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Diamine Sepia: drawing review


born t

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Hello All,

 

This is my first ink review post. This morning, I went to an art-shop and found that it had taken delivery of Diamine inks. The Sepia caught my eyes, as I like brown inks. Having tried the ink, I found that I liked it a lot, and so thought I should share my experience with the Forum.

 

Now, there has been many hand-written reviews already, so I thought how about a hand-drawn review? Well, here it is. I drew the portrait on Basildon Bond paper using an Omas pen with a fine, flexible nib. The ink behaved really well: it dried quickly and shaded beautifully. The flow was excellent, too, without being so lubricative that it compromised stroke control, while being capable of producing very thin, light lines as well as thicker, more saturated ones. The picture is about 2.5 times the real size.

 

The ink will replace Herbin Black Tea for the time being.

 

http://www.cantabgold.net/users/born/Born-1-small.JPG

 

Thank you for viewing, and hope you have enjoyed the review.

 

Born

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Born

 

http://img525.imageshack.us/img525/606/letterji9.png

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Terrific work! The drawing really helps to see the potential in an ink.

A certified Inkophile

inkophile on tumblr,theinkophile on instagram,inkophile on twitter

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WOW!!

I wonder if you could do a portrait using various brown inks? putting, high and low lights in hair and shadowing etc...Now, if only I could draw (sigh)

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Beautiful review. Thank you!

May you have pens you enjoy, with plenty of paper and ink. :)

Please use only my FPN name "Gran" in your posts. Thanks very much!

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    • stylographile
      Awesome! I'm in the process of preparing my bag for our pen meet this weekend and I literally have none of the items you mention!! I'll see if I can find one or two!
    • inkstainedruth
      @asota -- Yeah, I think I have a few rolls in my fridge that are probably 20-30 years old at this point (don't remember now if they are B&W or color film) and don't even really know where to get the film processed, once the drive through kiosks went away....  I just did a quick Google search and (in theory) there was a place the next town over from me -- but got a 404 error message when I tried to click on the link....  Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth 
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      There is still chemistry for processing regular chrome (positive) films like Kodak Ektachrome and Fuji Velvia, but Kodachrome was a completely different and multistep beast. 
    • Ceilidh
      Ah, but how to get it processed - that is the question. I believe that the last machine able to run K-14 (Kodachrome processing) ceased to operate some 15 or so years ago. Perhaps the film will be worth something as a curiosity in my estate sale when I die. 😺
    • Mercian
      Take a lot of photos!   If the film has deteriorated or 'gone off' in any way, you can use that as a 'feature' to take 'arty' pictures - whether of landmarks, or people, or whatever.
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