Tag: staedtler

  • Lumbering Bier

    Lumbering Bier

    In this second installment of the series, our ambiguous land deity is no longer a distant silhouette on a ridge line. Here, the entity is a massive, lumbering presence actively moving across a raw, windswept field. I wanted to shift the atmosphere to something highly kinetic, capturing the restless friction of an old god traversing its domain while the grass churns around it.

    Technically, expanding this world required a dense mixed-media approach on cold press paper to handle the sheer volume of texture. I built the environment using a layered blend of Faber-Castell Pitt pens, Staedtler pigment pens, acrylic brushes, and Sakura gel pens.

    The process itself was highly rhythmic. I used the fine precision of the Staedtler and Pitt pens to map out the intricate, flowing lines of the prairie grass, mimicking the paths of the wind cutting across the earth. For the figure itself, I wanted a stark architectural contrast; its blocky, horned head is built with textured gray tones, while its heavy cloak is a dense thatch of deep crimson lines interwoven with pale, root-like fibers. The sky is composed entirely of meticulous stipplingโ€”thousands of individual dots of ink and acrylic that create a vibrating, static-like atmosphere above the field. The tooth of the cold press paper catches these distinct mediums differently, keeping the individual marks crisp while allowing the colors to optically blend into a restless, living landscape.

    There is a solemn, ritualistic quality to this giant form moving through the elements, acting as an ancient shepherd of the wild, untamed acres.


  • Frenetic Canopy

    Frenetic Canopy

    I wanted to move away from the quiet, still qualities of a traditional landscape and focus entirely on energy. Nature is rarely static. It is constantly growing, decaying, and shifting. This piece was a deliberate experiment in capturing that hidden, frenetic activityโ€”making a forest look as though it is writhing and moving right in front of you.

    Technically, this required a dense orchestration of different tools and medium behaviors on smooth hot press paper. I built the surface using a heavy blend of Faber-Castell Pitt pens, Staedtler pigment pens, acrylic pens, and Sakura gel pens.

    The process was rhythmic and intense. I used the fine precision of the Staedtler pens to create an intricate web of overlapping, high-contrast lines for the undergrowth and the tree trunks. The fine, colorful lines slashing through the foliage were accomplished with Sakura gel pens, giving those bright accents a sharp, clean edge. Instead of blending colors smoothly, I relied on rapid dashes and tight clusters of stippling with the acrylic and Pitt pens. By placing contrasting tones directly side-by-sideโ€”the electric greens against the deep purples and warm ochresโ€”the canopy begins to optically vibrate.

    It is a chaotic way to build a landscape, but letting the marks layer over one another without correcting the friction gives the piece its pulse. It records the grit and the constant motion of the woods rather than a sanitized portrait of them.


  • Rockwell Church Farmhouse

    Rockwell Church Farmhouse

    I am sharing another graphite piece today that keeps us grounded in Barrow County, Georgia. Not far from the historic church I sketched recently sits this abandoned farmhouse, quietly decaying along Rockwell Church Road.

    Like much of my work, this drawing began as a photograph taken through the lens of my Pentax. There was something immediately striking about the isolation of the structure. For the translation to paper, I chose Staedtler Mars Lumograph pencils. The grading of these pencils allowed me to push the contrast, digging into the heavy, dark textures of the weathered siding and the deep, impenetrable shadows lurking beneath the covered porch.

    To enhance the feeling of quiet observation, I emphasized the barren, skeletal tree branches sweeping across the foreground. They act as a natural frame, pushing the farmhouse further back into the landscape and adding to that subtle, Southern Gothic atmosphere that permeates these forgotten spaces. It is a study in texture, memory, and the slow reclamation of rural architecture.

    Technical Details:

    • 9×12 hot press Fabriano
    • Staedtler Mars Lumograph pencils

    Rockwell Church Farmhouse-Distance1
  • The Reader and the Statue

    The Reader and the Statue

    Iโ€™m sharing a new piece today, built from a reference photo I took on a cool spring afternoon at the Georgia State Botanical Gardens in Athens.

    Walking through the grounds, I was immediately drawn to the relationship between these two figuresโ€”a man reading on a bench and a nearby sculpture. I loved the accidental, imitative gestures; both the living man and the stone figure seemed equally invested in their quiet activities. The contrast between the fleeting stillness of the reader and the permanent stillness of the stone was a dynamic I wanted to capture on paper.

    For this piece, I wanted the technique to reflect the atmosphere of that afternoon. Instead of rigid, heavy linework, I relied on quick dashes and the natural, expressive tendency of India ink. My goal was to give the illustration a whimsical and impressionistic sensation, capturing the feeling of the garden rather than just mapping out its exact details.

    To balance that loose, kinetic energy, I brought in acrylic ink very sparingly. It was used just to provide some opaque grounding in a few sparse locations across the piece, anchoring the expressive ink lines and giving the composition a bit of weight.

    Itโ€™s a quick study of a quiet momentโ€”where life and art happened to be doing the exact same thing.

    Technical Details:

    • 9×12 140lb cold press
    • Faber-Castell Pitt pens
    • Shuttle Art paint pens
    • Staedtler Pigment Liner
  • Snow Day in North Georgia

    Snow Day in North Georgia

    Iโ€™m sharing another new piece today, this one capturing a completely different kind of stillness. Based on a cold, snowy day up in North Georgia, it depicts a few figures standing right in the middle of an iced-over road.

    There is a very specific kind of quiet that happens when it snows heavily around hereโ€”the cars stop, the world slows down, and suddenly the middle of the street becomes a place to just stand and take it all in. I wanted to capture that rare, communal pause.

    To get the atmosphere right, I used the same technique as my recent Botanical Gardens piece. I relied on the expressive, fast nature of India ink, using quick dashes rather than rigid lines. This approach gives the illustration a whimsical, impressionistic sensation that mimics the raw, biting energy of a freezing winter afternoon. The scratchy ink work was perfect for mapping out the bare, shivering trees and the heavy tire tracks carved into the ice.

    Just like the last piece, I used acrylic ink very sparingly to provide some opaque grounding. The bright hits of color on the winter coats and the deep, rusty reds in the background tree line help anchor the composition, allowing the white of the cold press paper to do the heavy lifting for the snow.

    Itโ€™s a quick snapshot of a rare winter moment, frozen in ink.

    Technical Details:

    • 9×12 140lb cold press
    • Faber-Castell Pitt pens
    • Shuttle Art paint pens
    • Staedtler Pigment Liner