Laurene wrote: Tue Apr 14, 2020 4:28 pm
I remember this project very well from Facebook, and I remember thinking that this was too delicate a subject to succeed well with pyrography...and then you proved me wrong! The hat is as finely done as the face!
You are very kind with your words as usually my friend.
Thank you

To do shading on to larger areas I'm using gas torch, at least - I'm trying to.
The problem is, it doesn't work too well - or I'm still struggling to use it properly

I found that when I'm moving the gas torch frequently there and back to do some shading, it's actually heating the surface only, with very little shading effect if any?!
This fact was making me to point the torch on one spot for a bit longer - just to make it work, and start shading the surface...

Well ...

What's happens next, that spot is getting much more of the torch heat and quickly becomes of a dark spot, where the surrounded area is still light in colour...
The above is making me to adjust the surroundings, what is very tricky to do, and I'm ending with darker spots next to the other darker spots...
Do you know I mean?
Yes, I'm getting lucky sometime, and I am achieving smoother looking area, but it's very uneven, and I need more practice to learn to control it much better.
What I found is also the shading tone - it's different hue when burned by the gas torch ...
So it's not working well if I'd like to support tip burn area with gas torch...
The difference of the colour of the burn is noticeable.
I love pyrography, I'm after to practice it, it is amazing, but I confess I did discover the digital painting just week after I started pyrography...
And I got lost with it!
The digital art have amazed me so deeply, so my motivation of pyrography got a bit dimmed...
The force to burn the Chevrolet doesn't help

At first I thought it will be good to experiment for first time to do the "car" ..., to realise a bit later, that I don't enjoy it ...
I'm just forcing myself to get it done...
Once I finish, I will happily get back to this Hana project



And then some more, because pyrography is something extraordinary


Thank you Laurene.