Showing posts with label university of huddersfield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label university of huddersfield. Show all posts

09/03/2014

FASHION STUDENT: I'm on Pinterest!

Lately my illustrations have been heavily based (-however loose that may be) on the Dolce and Gabbana Autumn/Winter 2013/14 collection. 'Why?' you ask? Because I love it! Black and red lace. Classically gorgeous make-up. Crowns AND crucifixes? What's not to love?!

DISCLAIMER:: I DO NOT OWN THESE IMAGES.
So if you want to see a lot more from this collection (-not to mention a selection of insanely beautiful images ranging from Fashion to Beauty to everything in between), feel free to visit my Pinterest or search for Sheena Sreekeessoon on the site! Please and Thank you!


07/03/2014

ILLUSTRATION: Feast your eyes...

Just a quick blog-post to say Hi! So this is just one of my latest illustrations - a really fun one using different media! As this is part of the illustration project I have just completed, I did try to experiment using different medias...


From top to bottom...

Cara Delevingne
Image: Cannes for The Great Gatsby premiere
Media: Watercolour, water soluble pencils and chalk pen
Time taken: 2 hours approx

Daphne Groeneveld
Image: Self Service S/S 2012 Cover
Media: Letraset promarkers, gel pen
Time taken: 2.5 hours approx

Lindsey Wixson
Image: Balenciaga Spring 2011
Media: Pencils
Time taken: 3 hours approx



20/02/2014

PROJECT WALK THROUGH: Last project of term!

So I haven't posted one of these in a while...almost a year actually! And ideally this post should have probably been written before the December deadline...but hey ho! Now I do love a good project walk-through every now and then, and I always think that something like this would have been helpful for me in my first year at uni (-or even at college) as nothing gives you an idea of what standard your work needs to be at, than getting a closer look at your peers'. And I don't know if this applies to any of you design students out there but the college-to-uni transition for me was incredibly challenging as I had no idea what was expected of me; it's one thing reading a brief but getting a glance of someone else's thought process and having the knowledge of what is possible in terms of skills and the time frame given is incredibly helpful.

So with all that considered, I thought I would share the last piece of work (part of my Visual Studies module) that I had completed for the end of last term (Dec 2013)...

Inspiration
The title for this project is 'Turn up the Volume...Tune in the Details', and the idea was that we'd be shown an image/a selection of images (below) alongside a piece of music that would inspire us to create something individual on a dress stand - with the time limitation of 10 minutes. In preparation of this workshop, we needed to bring with us 3 pieces of fabric ( a meter of a lightweight fabric (silk), a meter of a medium weight fabric (cotton), a meter of a heavy weight fabric (wool)) and the usual sewing equipments (hand-sewing needles, scissors, unpickers, threads, pins, tape measure).


Having heard the about what we were required to do from the very first workshop, I immediately knew that I hated this project - simply because it was outside of my comfort zone. I loved working on a 2D surface and although Fashion generally consists of making garments for the 3 dimensional body, I knew illustration was my strong point - again an emphasis on the 2 dimensional aspect of Fashion I mentioned. I huffed and puffed and whined for a good 10 minutes or so before I realised that the procrastination part was over and had to just get on with it. It was strange and uncomfortable at first; it simply felt foreign.

Workshop
Knowing, however, that this was the primary research we needed to start off the project, I knew I needed to love it for me to be able to get through it. One of the reasons I started to - slightly- enjoy it was because my heavy weight fabric was a beautifully woven check that when moulded on to the stand created a beautiful confusion of lines. Another surprisingly good thing (surprising, because I like/need to take my sweet time on any work I do for it to be adequate) was the energy in the room. It was exhausting -that's for sure, but the ideas that were being generated; the designs that were produced were incredible - simply because it was a new way for all of us to work and really enabled us to think outside the box (- the 2 dimensional box, that is).

We had 10 selections of images and pieces of music, to which we would have to create 10 items on the stand - whether it was detailing, techniques or silhouettes - was up to us to decide. Above are some of the techniques/silhouettes that I thought worked quite well so I thought I should share it with you...

Developing Ideas
After having chosen some of our favourite techniques/silhouettes that we had produced on the mannequins, we needed to develop those ones further. We could change the scale, alter the textures, manipulate the patterns - pretty much anything we wanted to do! Some of the techniques (as shown below) I wanted to look into further were: 
1) Gathering
2) Layering
3) Creating print and texture with stripes
4) Creating new patterns using existing fabrics
5) Creating Volume 


Fabric Swatches
These were the selection of fabric I had chosen to base the collection on, I thought they were quite appropriate as they were on the heavier side ( in terms of weight) considering the season we were designing for was Autumn/Winter 2014/15 (from left to right):

1) A soft brown Suede
2) A gorgeous stripped fabric; the light cream mesh with a heavy black velvet - So very reminiscent of Jean Paul Gaultier, I thought. So to get this free in a clear-out at university was only a win/win!
3) The beautiful woven check that I mentioned before (While working with this, all I could think about was how good a cropped coat would look in this material)
4) A lightweight checked fabric (cotton, I believe)


Final Boards
So I was actually quite happy with these, and if you go back a couple of posts to where I had last posted a project with design boards, you'd understand why. I think one of the advantages of me doing this blog, is the fact that I can track my work - it's almost a visual portfolio. Anyway I do think that I have improved a lot since of this year (even if I do say so myself) - however, that was one of the comments I had gotten back as a feedback which I was incredibly happy about.




For this project, as we were working in a completely new way, I wanted my illustration boards to reflect that. I have always been a fan of the tall, skinny, feminine look, and always focused on elegance (it doesn't always reflect). However, if you have been reading my posts, you know that I'm an absolute Instagram addict and love 'following' fashion illustrators, and one of them talented people were Pinodesk, or Annalisa Pino Ravelli. I absolutely adore her style! And although mine isn't a spitting image of hers, I did want to use her work as an inspiration while keeping true of my style and I think it worked really well. (If you want to see examples of her work, visit her website at http://cheeksandheels.com/ for more)


Collection
Above is my line up and the conclusion of six weeks worth of experimenting on dress stands, Photoshopping and Fabric researching. Needless to say, I absolutely loved this project, I wish we had another project which involved a similar process to this so I wouldn't have procrastinated so much at the start. However, you live and you learn... so next time there's a similar project, I'll know not to dismiss it without having tried it.

07/01/2014

ILLUSTRATION: My little piece of luxury...

Being an Instagram addict that I am now, I couldn't help but notice that designer items (often with a luxurious look or price tag) have become the subject of many illustrators' artwork. Even though I don't particularly understand the reasoning behind it, I decided I should give it a chance...

The 'item of luxury' I decided to illustrate - disregarding the fact that it may be the ONLY item of this nature in my possession - is the gorgeously glamorous Rouge Volupte Shine lipstick (5 - Fuchsia in Excess). Having made this purchase based simply on impulse right after my first student loan payment of this year, I hadn't even had a second wear of it before I decided that I was going to follow the footsteps of these Instagram illustrators who I admire so much. 

This was actually my third attempt (-the first being with watercolour before I realised that the paintings resembled those of a toddler's) and despite everything and how uninspiring I thought these were, I quite enjoyed this.




Overall I quite pleased with the final product, (looking back I'd change the odd little lines and squiggles here and there), I think I may have overdone it with the use of the high contrast but I never seem to be satisfied until there is a huge gap between black and white. 

Media Used: Promarkers, Watercolour pencils, Copic markers, Chalk, Gel pen
Time taken: 5 hours (approx)
Date: November/December 2013

29/10/2013

ILLUSTRATION OF THE DAY: The lady with a pink flush...


Time taken: 4-5 hours
Media: Pencils
Editing software: Adobe Photoshop
Date: June/July 2013
Inspiration: Loosely based on Jourdan Miller (antm cycle 20)

23/10/2013

ILLUSTRATION OF THE DAY: Matthew Williamson Copy



UNFINISHED: Illustrations

A few of my unfinished promarker illustrations...

 

 
 
 Media: Promarkers
Inspiration: Fashion print ads, street styles
Date: June - August 2013


23/08/2013

ILLUSTRATION: FahadBoutique

Quite recently, I had joined Instagram...which admittedly for me was a big deal. Considering I had managed the majority of my teenage life void of any social networks, this was quite a breakthrough for me. 

But like most aspiring artists/designers/illustrators/creators your main goal is to get your work out there, whether it's for an approval or to convey a message or create a feeling - but bottom line - that's pretty much what we all want. As much as I try to deny the obsession with this newfound guilty pleasure of mine, I caught myself wanting to check the news feed every couple of minutes - seconds, even. And as much I hate to admit, my heart did soar a little every time someone tapped on that little heart icon...


One of the obsessions with all these "likes" and "thumbs-ups" are the advantages of checking on who in fact did like your image, because, well - let's face it, we want to know the who, what and why behind that single "like". Which gets me to right about here - where I had the pleasure of being introduced to fahadboutique, a Kuwait-based haute-couture clothing line.

Browsing the images as a sort of archive, I was torn; I either fell in love with the dress or the model...or perhaps the dress on the model. I couldn't decide whether I wanted to wear the dress or be the model wearing the dress. Either way, I figured that if I couldn't wear it, I would draw it. But of course, when it's not your own design, you kinda have to get a license/an agreement or something to give you (the illustrator) the rights..to, you know...illustrate. Thankfully, all I had to do was ask, which in return got me the thumbs up and I was good to go!


Part of my little dorky heart couldn't help but feel absolutely ecstatic and 'all grown up' as though I was a "real" fashion illustrator, and the other part was just hoping that this would be the start of many more to come. Having posted the finished image up on my Instagram, I remember feeling very, very, VERRRYYY nervous - whether the designer would like it, whether it was true to the garment or brand, whether it did the dress justice. And for those of you (the two readers I have) wondering what happened...Fahad, the designer himself chose to publish it and thought it was a beautifully done illustration. Needless to say I had an ear-to-ear grin for a whole week!

18/08/2013

MODEL OF THE MOMENT: Lindsey Wixson

Being a student on a course that requires 100% of its marking from coursework means having to do a lot of work which, needless to say, usually requires:
A) High caffeine tolerance
B) Sleepless nights
C) Dedication which can only result in aching hands and bloodshot eyes.

Being a student on a fashion course, however, is a little different...and in addition to the above you will need:
A) An insane collection of fashion magazines
B) An endless supply of drawing equipment/painting materials/fabric and trims
C) High tolerance for people constantly calling you thick (whether that's directly or simply implied or just assumed - that's irrelevant)


Being a fashion student, I found that even in my new flat, I have accumulated a few too many Vogues than the tiny space allows. Whilst debating to myself whether or not to keep the magazines, I began to flick through them in an attempt to help me decide. 
One model in particular caught my eye as she popped up in quite a few campaigns - everything from Versace to Miu Miu to Mulberry. And what absolutely just attracted me to her was her beautifully unusual face - something which, today I think would be more common in beauty shots rather than anything else. And as though to apply emphasis on that, she has also appeared in the Voguebeauty section of the magazine.

I recall first seeing this model in a youtube make-up tutorial by Lisa Eldridge - a video from 2011 and I had just fallen in love with her face from then on. So with that and the dilemma of what to do with my old Vogues, I decided that I would do something useful. And in order to prove to myself that the fashion magazines still deserved the shrine they held in my newly rented room, I would create inspiration boards (as shown in the photograph above) that would - as the name suggests - inspire me to create more adequate pieces of work.                              

I don't know about anyone else but before unleashing myself in a project like this, I always like to 'test the waters' - usually preferring to start small...hence the pencil drawing (image on the right hand side). I realise this may sound silly as the word 'project' may be being used too loosely considering I had originally set this task up for myself. However, I always find that for me, to ease into new media or new styles, I always have to treat a project as though I want to be able to use as many different media as I can, create different styles and looks and feels and experiment with every variant possible to ensure that I can perform at my best. 



This drawing (as shown on the image above) has become one of my most preferred method of illustration. I have found that as I begin to work more with coloured/toned paper that I am growing more and more confident with it, and even - dare I say it - increasingly better. As a child, you're expected to learn to draw by using lines. Growing up, you realise that the lines you have been drawing for a decade or so, were merely representations of shadows, hence the combination of HB pencils and white paper. Only when you're fully emerged into the world of art do you ever begin to give a crap about the negative space in a piece of work.

I had always considered myself a dedicated Art student, however, I have to admit that even to this day, portraying light in a painting/drawing is one of the hardest things to do. Especially when all you're given is a dark canvas and white media. Even thought I hesitate to admit, the idea of that is scary enough and that box shall remain empty in my tick-list for a long time, but is one that I hope to cross off some day.

All things aside, I do think that I did a pretty bad job with the proportions considering I had used a grid for measurements. However, as a stand-alone image, I don't think it's all that bad. I think the use of the strong contrast works well; I like the look of the subtle hints of colour - particularly in the eyes and mouth and I do like the way the light has been captured in a way to create a dewy and healthy look on the skin.


In comparison to all the other pieces in this post, (so far and yet to come), this was one of the quickest, free-est form of mark-making for me (image shown above). To emphasise that point alone, I'd like to point out that, this piece was done on the cardboard backing of an old sketchbook. And from that experience, next time I decide to use cardboard scraps, I think I would stick to mediums such as paint and inks rather than promarkers as it is absolute hell to blend.

And even though, (as mentioned in my old posts), I have been trying to steer away from cartoon-like illustrations, I feel like it turned out quite differently compared to anything else I have done previously. I feel this piece may just give this long, arguably boring post (that I am currently typing up), an element of fun and that pop of life it needs to make it somewhat enjoyable.

This painting (shown on the images on the right and below) is one of the pieces I am still content with. Usually I find that if I am happy with an illustration after having completed it, it will take me a week or two to gather up a list of improvements that could have been made...which in return voids my entire sense of achievement. However, a couple of weeks have passed now and I find that, although I have my list of possible improvements and mistakes, I am also still happy with what I produced.






Needless to say my Vogues are still intact and still remain on their shrine and I have yet to find a reason to stop clinging on to them. It's absolutely amazing how images from collections from seasons and years ago - from names you had never even heard of or just completely forgot about -  provided they are good enough - and strong enough, never fail to generate ideas and provide inspirations.


21/06/2013

ILLUSTRATION: A closer look...

University can be really full-on, especially if you have a course which requires its marking from 100% coursework rather than exams...for those of you lucky enough not to have experienced this, just imagine having the exam stress throughout the whole year. And now that I do have time to pretty much do whatever I want, I remembered how therapeutic it was to just paint, or draw or even practise hand embroidery - So pretty much what I have been doing for the whole year, minus the time limit, the guidelines and the dos and don'ts, and turns out it's surprisingly different!

If you've been through my blog before, or had a look at my older posts, this might look familiar to you. And it should be because it is an enlarged painting of a series of illustrations I had done earlier this year as part of my coursework... The image can be found here (entitled FAD COMPETITION). 

The image below (top left - green background) is the original painting and has been done on a canvas.
Size: A2 approx
Media: pen, pencil, fineliner, marker, acrylic paint, spray paint, nail varnish, watercolour
Time taken: 6 hours approx


Although I actually really like the painting I produced, after the last post (ILLUSTRATION: Changing it up) I couldn't help but render these...I have to say the filters on Microsoft Powerpoint is just growing on me! It amazes me how much the effects manage to change the image, and using only the click of a button!

1) (Top left image) I love the painting; I think it's glamorous and vibrant and young. In hindsight, I would've probably chosen a different, darker, richer colour for the background rather than the pastel green. I had a feeling, at the time that it wouldn't be the best colour to have settled for...and I have to emphasise that I did settle for the green as my colours of spray paints are very limited... If I could I would change the soft, matte green for a glossy finish of a rich ruby or deep emerald or a luxuriously warm saffron colour - anything jewel-toned really.

2) (Top right image) It surprises me how much the feel of the painting changes. Perhaps it's the lack of lack of colours and tones, but to me, it feels quite strange. I can't decide whether it has an ancient, faded look of washed out pen lines or whether the colours - particularly the blurred blueish-grey give it a futuristic feel...


3) (Top left image) I absolutely adore this rendered image. Unlike the previous image (2) this one can be described as a futuristically ancient feel. As though centuries from now, art lovers and illustrators will look at this as old  - It will be the new old, and yet it can be a classic. For those of you whom I may have lost due to the sheer stupidity of my words - I apologise. Also note, I am aware that I am being slightly overconfident. Anyway, I just feel as though, similar to the lace on her face, the painting looks almost timeless.

4) (Top right image) I can't fully remember but I have a feeling that I may have used more than one effect on this image - and I'm not entirely sure which. However, I quite like the effect of the blurry/smudged lines - to me, it resembles the strokes that can be created using a thin paintbrush. I like this because it looks slightly messier and slightly de-constructed which I usually prefer in art as well as illustrations. Although I'm not too sure whether I prefer the look of the finer details in this painting or the messy look - usually this is a no-brainer, but as this is my painting and I'm subjective, I think the image looses too much detail, especially in the lace.