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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
That sweetest word that artists love to hear. I posted this on Facebook, and was contacted by someone who wanted it. That's the second time in a month. This is a historical depiction (drawn from a barely legible photo) of a mill that sat in Bentonville, Arkansas in the late 19th century. I added the horse and rider and a few trees to make it more interesting, but the mill itself (and the large house behind it, owned by the town doctor) are historically accurate, as far as I can tell by that bad photo.

Have a great day, all.
 

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That sweetest word that artists love to hear. I posted this on Facebook, and was contacted by someone who wanted it. That's the second time in a month. This is a historical depiction (drawn from a barely legible photo) of a mill that sat in Bentonville, Arkansas in the late 19th century. I added the horse and rider and a few trees to make it more interesting, but the mill itself (and the large house behind it, owned by the town doctor) are historically accurate, as far as I can tell by that bad photo.

Have a great day, all.
Its beautiful !! congrads to you !:biggrin:
 

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Congrats, I know how that feels, I build models and sold 2 of them as my boss happened to see them, he asked how much, I had no idea so he said 400 quid, I snapped that up before he had time to change his mind. Great stuff, hopefully you will get more offers if the rest are as good as that.
 

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Discussion Starter · #10 ·
Congrats on the sale! What sort of pen and drawing surface do you use? Just curious, I do pen work too, on watercolor paper but I was thinking of trying some other drawing surface.
This was done with Pigma Microns. Since then, I've switched to ek tools, they have stronger tips. I must press pretty hard, because I was rapidly wearing out Pigma .005 tips. I use Canson drawing or multimedia paper. Lately, I've been doing mixed media with watercolor, Canson watercolor paper in that case.

For thirty years, I dipped quills in India ink. The new breed of drawing pens has been a godsend for my productivity. It's hard to get all of that nasty bottled ink stuff out to draw.
 

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Funny you mention the micron .005, I'm planning on getting that pen. I bought a set of microns a while back but the smallest point in the set is 01 I must have a light touch because haven't noticed it wearing down or maybe it's because it's a bigger point. I really like the micron pigma because it doesn't clog like my drafting pen. The ink goes a long way too.
 

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Discussion Starter · #16 ·
Funny you mention the micron .005, I'm planning on getting that pen. I bought a set of microns a while back but the smallest point in the set is 01 I must have a light touch because haven't noticed it wearing down or maybe it's because it's a bigger point. I really like the micron pigma because it doesn't clog like my drafting pen. The ink goes a long way too.
When they wear down, you can make truly microscopic marks with them, which I use on portraits for fine shading. So toss your worn ones into an accessible place and use as directed. ;-)
 
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