Drawing - Whiteboard Art

Drawing – Whiteboard Art

In June 2016, I moved to a new room at work which has an entire whiteboard wall. For the first few weeks the wall was covered in work from the previous team and I wasn’t allowed to touch it. In those weeks my colleagues and I named the room ‘The Chic Suite’ and talked about how we would use the whiteboard wall. We wanted to bring a bit of fun and colour to the room, by drawing around each others bodies. The day we were told we could wipe that wall clean, we did.

One evening when everyone had gone home, I was packing up to leave when I turned and looked at the empty white wall. I decided to write ‘Welcome to The Chic Suite’ in the centre of the wall using different colours, so that when someone came into the room, it would be there right in front of them.

welcome to chic suite

The day after during lunchtime we started to draw around each others bodies. There were only four of us in the room at the time, so we had three of us to the left of the wall on one on the right, with the ‘Welcome to the Chic Suite’ in the middle. Tracing around each other was fun, though the traces were not accurate to our body shapes, one person had a big unnatural hand and another had an extremely slim leg. We just laughed at the figures we’d drawn and didn’t bother changing them as they were unique, like us! We decided to each be a Disney characters, so we had an Alice, Belle, Pocahontas and Aladdin and we all had fun drawing the outfits on each other. The Alice and Belle looked very similar in blue dresses, so to tell them apart, I thought I’d try and draw Lumière (the candle) next to Belle. I found a picture on Google using my phone, grabbed an orange whiteboard pen and started to draw. When I was finished I was really surprised how easy it was and how similar the drawing was to the original picture. I had a sudden urge to do more! So I took to google again to find an image of Meeko (raccoon) for Pocahontas and started drawing. When I’d finished drawing Meeko lunch was nearly over and I had to wait until the end of the day to carry on! That evening I added a Cheshire Cat, I found a picture of the cat lying on a tree branch and as Alice was on the far left of the wall, it was perfect!

I really had the bug for drawing now, so for the Aladdin (that was the fourth body trace on the right side of the wall), I added Abu (monkey) and the Genies lamp. I also drew Mini Mouse with the words ‘Walt Disney lives here’ underneath, as the wall was pretty much all Disney!

Here’s a picture of the wall (it’s the only one I have!) :

whole-wall-e1495321562929.jpg

One evening I was curious to see what else I was able to draw and I called a friend to give me a challenge. She asked if I could do the famous drawing of Cosette from Les Misérables. Challenge accepted! The original drawing of Cosette consists of lines, so I started from the top and worked my way down copying every line as close as I could from the picture on my phone. Once I’d gotten to the end of Cosette’s face it had been over an hour and the ink in the pen was becoming faint. I was not leaving until it was finished, so I put the pen in an up right position for fifteen minutes, then continued. I finished the neck by just doing lines and not copying the original as my arm was getting achy. All that was left after that was the hair, which wouldn’t have taken that long to do but the ink was faint and it was past ten o’clock, again I didn’t bother looking at the original image and just drew from memory to get it done. Here it is:

Les mis

I added a drawing of Aladdin a week or so later, along with a body trace of our fifth team member. This was done underneath the ‘Welcome to the Chic Suite’ and in a sitting pose. This person soon became Esmeralda from the Hunchback of Notre Dame, holding a tambourine and a potato (inside joke relating to the person). Sadly I don’t have a picture! But I have one of the Aladdin:

Aladdin

I’ve made a slideshow of some of the Disney drawings close up!

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At the beginning of December 2016, I wiped all the drawings off to start fresh. As it was the holiday season and I was feeling festive, I decided to do a Christmas morning! I grabbed a ruler and drew a window, which took me a couple of hours. The next evening I started the stone fireplace. On top of the fireplace I added Clogsworth, Chip and Mrs Potts all from Beauty and the Beast. Overall the Christmas morning took me about four nights to do. The three Disney characters were the only drawings where I had to look at a picture. For the rest of the Christmas morning, I just let my imagination do the work!

Whiteboard wall - christmas morningWhiteboard wall - christmas morningWhiteboard wall - christmas morningWhiteboard wall - christmas morning

I really enjoy drawing and I learned that it was something I never knew I would be good at. I found it very relaxing and for a first, I never got frustrated during any of the drawings. I will carry on drawing on the whiteboard wall, as all the drawings above have now been wiped off and I just need to find the time! When I do have the time, if you would like to challenge me to draw something, comment below and I’ll give it a go! 🙂

RATINGS

  • Difficulty scale – I can’t rate this for you but for me it was easy
  • Time taken – on going – For the Disney characters it was about 15 minutes each
  • Enjoyment – 😀 LOVE IT
  • Would I do it again? – YES, when I have the time..

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Individual Eyelash Extensions

Individual Eyelash Extensions

In December 2016 I decided that I wanted to become a fully trained eyelash technician, not because I wanted to earn some extra cash but because, well… why not?

I spoke to my niece, Jordan and asked her if she was up for doing the course as it meant we could practice on each other, and she agreed. We enrolled for the one day course in April 2017. A few days after we had booked the course I became curious to how the lashes were applied. I watched a few Youtube videos and soon learnt that two steady hands were required and having a weakness in my right hand, well, now it was a challenge that I couldn’t resist!

I was nervous on the morning of the course, in case I physically couldn’t do it and was wasting my money. Normally when I try new things, it’s at my pace and on my own, so I have no one to judge me. The course started at 10am and when Jordan and I arrived, we were joined by 20 other women, all eager to learn! A Scottish woman called Lisa was our trainer, she was very welcoming and made us all feel at ease. We were handed a booklet which contained all the information about the course and what we would learn. We spent about an hour going through each page of the booklet with Lisa and she was very thorough when explaining, answering all the questions everyone had. Once we knew the important bits and the basics, that’s when the fun started! We were each given an eyelash extension kit that contained all the equipment needed and a doll’s head. We gathered around Lisa’s doll and watched how she applied each lash. Once we were shown the technique, we then went to our dolls to practice.

I found applying the lashes on the doll very easy, the strip lash I was using to apply the individual lash to, was spacious between each strand and I didn’t need my right hand to separate the strip lashes. I practised separating the lashes with my right hand anyway and it was very slow. It took me 3 hours to apply the lashes onto the doll, but it was the same for everyone in the group. Here’s some pictures below:

Once we had finished on the dolls, Lisa asked for six volunteers to allow us all to apply 4 lashes to a real person. As soon as my turn came up, I was nervous. I sat down with my equipment, my right hand started shaking and I was worried I was going to poke the girl in the eye with my tweezers. I called Lisa over before I started as I was doubting myself and told her I wasn’t ready. She quickly assured me that the girl’s eyes were closed and I was not going to hurt her. I felt a bit stupid for panicking but took in a deep breath and starting separating the girl’s lashes with the tweezers, using my right hand. OK, I know said when I was using the doll it was easy but my god it’s not! Natural lashes come in different lengths, angles and layers! The lashes on the doll were one thin strip, human lashes are layered and it takes some time to find a healthy lash that is not at the end of it’s life cycle. It took me 15 minutes to find a lash, which then I had to hold my right hand steady enough so that the other lashes around it wouldn’t fall in between my tweezers. It was hard but I did it! I mastered one more lash after the first one. I was so nervous I couldn’t do the other two lashes.

When everyone had applied 4 lashes, Lisa then showed us how to remove the lashes individually on one of the girls that had volunteered. After we watched this, we were then given our certificates. Lisa told us to practice as much as we could before charging anyone for the lashes.

After the course had finished I went back to Jordan’s to do her eyelashes. I have to say it was much easier and more relaxing doing the eyelashes for someone you know. It took me 2 hours to put a few on Jordan’s lashes but I found that I can do it. Eventually with more practice it should take me no more than 2 hours to do a full set and that my dear friends is a new challenge on it’s own! Bring it on! 🙂

Here’s a picture of lashes I applied on Jordan:

Jordan Lashes

RATINGS

  • Difficulty scale – somewhat hard
  • Enjoyment – 😀
  • Would I do it again? – YES!

**UPDATE**

Since completing the course in April, I’ve done a further two sets of lashes on two different people.

Joanne Eyelashes
Time taken: 3 hours, 30 minutes
Marisa Eyelashes
Time taken: 3 hours