I work with textiles as well as with paint, but whether paint or fabric, texture and richness of surface is significant. This encourages the looking at the whole and then the part, the excitement and vitality of the work being as much in the detail as in the larger gesture.

I love colour and surface and this feeds into the way I deal with my subject matter. I use colour in a liberated manner in terms of the actual hue. The local hue is less important than its property – warm, cool, light, dark, intense or muted. This allows me a freedom of expression that can lead to vibrant, exciting and sometimes unexpected results. I believe in preparation and development and find that one work leads to another as I begin to see the possibilities within my subject matter.

Using the computer

The computer is an invaluable tool and I use it not only to store my images but to manipulate my sketches and photographs to create variations on the theme I am working on. Any photo-editing programme will give you the option to saturate or change the hue of an image, which can be a useful starting point. Often the painting will change, particularly when working on a large scale, as what may look right as an A4 printout needs reassessment as it progresses to a large canvas. However, it is with layers in Photoshop that the real fun begins. Layers can be very complicated. I find the manual gives far more information than I feel necessary to do the relatively simple tasks that are useful when sketching out ideas. I use Photoshop purely to do what I will find useful and no more.

I use the working method described here with all my subject matter, except when I am working directly from the subject, such as on a portrait or an observed still life. One note of caution: use filters and special effects with great care and judgement. Let the computer do some of the work but remember that the creative process is essentially your own.

I am presently working on a series of commissions mostly arising from my last exhibition. I enjoy liaising with my clients and understanding the space where the work will hang is an added bonus and, occasionally, a challenge!


How I use layers in Photoshop to develop my sketches

There are different versions of Photoshop; Photoshop Elements is reasonably priced, whereas the full suite is a much more expensive option. Screen views differ slightly between the various versions but help can usually be obtained from Photoshop Help or Googling any problem you encounter.

To start

  • I open the image I want to use in Photoshop.
  • I create a new file – click File, New – and usually select 29x21cm (A4), 112 pixels/cm, RGB colour mode, white background. Name it New File.
  • I create a duplicate of my original image and move it to the new file. To do this, click on the Move tool (press V on your keypad for the shortcut), then click on the original image and, keeping your finger on the mouse, drag it to the top of the screen, place the cursor on the new file tab and drop it in.
  • If necessary I make the images bigger or smaller (to fill the file size) by using the Marquee tool (shortcut M) to enclose the image and then the transform command – Edit or Image, Transform, Scale (shortcut Command T on a Mac; Control T on a PC). I hold down shift while pushing or pulling the corner of the image to the required size, which maintains the aspect ratio (relative proportion). I then press return to complete the transformation. In some Photoshop Elements versions you will have to select Constrain Proportions and then drag or push a corner handle. Both images should be similar in size on the screen. However, you can fine-tune the scale later.
  • Now working with the original file I use the Marquee tool to make a rectangle to enclose the area I want to drag over to New File. Using the Move tool (V) I take the enclosed area over and drop it in position on New File. I then transform it to the size required, pushing or pulling the corners while holding down shift; press return to complete the transformation and move it to where you want it (V).

N.B. At this point I have to make sure the layer palette is showing on my screen – Window, Layer – where I can see that the selection I have taken over to my new file shows up as a different layer. The layer I am working on will be highlighted.

What follows is the very simplest way of dealing with your layers

  • Select Eraser (E) and the brush size, then erase the bits you don’t want. Make sure you are working on the layer you want to erase! If you make a mistake go to Window, History (Show History), click on the bin icon and delete the last operation (Command Z, Mac; Control Z, PC).
  • If you want to move your layer, use the move tool, making sure you are working on the appropriate layer. You can make it bigger, smaller, (Edit/Transform or Image/Resize/Scale) or change the colour, intensity (Image/Enhance/Adjust), all without affecting any other layer. You can continue to add bits to your composition – each move from one file to another will create a separate layer.
  • When you have something you think might work you can save it if you want to keep the layers separate but then you should flatten (merge) the layers – Layer, Flatten Image – so that the file becomes unified.
  • Once I have something I think may have potential I save it and name it option 1, 2, 3 and so on.

You can also manipulate your photographs by taking parts of one over to the other. Decide which image will be your background and duplicate that one in the first instance. By creating the new file you maintain the integrity of the original. Then follow the same steps.


DEMONSTRATION Mooring Poles, Venice

STAGE ONE

I worked on an existing, unresolved painting as the starting point for this new work. I began by opening the image in Photoshop

Here a layer has been added (partially erased)

The image was cropped and the file saved as OPTION 1

STAGE TWO

OPTION 2 IN PROGRESS

By cutting and pasting I made additions and changed the original composition

Content continues after advertisements

Option 2 Option 3 Option 4 Option 5

I also enhanced the colour (Option 2), I considered whether or not to zoom in (Option 3), whether to add areas from other paintings (Option 4), or to change the colours. (Option 5) – the options are endless. You can completely change the colour and, of course, you can paint into your computer sketches digitally, on screen. I often print the sketch and work on it with paint or pastel. Try using watercolour or cartridge paper in your printer if you want a more substantial ground to work on

STAGE THREE

THE FINISHED PAINTING

Mooring Poles from San Vio, acrylic on canvas, (100x50cm).

I decided to work from Option 2 for this final painting

STAGE FOUR

Figure1

Figure 2

I continued this process for a textile hanging, trying various options, adding bits of other paintings (Figure 1), different formats, sometimes using some of the other Photoshop tools such as Paint Bucket (shortcut G) to fill in areas of colour (Figure 2), and draw into the design. My final choice was Figure 3 (below).

THE FINISHED TEXTILE

Mooring Poles Venice, textile hanging, (120x140cm)

The wall hanging was worked on a linen fabric pinned to a long piece of wood. The collaged fabric was initially pinned to the background and then appliqued with a zigzag stitch using an embroidery foot on a sewing machine. When working on a textile I think of my strip of fabric as the brushstroke, much like collaged paper in paintings. I take a bold approach, using fabric and thread as one might use blocks of paint and line. I also produced a series of small paintings from the initial sketches into which I incorporated fabric and gold leaf. These lie somewhere between the more spatial renderings of my paintings and the designs of the hangings.



Phyllis Davies studied at Glasgow School of Art. She has exhibited widely and also sells her work in Venice. She works and teaches from her studio in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire. www.phyllisdavies.com


Content continues after advertisement