WordPlay Festival Poster

I was recently asked by the Hand Eye Society to create a tea stain illustration for the upcoming WordPlay festival. I’m extremely excited about the final image and I want to share the process of creating it with you!

The first step in creating the tea stain was to draw some thumbnail sketches. Unlike many of the tea stains I create, this one needed to be planned out. After the first round of sketches it was decided to take a more visually Victorian approach. I came up with a couple using the WordPlay logo to engage on a journey featuring a dirigible and Kraken tentacles. You can almost never go wrong with dirigibles and tentacles.

Victorian couple reading the WordPlay, sitting on a bench.

Victorian couple reading the WordPlay book, sitting on a bench.

Victorian couple reading the WordPlay, standing.

Victorian couple reading the WordPlay book, standing.

We decided to go with the second sketch.

The next step was to mentally break the image into pieces and decide how many teas I would steep and how many stains I would make. I decided to create a composite image (all of the pieces created individually and digitally composited for the final) to give me the freedom to play with the composition and make each visual element clear. I used Orange Pekoe, Cranberry and Ginger tea to create the 5 parts of the image.

I don’t pencil out my tea stains. When I have an idea in mind I set up my reference materials ( my sketch or a photo) next to my work space and use it as a reference to help guide where I put the tea. The end results are abstract, but oddly specific tea stains.

Initial tea stains

Initial tea stains

Once the tea dries I ink in two stages. The first is to use a fine tipped technical pen to “rough” in my line work, and create small patterns. This basically acts as my pencil drawing, which guides the final inking. That being said, I can’t erase anything. Its my freehand inking in combination with the loose shapes of the tea that leads to the final tea stain drawing style.

Once the rough inks are complete I make my final lines with India ink and a brush. I have a couple of sizes that I like to work with, but I just stuck with a #2 brush tip for all of these drawings.

tea stains and rough inking, sky not pictured.

Rough and final inking, sky not pictured.

After inking each drawing I scanned them into my computer and removed the images from their water colour paper backgrounds.

Orange pekoe couple

Orange pekoe couple

Ginger Kraken tentacles

Ginger Kraken tentacles

Orange pekoe dirigible

Orange pekoe dirigible

cranberry water

Cranberry water

Cranberry sky

Cranberry sky

Once I have all the pieces ready to go I place them on to the digital canvas (in photoshop) sized for the final image.  I don’t really have a picture to encapsulate this part of the process. Basically I just resize and move things around until the whole things matches the sketch and makes a pleasing composition.

I also added some detail digitally. The WordPlay festival is about words, and many of the featured games don’t have any visuals at all. So it was very important to include text in the “game” area of the image. I chose a passage from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and overlaid the text in the sky (behind the tentacles). I made the words white and set the opacity to a medium low so the words wouldn’t interfere with the image, while still seeming part of the scene.

I created a 4×6 postcard and 4×4 square for the final image. All that remains is for the Hand Eye Society to add the festival details, and voila tea stain FESTIVAL POSTER!

4x6 poster

4×6 poster

4x4 poster

4×4 poster

 

Want to stay up to date on all my current works in progress? Head on over to my facebook page for projects like this and other art treats!