Travel Journalling Tips

This article is written by Francesca Albini

A cruise on the Nile may sound like a calm, relaxing experience, but the truth is, most of the excursions start at 4-5 am, you are often dragged from one monument to another, and in the evening there may be special dinners, dances, music and other entertainments. There are only a few moments where, if you have the energy, you can sit down and sketch, glue, paint, or write.

I find it is actually better when visiting a completely new place to absorb the atmosphere and collect material to then work on my journal once I’m back home. I make mental notes about things like colours, sounds, impressions, temperature. I write key-words  and a few diary entries on a document app on my mobile (I handwrite too, but calligraphy is not what I do best). I also have a folder to collect ephemera, ticket stubs, postcards, brochures, and, why not, the letter paper of the hotel or boat I’m staying in.

I hardly use my big camera these days, I prefer a more compact one, but still with an slr chip. I also bring with me a few plastic cameras and mobile camera apps. I very often find that the lo-fi images record the atmosphere better than the higher quality ones. Lo-fi also means you can capture images quickly, for instance when riding on a coach (less pixels or 35mm film are faster).

Here are three spreads from my Egyptian trip.

The first is more collage-based with bits of ephemera, my cut-out diary entries and some photos, one of which printed on a piece of brown manila envelope.

Art Journalling by Francesca Albini

 

The second is a sketch of the view from the boat. I laminated the book I’m working on with rice paper died with a tea bag. I used pencil, gouache and bits of coloured tissue paper. The reference for the image were a photo I took and some quick sketches I did on deck at the time.

Art Journalling by Francesca Albini

The last spread shows three photos I took, the one on the left is a candid taken with the good compact kept at waist level, the two on the right were taken with a 35mm plastic camera. I spread brass, ochre and white acrylic around the pictures and completed with rough homemade eraser stamps of birds and palm trees.

Art Journalling by Francesca Albini

 

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Francesca is a visual artist using pretty much everything she finds around her to record and relive feelings and memories of places and emotions. She collages, paints, draws, photographs. Francesca loves mixing modern technology, such as mobile phone apps, with the simplest of tools such as glitter glue, crayons and other children’s art supplies. Read her blog at http://franjournal.blogspot.com/

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What to do with Doodles

This article is written by Francesca Albini

I am a doodler. I doodle on a dedicated sketchbook while watching TV, I doodle on scraps of paper when I’m talking on the phone or writing notes. When I buy a new pen or marker, or I see one lying around, I just have to pick it up and make squiggles, cartoony faces, trees, eyes, noses, whatever comes to mind. I also do digital doodles on my mobile phone.


And I hate throwing my doodles away – they are free, spontaneous, funny. Let me share with you some ideas of what you can do with your doodles. You can rip them up randomly, glue them to your journals, adding glazes of watercolour and other marks to form an interesting, almost abstract, background. You can scan them and turn them into digital brushes (do a search for “custom brushes” to see how to do it in different programmes). For instance, I print patterned paper using my doodle brushes in different colours, opacity and sizes.

I also print borders for my pages. I stick strips of masking tape on a transparency or vellum paper that I can run through my printer, and use the decorated masking tape to make borders or attach photographs. I also scan some coloured doodles and print them on white or transparent adhesive paper to make stickers.


Or I simply cut the originals with scissors and arrange them into a collage. Here are some examples from my journal pages. I hope they will inspire you and make you think twice before chucking your doodles away. They too can find a place in your art.

mixed media art
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Francesca is a visual artist using pretty much everything she finds around her to record and relive feelings and memories of places and emotions. She collages, paints, draws, photographs.

Francesca loves mixing modern technology, such as mobile phone apps, with the simplest of tools such as glitter glue, crayons and other children’s art supplies.

You can see more of Francesca’s work at www.franvisions.net

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Mixed Media Artist – Francesca Albini

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Today we have Mixed Media Artist Francesca Albini sharing two of her journal layouts.  Our Mixed Media Art community is a diverse bunch and over the last 5 months we have shared work from all around the world. Each artist has had different interests, reasons why they create and a wide range of skills.

Let’s let Francesca tell us her story…

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I am a visual artist using pretty much every media and tool that exist, from digital painting to 35mm plastic cameras. I especially love using children’s art supplies and anything colourful and interesting. I collage, paint, draw, photograph, to record feelings and memories of places and emotions. I’m Italian, I live in London, UK, with my husband, and I love travelling to warm countries, deserts and oceans.

I’d like to share with you 2 pages from my journals. The first one is a junk journal. I find them a great way to record my travels . I bring with me a hole puncher and some hinged rings, then I collect whatever scrap paper I find, leaflets, pages from books, anything relevant to my travel and I work on that, adding my own photographs, glazes of paint, and text.

Mixed Media Art journal

The second picture is from an altered book. I like creating landscapes with layered found paper and tissue paper. I paint white tissue paper to give it a feel of a grass field or rocks, then rip it with my hands and laminate it with PVC glue.

Mixed Media Art Journal

To see more of Francesca’s  artistic endevours, you can visit her blog: http://franjournal.blogspot.com/

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Thank you for sharing your work with us, Francesca.

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