Lately I've had several people ask about the paper I use -- the brown stuff. What it is and where I get it.
So I figured I'd post some links, and encourage y'all to play because I've found brown paper SO much more fun than stark white.
The dog portrait, above, is on a cotton-rag printmaking paper called
Rives BFK Tan. I love this paper
so much it might not even be moral. You can get it at Blick or at
Wet Paint. It comes in big sheets and you tear it to whatever size you need. This is heavy, velvety, and holds up to ink washes, watercolor, paint -- pretty much anything you throw at it, it won't buckle, and that's a tough thing to find.
The Greyhound drawings, and a lot of the sketches I've posted recently, are in my
Cachet Earthbound Sketch books. The only place I know that carries them locally is
Wet Paint, but even they are hit or miss. Easier to get these online. They come in a variety of sizes. The paper has a lovely speckly quality and a really nice tooth for drawing. I love it, but for dry media only; it is lightweight and will buckle badly if you use washes on it.
Some of the bolder things, like this toy horse drawing (
Uncle Oscar's Appaloosa, mixed media, 13 x 10", sold but if you love it I'd love to make one for you) are on textured brown paper I prepare myself. If you click and enlarge it you'll see the brush-stroke texture that permeates the drawing, and that's from the prepped paper. It's a fun and simple process and I'll share it in another post if anyone's interested.