Tag Archive for 'drawing'

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Sketch: How can you tell a girl dragon from a boy dragon?

Kat Johnston Sketch: This dragon is a girl. You can tell by the flowers and pretty pretty bow on her head.\

A nice pretty bow and some flowers are probably a decent way to tell that a dragon is a girl. Well… I don’t know completely. Surely there is such a thing as a drag-dragon, but that just sounds a little wrong, you know? Perhaps they have to come up with a different term for it, just so that it doesn’t look like that. Drag-dragon… hmm…

So yes, anyhow, skipped the weekend for the production of online content, but back to it again today! The weekend was fun of fun and frivolity, with a decent amount of nikko being used on bodies. I have good friends: they are either smart enough or stupid enough to let me draw all over them with permanent marker… I don’t envy them when it comes to having to wash it off the next day.

Lets see… there was one friend with flowers and vines trailing here and there, another with a full back covered in a cobra with some tribal designs melding into tech, and another friend requesting a dragon. There was no-one wanting bunnies at all! How odd, huh? Anyhow, I decided on Sunday morning (I was up bright and early enjoying breakfast then grocery shopping at the barracks) that I needed markers which weren’t so… uhhhh… thick. Nikkos (the big ones) are all good and all, but when they’ve been used enough, there’s just no way to get a nice fine line. I’m now outfitted with a whole baggie full of sharpies with not only black, but colours too! Ohhh, the next person who lets me draw on them is going to have some funnnnn!

Sketch: Waiting for the bus.

Kat Johnston Sketch - waiting for the bus with over a hundred other people... is rather an interesting exercise.

So, yesterday I popped into town in order to fetch some fimo and a few other choice bits and pieces which can’t easily and immediately be obtained through use of either an internet connection or the bribing of a conveniently loving husband. After a wonderful, if exhausting few hours of looking around at shops, picking up books, jewelry findings, and other bits and pieces, it was time to go home. I decided I’d take the train.

Long story short: bad idea. The power lines over the Ferny Grove track (which is the one I require to get home) had fallen, or something of the like, making that particular route home unusable. It was just cresting three, and every bus in the city was swept up in the usual daily rush to get children home from school. Thus one, and then two train loads of people wanting to get home were lined up across from the Brunswick Street Station, waiting and waiting for fill-in buses that were taking quite a while to come.

I found it amusing, though many others, of course, did not. I love watching people (no, not in a creepy way!), so a day like this, although slightly annoying, yes, is also good in its own way. I guess I just find it fascinating to see how so many different people react to such a thing happening.

There was the annoyed person, of course, who seemed to believe that the customer service rep standing there in the middle of the street in his bright orange safety vest must have been at the top of the Queensland Transport hierarchy – because lord knows he must certainly have the power to order people to ‘fix things’ and ‘get buses now’.

There was the talkative old gentleman who was quite willing to fill me in on his day – where he came from and where he had to get back to, as well as to ponder on the unfortunate nature of the situation on those who did have appointments to meet. He started talking to me because I rebandaged someone’s wrist, when they were unable to do so themselves.

Then of course was the schoolgirl who had no qualms about having a long and intimate conversation with her boyfriend, or once-boyfriend about his perchance for cheating, seemingly oblivious to the number of ears quite happily listening in to the mini-melodrama laid before them.

All of this – a buzz of a crowd of over a hundred tired commuters murmuring against a backdrop of over-loud music from the strip club just behind us, while someone saw fit to film a portion for the evening news – it is just not something that happens every day now, is it?

Is it wrong that I was close to laughter for most of the time I was waiting? That I found it so incredibly amusing, that on the one day in quite some time that I venture out far enough from home as to require public transport it decides to break down on me?

People-watching is a very enjoyable pasttime, I must say. Especially under conditions such as these. That’s not to say that I want to see people inconvenienced for my sake, so that I may observe them – but I can’t say that I entirely regret not taking the bus home in the first place to avoid the redirection of passangers from the train.

Bedraggled: Its a cool word, isn’t it?

Mmm, I'm not sure about this girl... but the name seemed appropriate.

As per usual, just quick postings for the weekends. I quickly threw together this sketch when I had a few moments, because I need to put something up! The name ‘Bedraggled’ popped into my head, so its stuck. I love the word bedraggled. It is an awesome word. It makes me think of things like if ‘bedazzled’ is based on the word ‘dazzle’ and ‘bejewelled’ is based off the word ‘jewelled’, what exactly a damn draggle is. As it is, the word does actually exist (to soil by dragging over damp ground or in mud according to dictionary.com), yet it brings to mind other such fantastic visions. I propose that we provide alternative definitions. A draggle need not be so boring as ‘to be dragged through dirt or mud’, especially when it is such a brilliant word either by itself or with ‘be’ in front of it. So… here are a few alternative suggestions by yours truly.

Draggle – A dragon who likes to haggle. I suggest that you don’t try to get too good a deal with them, because lets face it, if they don’t get a bargain you might just end up as a crispy-strip. Example of usage: ‘The draggle threatened to turn me into ash if I didn’t sell him my turban for a dollar.’

Draggle – The motion one makes when they are trying desperately to get the last little bit of dip from the container, scraping rapidly with a cracker even though there is no way they are going to get enough to classify it as a proper dollop of dip. Example of usage: ‘I couldn’t get enough dip, even with a concerted effort at draggling.’

Draggle – A word uttered when frustrated, often considered a synonym to ‘damn’ but without the possible stigma attached to the word. Example of usage: ‘Oh draggle, I knew I’d be late today!’

Anyhow… there are a few off the top of my head. Can you think of any more?

Just a random sorta flowery thingie

Just a random flowery thingie inspired by the outfit I'm wearing.

Today’s post is a little later in the afternoon than I usually post… I blame it on the fact that it is a Sunday. Another picture drawn in green biro: its becoming a habit. Its actually because its the only pen on my actual computer desk at the moment, save for my wacom pen… which, while useful, doesn’t actually draw on paper all that well, being as it only works on the wacom tablet.

Anyhow, today’s picture is just a little something whipped up quickly to go up on here – it was inspired by the dress that I’m wearing today. I’m slumming it around the house in something I’d like to refer to as ‘bedsheet couture’. In other words, light, loose, comfortable and severely unflattering. That said, I, my husband and my brother-in-law are the only people who have to see me in it, therefore, I’m all for the comfort over style! I have the air conditioning on, a light breeze wafting through the room, a good book to get back to… life doesn’t really get much better than this.

Hope y’all are having a great weekend too, I have a book to get back to!

Angela… my characters are sad right now, and I don’t know why.

Another little character, again with a little tinge of sadness.

I am surprised, sometimes, by the way my little drawings turn out. It isn’t a matter of skill or mastery – if I do a ‘bad’ drawing, I do a bad drawing… it is nothing huge. You toss away the piece of paper and you start over. That isn’t what surprises me. What does surprise me is that I don’t always seem to have the ability to pick the way they are going to turn out. I can have one thing in mind, but once pen touches paper… it doesn’t seem as if it is always up to me. Is that odd?

Take Angela here for example. She was meant to be happy. She was going to be happy. But she’s not. I’ve drawn another character with a tinge of sadness, though it wasn’t my original intention.

It irks me sometimes that I don’t seem to have full control over my pen some days. Don’t get me wrong: I know how to draw a happy face, I know how to draw a sad face, I can force things into being one way or another… but I find that it is always better not to force it. As much as a writer or a film-maker must tend to think of their characters as alive, as living, breathing, full creations and people in their own right, so too do I tend to do so. Although most only have one little moment in which to shine, I still can’t let them be other than who they are. To force a full, beaming smile would be wrong for Angela right now: it is just not who she is. Does that make sense?

It is annoying, in a way… if I want to draw a happy, beaming girl plucked from the recesses of my imagination, it isn’t always the best sensation to find out that the beaming happiness is just a front… and that the true self is not quite so joyous. When Angela first popped into my head, she was younger, trick-or-treating with her much older sister and her own little twin. They actually had rather an interesting contraption they would sit on to move from house to house. They even entered a new-age style of store and talked to the woman behind the counter.

The entire time, Angela was beaming and happy, though perhaps a little fickle as young children are. Her costume was an identical match to her identical twin’s, though the colours were inverted: a long shift dress, with a long vest-style overcoat, one piece in light brown, the other in dark. A witch’s hat matched, and she carried a hand-made straw broom, tied with twine where the bristles met the handle, to keep them all secure. She and her twin had so much fun creating them: they created their whole outfits from scratch, with help. They weren’t masterful, but they were incredible and perfect in the eyes of the children, and to most of the others who saw them. There were children who would tease, because the girls couldn’t afford the elaborate bought costumes they had… but the girls weren’t upset for the most part. They had each other and even if their family couldn’t even afford proper shoes to go with their costumes, you can bet that they had more fun in them than even the most expensively attired child would have.

Anyhow… all that aside (and I could go on for hours – it was a rather detailed dream), when I decided to draw her afterwards, she wasn’t the same smiling, bubbly young girl she was in that vision. Time had changed her and taken away something she might never be able to regain. Perhaps I will get an actual story out of her one day, but for now, I don’t think that she wants me to pry.