• Home
  • About
  • Classes Near You
  • Teaching & Learning
  • eBooks at ArtPlantae
  • For Gardeners

ArtPlantae Today

Connecting artists, naturalists, and educators

Feeds:
Posts
Comments
« Exhibition About Endangered Plants Opens at The Smithsonian This Weekend
Add a Botanical Theme to Your Holiday Cards »

“Botanical Drawing in Color” is a Comprehensive Guide to Botanical Illustration

August 13, 2010 by ArtPlantae Today

Colored pencil isn’t just a medium to use, it is also a learning tool. It allows you to teach drawing skills and teach about color at the same time.
– Wendy Hollender

Just as her first book is an inspiring guide for botanical illustrators, Wendy Hollender’s Botanical Drawing in Color: A Basic Guide to Mastering Realistic Form and Naturalistic Color is equally inspiring, if not more.

In her new book, Wendy reveals the mystery behind botanical illustration by breaking each step of the process down to minute detail. No detail is too small. Even the seemingly obvious detail of sharpening a pencil is addressed. Experience has taught Hollender that something as innocent as a blunt pencil can become an obstacle if not monitored properly. The step-by-step instructions Hollender provides in Botanical Drawing do more than carefully guide artists through new exercises. Through carefully written text and supporting illustrations, Hollender instills confidence in novice illustrators bravely embarking on their first attempt in botanical art and instills confidence in artists who may be exploring colored pencil techniques for the first time.

What makes Botanical Drawing in Color a comprehensive guide to botanical illustration is Hollender’s careful arrangement of exercises, each exercise building upon the one before. This book is not a reading book. It’s a book that requires readers to take action. If the exercises are completed faithfully and in sequence, novice illustrators will find they are no longer beginners and colored pencil enthusiasts will be charged with their enhanced understanding of color theory and color harmony.

Here is a quick overview of the contents of this new book and how artists can benefit from Hollender’s thorough introduction to botanical illustration:

Chapter 1 – Overview

Chapter 2 – Art Supplies & Materials: Hollender introduces the materials she uses and explains the reasons behind her choice of graphite pencils, colored pencils, paper, and other supplies.

Chapter 3 – Tone and Form: Artists will learn how to look for changes in value on any surface, learn how to create many values in order to achieve 3-dimensional form, how to work with a light source, and how to create the natural forms found in nature.

Chapter 4 – Adding Color to a Toned Form: The essential skills of toning and burnishing in colored pencil are discussed. These skills are required if artists are to convincingly render form in color. Hollender demonstrates how to hang onto form while applying color.

Chapter 5 – Establishing Perspective: Creating a 3-dimensional form on a flat piece of paper is simply not possible without being able to see and draw in perspective. Artists will learn how to do both in this chapter.

Chapter 6 – Putting Value and Perspective Together: Applying the techniques learned in Chapter 5, Hollender demonstrates how line, tone, and perspective work together to create natural forms.

Chapter 7 – Understanding Color: Color theory, color mixing, and color harmony are the focus of this chapter. Carefully planned exercises enable artists to experience these concepts, not just read about them.

Chapter 8 – Depicting Overlapping Elements & Different Planes: Drawing an individual flower or leaf is fine, but plants don’t produce free-standing leaves and flowers. Plants have branches, clusters of flowers, and leaves of all shapes and sizes overlapping each other. How do you get all of this down on a piece of paper? This is what this chapter is about.

Chapter 9 – Understanding the Form & Function of Plants: Plant morphology, growth patterns, and working with a microscope are the focus of this chapter. Artists will learn how to design an herbarium page and a sketchbook page when studying plant specimens.

Chapter 10 – Mastering Advanced Drawing Techniques: In this chapter, artists will apply what they’ve learned about form, perspective, overlapping elements, and color to create a finished drawing.

Chapter 11 – Mastering Advanced Compositions & Techniques: Hollender describes how to plan and evaluate eye-pleasing compositions and how to use alternative backgrounds. She also demonstrates how to work with watercolor pencils, how to create a colored pencil painting of a white flower, and how to capture the intricate details of a flower’s reproductive parts so that the centers of your flowers are as alive as the rest of your drawing.

Botanical Drawing in Color: A Basic Guide to Mastering Realistic Form and Naturalistic Color is far from basic. This all-inclusive guide is sure to enhance the work of botanical artists and jump-start the career of beginners who have been wanting to explore botanical illustration, but were too intimidated by the process. Hollender’s approach to botanical drawing is doable and no-fuss. All one needs is paper, pencil, and colored pencils.


LEARN MORE

  • Watch Wendy Hollender at work on YouTube.
  • Teaching Botanical Art From the Ground, Up


DID YOU KNOW…

  • Wendy’s live “Ask The Artist” webcast has been bundled with her book? Buy the book, watch a recording of this online event.
  • Our April 2008 “Ask The Artist” with Wendy Hollender is the most read article of all time at ArtPlantae Today?
  • Botanical Drawing in Color sky-rocketed to the #2 position on the Nielsen Bookscan Ratings during its first week?
  • Botanical Drawing in Color is already in its second printing?

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Posted in botanical art, botanical illustration | Tagged art, book review, colored pencil, how to draw, Wendy Hollender | Leave a Comment

  • I’m Curious About…

  • Feature Group

    The Institute for Analytical Plant Illustration encourages botanists and illustrators to work together to enhance botanical knowledge.

    Find out how!


    Winter Aconite

    by Sue Nicholls

  • Visual Language

    See Inside

  • Recent Comments

    • ArtPlantae Today on Institute Encourages Collaboration Between Botanists and Illustrators
    • JohnB on Institute Encourages Collaboration Between Botanists and Illustrators
    • Carol Creech on Institute Encourages Collaboration Between Botanists and Illustrators
  • What Readers Are Reading Now

    • Institute Encourages Collaboration Between Botanists and Illustrators
    • Researchers Study Renaissance Herbals to Preserve the Botanical Tradition of the Ancient Mediterranean
    • Scientific Illustration in the Elementary School Classroom
    • Classes Near You!
    • The Symbolic Language of Plants
  • See Inside

  • Convenient Updates


    Join Our Mailing List
    OR

    Subscribe to ArtPlantae Today to receive new blog posts.

  • Ask The Artist

    Wendy Hollender (interview)
    Wendy Hollender
    Gilly Shaeffer (interview)
    Today's Botanical Artists
    Society of Botanical Artists
    Billy Showell (interview)
    Billy Showell
    Sarah Simblet (webinar)
    Robin Brickman (interview)
    Mark Granlund (office hours)
    Wendy Hollender (webinar)
    Diane Cardaci
    Katie Lee (webinar)
    Bruce L. Cunningham (webinar)
    Jane LaFazio (interview)
    Jane LaFazio
    Mally Francis (interview)
    Kandis Elliot
    Anne-Marie Evans
    Margaret Best
    Elaine Searle
    Mindy Lighthipe
    Niki Simpson
    Anna Knights
    Helen Allen
    Birmingham Society of Botanical Artists
    Hazel West-Sherring
    John Muir Laws
    Martin J. Allen
  • Read Our Review

  • Teaching & Learning

    Seeing with Graphite Eyes

    Students Overcome Their Fear of Drawing in Botany Lab

    Eradicating Plant Blindness in the 21st Century

    Using Social Media to Gather Feedback About Student Interest in Natural Resource Management

    How to Draw Plants for Documentation

    Investigating the Drawing Process

    Making Students Aware of Errors During the Drawing Process

    How do you grade a sketch?

    Helping Teachers Turn Observers Into Naturalists

    Empowering Children to Know What They Know Through Art

    Lesson Plans in Botanical Art & Plant Conservation

    Anne Marie Evans Discusses Teaching, Learning & Botanical Art

    The Timeless Value of Naturalist Journals

    An Interdisciplinary Approach to Learning the Power of Plants

    Margaret Best Discusses Color in Botanical Art, Provides Tips for Informal Science Educators

    Generating Interest in Boring Subjects

    Public Perception of Botanical Gardens

    Quality Observation is the Common Denominator in Art & Science

    Botanical Wall Charts in the Classroom

    Lesson Plans in Botanical Illustration

    Practical Drawing as a Thinking Tool

    Visualizing Plants with Botanical Symbols

    Does experience in the arts lead to academic achievement?

    The Value of Words Over Botanical Illustration

    Biologist Learns to Draw Plants, Sees with New Eyes

    Visualizing Life Cycles & Ecosystems

    Niki Simpson Introduces Digital Composite Botanical Illustrations to Botanical Art

    Imagery in Scientific Communication

    The Last Botany Student in the UK

    Humans First. Then Animals. Then Plants.

    The Origin of Botanical Field Guides

    User-friendly Identification Tools for Plants & Animals

    Students Take First Step Towards Creating Unique Florilegium

    Make Students Better Observers This School Year

    The Botanical Artist as Naturalist

    Remember That Plant You Saw?

    The Arts & Everyday Learning

    Why Integrating the Arts into the Classroom May Improve Content Retention

    Watercolors of the Herbs of Britain Provide Framework for Dichotomous Key

    Learning with Journals, Notes and Scrolls

    What makes plants interesting?

    Ecoliteracy Curriculum Emphasizes Plant Restoration, Natural Dyes

    Educational Wall Charts Teach Less, Better

    Plant Identification & Environmental Literacy

    Outdoor Education & Plant Blindness

    Scholars Study Images in the Service of Science

    Botany Program for Botanical Artists Launched in UK

    Olcani: When Plants Are Medicine

    Botany Education in the 18th Century

    Thoughtful Observation

    What do textbooks teach us about plants?

    Drawing Plant Life Cycles

    Painting Hawaii's Endangered Plants

  • Paperback & Google eBook

  • Authors & Illustrators


    Introduce Your Book to ArtPlantae Readers
  • Nature Near You

    Botanical Gardens
    Learn about your local garden at www.publicgardens.org.

    National Park Service
    Search for national parks at the National Park Service website at www.nps.gov.

    National Environmental Education Foundation's Nature Center Guide.
    Find your local nature center.

    Rails-to-Trails
    Find a trail for hiking, walking, cycling or inline skating. The Rails-to-Trails Conservancy and its volunteers work to convert unused railroads into trails for healthful outdoor activities. Search their national TrailLink database to locate a trail near you.

    Sierra Club Trails
    Locate trails for hiking, cycling, climbing, and many other outdoor activities. Go to Sierra Club's Trails.

    Disclosure

  • Exhibits To Visit

    Plants in Peril
    Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art
    Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
    June 25, 2011 - Mar 11, 2012

    The Smallest Kingdom
    Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art
    Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
    June 25, 2011 - Mar 11, 2012

    Picturing Science: Museum Scientists and Imaging Technologies
    American Museum
    Natural History
    New York, NY
    June 25, 2011 - June 24, 2012

    A Walk in the Wild: Continuing John Muir's Journey
    Oakland Museum of California Aug. 6, 2011 - Jan. 22, 2012

    Joseph Hooker - Naturalist, Traveller and More
    Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art
    Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
    Nov. 12, 2011 - April 9, 2012

    Treasures of the Royal Society Library
    The Royal Society
    Dec. 5 - June 21, 2012

    Nature Morte
    The Horticultural Society
    of New York
    Dec. 7, 2011 - Feb. 10, 2012

    NEW
    Portraits in Bloom
    Westport Public Library
    Westport, CT
    January 3 - March 28, 2012

    Seeing Trees: Photographs by Robert Llewellyn
    Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden
    Jan. 14 - Feb. 26, 2012

    Pepper in Image and Word
    Lloyd Library and Museum
    Cinncinati, OH
    January 14 - April 13, 2012

    Wild Green Things: The Art of Anne Ophelia Dowden
    Andersen Horticultural Library
    Minnesota Landscape Arboretum
    Chanhassen, MN
    January 18 - May 2, 2012

    NEW
    Botanical Edibles:
    Wild and Cultivated

    Muroff Kotler Gallery
    Ulster County
    Community College
    Stone Ridge, NY
    January 26 - February 17, 2012

    Conserving Plant Biodiversity in a
    Changing World: A View from NW North America

    UW Botancal Gardens
    Seattle, WA
    March 1-31, 2012

    Native Pennsylvania,
    A Wildflower Walk

    Hunt Institute
    Pittsburgh, PA
    March 2 - June 29, 2012

    Selections from the Reichenbachia
    Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden
    Ginter Gallery II
    March 10 - April 22, 2012

    Margaret Flockton Award Exhibition 2012
    National Herbarium of New South Wales, Australia
    March 31 - June 29, 2012

    Focus on Nature XII:
    Natural History Illustration

    New York State Museum
    April 28 - December 31, 2012

    When They Were Wild: Capturing California’s Wildflower Heritage
    The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens
    Expected 2013

    Art and Nature
    ASBA Members & Philadelphia Society of Botanical Illustrators
    Coming April 26, 2013

    Add your exhibition to this list!

  • Nature Blog Network

  • Contact Info:



    ArtPlantae LLC
    5225 Canyon Crest Drive
    Ste 71-127
    Riverside, CA 92507
    Email: info@artplantae.com Phone: 951.776.4696

    Follow ArtPlantae on Twitter http://facebooklogin.ws/2009/12/facebook-login/
  • © 2007-2012 by ArtPlantae LLC. All rights reserved. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to ArtPlantae LLC and ArtPlantae Today with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. Artists retain the copyright to their work. The ArtPlantae® logo is a registered trademark of ArtPlantae LLC.

Blog at WordPress.com.

Theme: MistyLook by Sadish.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 617 other followers

Powered by WordPress.com
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.