Color the Emotion

Pick a few colors and create without stiffness.

From Fact Finding to Quick Start

Fact Finder, an illustration by Peony and Parakeet. Tips on how to stop browsing and start creating!

She searched ideas by watching what others had made. Then she realized that she had spent hours trying to find the inspiration. And it was already too late to start making anything by her own. Besides, she was feeling overwhelmed.

Does this sound familiar to you? You might get inspired of this or that, but feel powerless to start making your own. It can be only that you are tired after a long day. Then the best you can do is to go to sleep. But if repeatedly find yourself having difficulties to begin, it might be that you are using the wrong method when searching for inspiration.

Use your imagination when browsing other people’s work.

When you use your imagination, you will get your own, not other people’s ideas. This requires that you do not take anything you see as a fact. Instead, you should focus on the feelings and associations which they raise.

Coming from the Library, a drawing by Paivi from Peony and Parakeet as a teenager

Here’s a crayon drawing which I made as a teenager. It is about a girl coming from the library. The weather is predicting the end of summer.

But actually, you don’t need to know anything like that. The fact that the girl is standing in the middle of the picture should be irrelevant to you too. The purple dress is interesting only if you react to the color. Maybe you are touched by the combination of blue purple and bright yellow? Or maybe you get cold vibes when watching the image? Like when you were sitting on the floor of your new unfurnished home thinking of how to renovate it. Which reminds you of new beginnings and how much hope they hold. A little bit like puppies and young children …

Now you ask: would that mean that I should draw a puppy dog? Or just grab the idea of softness? You could if you feel inspired enough but I would advise you to have a bit larger mix of things. So let’s pick another image.

Four girls, a watercolor painting by Paivi from Peony and Parakeet in 1988

Here’s another work from decades ago. I used watercolors to replicate a black and white photograph of my grandmother and her three friends. Here you might think how stiff and serious people used to be in photographs. Those forced gestures are a complete opposite for the puppies. How funny the similar photo of four puppies would be!

Now you might get inspired by expressing the two opposites: stiff and free-form, hard and soft. Hard can still be soft inside, like the hearts of the four young girls.

Make a Quick Start using the ideas as a starting point.

When I began working from this standpoint, I knew only this: I would begin with coloring four soft areas and at some point add both organic and angular lines to express the opposites. Then I turned the music on and went with the flow.

The Sun Always Rises in the Morning, an art journal page by Peony and Parakeet. From fact finding to quick start!

In the end, I wrote where my thoughts had led me to: “The sun always rises in the morning”. I had illustrated the change of day and night and expressed how every morning is a new beginning. Now, there’s hardly any resemblance to the images I started with. Still, they gave me a jumpstart on creating.

When browsing, focus on your inner thoughts.

If you get stuck with having no ideas and being overwhelmed by other people’s work, you think too much about facts and give too little value to your inner thoughts. You will browse endlessly because facts never stop if your own thoughts will never get noticed.  Instead, look at few images or read few sentences and think: What is here that comes to my mind? What basic combination could I create from these just to get started?

If you look for the perfect inspiration starter, you may never find it. In fact, there’s no such thing. But if you value your own thoughts, creating art will generate happiness regardless of the source of inspiration. Your art journal or any end result will become more and more perfect because you are perfect for yourself.

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29 thoughts on “From Fact Finding to Quick Start

  1. I so needed this today. I am rather new at the whole paint and color part of my artistic side, and as I browse through pinterest or other websites looking at people’s art, I am so overwhelmed, I am frozen with doubt. So thank you for the reminder to use my imagination and just let go.

    1. Thanks, Sherrinda, it was great to hear that the post helped you. Help your imagination grow by giving time for your own thoughts too!

  2. Your blog is one of my all time favorites! Thank you for sharing your work and inspiring us all!

  3. This is so me. thanks for the help. I start with an idea to copy something then end up with something entirely different. Your blogs are so encouraging.

  4. I am so happy that I found your blog and Pinterest!! Your instructions is just what I need, (I’ve now read several of your past posts). I feel afraid to start a project/piece, and now I see why. Thanks! ~Lori

    1. Lori, welcome to follow my blog and subscribe to my weekly newsletter! Have fun creating!

  5. So true! Happens to me way to often!!!! I have started limiting my time on the internet…but not enough. Too easy to get side tracked! I will take your advice the next time I go fact finding! Thank you for all of your inspiration!!!!

    1. Sharon, thanks! For me, changing the process has worked better than setting the numbers like exact time limits.

  6. I love reading your articles. They help me so much. You seem to know me so well! 😉

  7. OMG I thought you were speaking directly to me! Yes, I spend hours reading many many artists blogs saying to myself I will go and create something as soon as I finish just a few…..but I cant stop! I print out hundreds of others creations to look for inspiration and learn new techniques. but if I don’t get off the computer then nothing gets done artwise. I also tell myself that this is part of my life and obsession for art and spending hours on the computer and $$$$ on ink for the computer is ok. Well you are right, it is not!! Thanks for this great post today and I will try your methods to hopefully get me arting!

    1. Susan, thank you for the great comment! I would suggest to pick only few supplies that you like the most and start with them. By creating boundaries you will get most out of your creativity … hmmm… should blog about that too!

  8. You know us all so well!!! You truely do inspire us and give us confidence to keep going. Thank you!!!

  9. Thank you so much, Päivi. This blog (the sun always rises…) inspired me to try my coloured pencils in a new way – I always wanted to use them more but didn#t know how. So I am glad I found your blog!

  10. THANK YOU! Oh I do this way too often. Thank you for tossing out the rope and pulling me out. Now to get back to creating beautiful things 🙂

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