Sunday is a day of rest

Oct 24, 2004 16:16

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Comments 10

kaptainsnot October 25 2004, 00:36:34 UTC
There are a few inaccuracies, but it's a 12 minute drawing and that's to be expected. It's a gorgeous drawing, I think -- that's a pose I really love to draw, and I think you did well in capturing the space -- especially without the use of much under her. I adore simplistic and stark shading like this, so soft at some points and cutting in others. It's lovely.

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mandrill October 25 2004, 03:50:18 UTC
Thank you for your comments. Yes, I can see problems with the drawing, but I won't attempt to correct them. Charcoal smudges badly when erased (which is partly why I use it -- it prevents me from trying to go back and correct things -- it's part of trying to force myself to focus better when drawing. :=)

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mutleyjames October 25 2004, 01:00:37 UTC
Yay for you to be posting more art!
Thankee.

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myrafur October 28 2004, 22:27:57 UTC
Ohhhh, how wonderful!

I love the way charcoal feels on rough, rough paper... like newsprint. Or, hell, crappy construction paper.

I had so much fun chittering with you that I wandered over and OMG! I'm so glad I did! What wonderful work!

You...uh-is...uh-friended. *loves*

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machoo October 28 2004, 22:47:38 UTC
Myrafur sent me here to see your art. Gorgeous drawing! So good, especially considering the short amount of time you had to draw. You are very talented.

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undunoops January 12 2005, 22:34:36 UTC
It's quite sensual, would you consider putting it on Ebay? If you do I would be interested to see what you get for it -- and it WILL sell for sure!

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mandrill January 13 2005, 04:25:19 UTC
I've attempted to sell artwork on eBay in the past. eBay buyers are cheap and aren't willing to pay much, especially for pastels or pencil art.

Additionally, selling pastels through the mail is problematic as you have to be very careful packing the pastel for shipping. To ship pastels flat, you must cut a foam core mat for the artwork and then sandwich that between two more sheets of foam core and then wrap in plastic and pack between cardboard. It's rather expensive and time-consuming.

My "Finding Nemo" pastel sold for $25 on eBay and the Buyer couldn't even be bothered to leave me feedback. Blah. I should have kept that piece of artwork. :=P

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undunoops January 13 2005, 06:08:48 UTC
Yeah, $25 is pretty cheap. And foam core is definitely NOT cheap -- unless you knock it off from the art dept you work in, of course... ;-) After being out of the industry for a few years now, my freebie art supplies are dwindling, waaah!

But I'm sure this piece would get more than $25... is there a particular auctions site for original art? Artwork probably gets swamped on Ebay.

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mandrill January 13 2005, 08:32:55 UTC
The trick to selling on eBay evidently is to be willing to sell a LOT of art for cheap, thus building up a fan base of sorts.

A woman I know has sold artwork on eBay since 1999 and is only now getting $150 for small (very intricate) watercolor fantasy illustrations. She also sells matted inkjet prints of older pieces which go for $20 or so. She does commissions for some of her older eBay customers but I don't think she gets all that much for the paintings.

There are a metric ton of artists on eBay, including "artists" who sell photocopies that have been tinted with chalk pastels (ugh). There are also poor artists from Eastern Europe as well as brokers selling cheapie "sweatshop" artwork who are willing to sell unstretched mass-produced paintings on canvas for next-to-nothing.

I'm sure that there are other online art auction places, but I don't know anything about them. I'm still entertaining the hope that I may eventually be able to get into some smaller local gallery.

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