE'S NOTES

I encourage you all to remember that this lettering style is very casual, imprecise and totally personizable. Do not distress if your letters are skinnier or fatter than the example. No need to worry if the bulges are not consistent.

Think of these as some regular block letters that got left out in the sun and have started to melt a little. They wouldn't do that in a precise manner!

The thing that will pull them all together in your project is to have the shadow depth consistent. So, make that shadow line an even amount from the letter edge and I think you'll be happier with your results.

 

WEDNESDAY

Use your new lettering style to create a ‘sign’ with a quote on listening. I found this one to be thought provoking.

I varied the sizes of the guidelines to emphasize some words and deemphasize others.

I did not decorate the shadows on the letters and I used a rainbow order for coloring my words.

Lots of options – what will YOU do?

 

 

THURSDAY

You may choose to use a shorter verse with the word ‘listen’ when you write on your practice paper. But doing a long verse provides the practice needed to really get those letter forms into muscle memory.

Again, I did not draw or color in the shadows. But I did get to use those numbers we talked about on day two.

Look how you can use the same style for punctuation, just bulge the ends of lines and add a shadow.

Crazy coloring today!

 



DEBBIE’S NOTES

Since this lettering has a distinct shadow, look how much dimensionality you can get by using a white gel pen to add some highlights!

Highlight sparingly INSIDE the letter on the UPPER RIGHT with a single curved line. This makes the letters appear to have a rounded surface instead of lying flat.

 



FRIDAY

Today we are going to use the ‘listen’ font in our Bibles.

Because this is a font that takes up a lot of horizontal room, I chose to turn my Bible and work on an edge-strip. I also saved space by mixing in a script font so the emphasis is on just two key words. You could also use a simple single-line block print with either all-caps or a mixed case font. I wouldn’t use a faux-brush style with thickened letters as it would then compete visually with the featured lettering.

I DID color my shadows for this final piece – with gold gel pen!

The addition of the flowers was to fill in some white space and balance the piece visually.


Another lettering lesson in the books.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 3:05 PM PDT
Thursday, 31 May 2018
Back So Soon?
Topic: Bible Journaling

While I was on vacation I spent a lot of time drawing and lettering and doing Bible journaling. You’ve been seeing the results of all this for several days now.

However, I had three sketches that were unfinished in my notebook when I came home. So, yesterday I worked on transferring those into my Bible and making finished pages out of them.

The first of these is Hebrews 6:19. I had found this scripture written in the shape of an anchor at https://www.pinterest.com/pin/858358010201145418/ (see photo)

But I wanted to have an actual anchor on my page. So I found a ‘how-to-draw-an-anchor’ page at http://www.supercoloring.com/drawing-tutorials/how-to-draw-an-anchor-with-rope (see photo)

Perfect! I combined the two of them in my sketch and then traced them into my Bible. After coloring, here is my result.

 

Also, on my iPhone I had a screenshot of a ‘zentangle’ feather that I wanted to use with Psalm 91:4. You can see the original at https://www.pinterest.com/pin/274930752227263469/ or see photo below.

I used the sample as a general guide to the shapes and then did all my own designs and coloring for the spaces.

 

The third page I did was inspired by this page https://www.pinterest.com/pin/7036943146432236/ (see photo)


You can see that I took it in a whole new direction by using a different scripture, writing the entire verse and reference in layers of script, and using a gradation of blues to color the water.

I did Isaiah 43:2

I am all caught up with the work I started on vacation so will have to compile a new list of things I want to work on now.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 11:44 AM PDT
Wednesday, 30 May 2018
Praying Hands
Topic: Bible Journaling

Today the Drawing Room lesson was posted for Praying Hands. You can get the free PDF for it here: http://creative-bible-journaling.com/drawing-room-214-praying-hands/

I drew this in my Bible to illustrate James 5:13 but I did it while on vacation and didn’t have the ‘notes’ that went with the lesson. That is why the fingers are longer than needed and too straight. It makes them look very wooden and flat.


The hands in the lesson are more natural-looking so don't judge the lesson by my lame results.

Ddd


Posted by studio3d@ccgmail.net at 12:49 PM PDT

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