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Watercolor House Portrait #263Z

Watercolor house portrait #263Z.

This is about Watercolor house portraits #263Z, pen & ink drawings, which contains two renderings done for Realtor Megan Beechen, and written by artist Stephen F. Condren, BFA-SAIC, of Condren Galleries, a Fine Arts Gallery. Congratulations Megan Beechen!

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Properties Sold

544 Regal Lane, Bolingbrook, IL

1050 N. Ashbury, Bolingbrook, IL

Realtor

Megan Beechen
Real Estate Broker, Realty Executives Elite

630-632-5486 (Call or Text)
www.MeganBeechen.com
15400 127th Street, Lemont, IL 60439

Pencil Drawing For Watercolor House Portrait #623Z

  • Stylus Sketch

The very beginning of all house portraits starts with a fine line stylus sketch or drawing. Just like in Real Estate, so too in art, you have to have a foundation! The sketch is the basement for all practical purposes. As you can see from the image below the sketch does not offer much refined detail, in the same manner a basement is unfinished. Because the sketch is the starting point it is crucial for laying out the correct size, scale, and details of the house to be rendered.

This fine home is a two story house in traditional style. There is a bay window in the living room and a nice covered porch at the entry. The garage is attached to the side of the home. The second floor is the same size as the first and there is no third floor outside of an attic. The landscaping is handsome in that it offers a lovely stone wall to secure the boundaries of the front lawn and gardens. There is a large birch tree directly in front of the entry and a large maple on the right side of the property. These trees are both enclosed in the stone wall framework.

It is amazing how much information you can get form this simple sketch! Now the next step is to put the pen & ink to work.

Lead Pencil house portrait #263Z.
Lead Pencil House Portrait

Pen & Ink Drawing

  • Stylus Sketch

The pen & ink drawings or stylus sketch is very demanding and also very unforgiving. When it come to drawing this is where you separate that men from the boys for you have to know what you are doing. There no room for error, when you put the pen & ink on the paper it is final, so you have to be sure that it is correct from the moment that you start.

Sketch As A Guide

Because pen & inks are so demanding you can appreciate the need for a sketch as a guide. To draw pen & ink on a blank sheep of paper is a whole different ballgame. As an artist, my clients demand and expect the best, as they are entitled to. These house portraits not only cost money they are a statement to the Realtor’s client. Therefore, it is serious business to do things right, and from the start.

As a graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, I am well educated on how to approach a work of art, which every house portrait it. Further, each house portrait is a commissioned work of art, thus the client is taking a risk that the rendering will be what he or she is expecting.

MLS Images

My approach to pen & ink renderings is to carefully take the pen and look at both the MLS list image and the paper. The funny thing about all of this is that I draw very quickly! It is difficult to explain, but as I see the image on the MLS page I only have moments to grasp that form and carry it over to the paper with my pen. For that reason, the longer that I take the more that I will forget. I need to move quickly. I carefully outline the entire structure and then start to fill in the detail.

Picture Plane

The thing that I draw first is the landscaping and any other object in the front of the picture plane. If you look at the pen & ink below you can see that the birch trees out front are going right up and not cut through with lines from the eaves of the house. This is because I had to layout the area for the trees before hand and leave that space blank for the trees. The same holds true for bushes and other object in front of the house.

Pen & ink house portrait #263Z.
Pen & Ink House Portrait
Pen & ink house portrait #263Z.
Pen & Ink House Portrait

Watercolor House Portrait

  • Home Painting

Most importantly, the final step is applying the watercolor to make the house portrait or home painting. Just like the pen & inks, watercolor is also very demanding and very unforgiving. Once the brush touches the paper that is it! You cannot erase and when you attempt to rub it out with the paint brush the watercolor then look “worked”, a very bad and undesirable thing. Watercolor have to be fast and fresh.

Because you can see from my brush strokes below, they are worked together as I apply the paint. I put a few colors from my pallet on to the brush and then work them onto the paper. I never go over it and work it out. Light, fresh, and fast is the key to success!

Watercolor house portrait #263Z.
Watercolor House Portrait
Watercolor house portrait #263Z.
Watercolor House Portrait

Condren Galleries

  • Fine Arts Gallery

I am honored that Megan commissioned me to do her renderings and I look forward to working with her again.

Note Cards and Housewarming Gifts

  • JPEG & PDF Scans

Note cards and stationery as well as many other things can be made from the scans that I email to the Realtor. Simply email the scan to any local print shop and they can produce what ever you want. Scans are available JPEG & PDF formats.

Alt Image Tag

Watercolor house portrait #263Z

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House Portrait Sketch Proposal For 1152 Cherry St. #182Z

House portrait proposal sketch

This article is about a house portrait sketch proposal, which is for sale at discount with prints by artist Stephen F. Condren, BFA-SAIC, of Condren Galleries, a Fine Arts Gallery, offering JPEG & PDF scans. This is the preliminary ink for the watercolor painting that is to follow. I start every house portrait with a pencil sketch until I have captured the image of the house. After this point I start inking until the drawing is “under control”, at which point I apply the watercolor.

Delineation of Watercolor house portrait 6/26/2018

This love house portrait is done in watercolor with use of pen & ink. The color of the pigment is a variation on greens and yellow.

Hatching & Cross-hatching

The shade and shadows are make from a mixture of red and blue and added to the cross-hatching.

House Portraits Link

House Portraits

Related Links

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House Portraits For Realtor Closing Gifts #157Z

Watercolor house portrait by artist Stephen F. Condren

This article is about house portraits for Realtor closing gifts, which is for sale at discount with prints by artist Stephen F. Condren, BFA-SAIC, of Condren Galleries, a Fine Arts Gallery, offering JPEG & PDF scans. Though residences in multi-unit structures have been the subject of house portraits, by in large the single family home is the defacto model. Most often the house portrait is given by a Realtor to his/her clients as a closing gift. This has proven to be a very successful and popular gift by the Realtor in securing future leads and referrals. Order House Portraits Here.

Architectural Renderings

House portraits are casual works of art and they are not Architectural Renderings by any measure. A masterful example of Architectural Renderings are my renderings of the Loeb Mansion, which can be seen below that is in the permanent collection of the Chicago History Museum. The purpose of an architectural rendering is to convey in exacting terms to an architect or committee what the proposed structure will look like. There is little to no room for “artistic license” for these offerings. As you can see in the Loeb Mansion below, the use of Two Point Perspective was employed and thus all of the lines for the vanishing point recede either to the left or right vanishing point on the horizon line. This is a very technical and tedious kind of drawing and take an enormous amount of time and energy.

Loeb mansion house portraits from the Leopold-Loeb murder case.
Architectural rendering of the Loeb mansion.

Realtors

By in large most of my clients are Realtors that give the house portraits to their clients at closing. The most common protocol for ordering a house portrait is to place the order on-line then email to me the MLS link of the house. If there is no MLS link any photo will do. I usually request a few images of the home, from the left, right, and center. If possible a nice close up view of the entry is good to have as well.

Perspective

I always contact the Realtor when I receive the images or photos and go over them with him/her to make necessary adjustment to the image. For example, if there are unsightly poles, cars, or toys in the photos I recommend removal of these objects. Also, the angle and position of the house in the frame is discussed. Some homes lend themselves to being seen or “painted” from a certain angle or perspective which I seek to use. Without doubt any trash canisters or debris of any kind is removed without question.

Genres

The two most popular genres that I have chosen to do for house portraits are watercolors and pen & ink. Below is a brief outline of the two classes.

Watercolor House Portraits

Watercolors are the most popular house  portraits.

Watercolor house portraits
Watercolor house portrait.

Very fresh and light are the watercolor house portraits which have proved to be the most popular genre of house portraits that I do. I start out all of my house portrait renderings with a light pencil sketch of the home. After I have put down the sketch I examine it to check out the proportions of the dwelling in relation to the landscape and the scale of the picture plane. Once that I have determined my satisfaction with the layout I then detail fine places on the rendering that will need attention.

After the final pencil draft I then get out my India ink and pen and commence with the rendering. Usually the first thing that I do is the sky for it sets the tone of the work of art. My pallet has a set mix of color that I have prepared for the renderings. In the case of the sky colors I use a mix of cerulean, cobalt, and Prussian blues. Depending on the photo I balance the intensity of the tones to match the photographs or other images provided.

Pen & Ink House Portraits

Pen & inks make very good and exact house portraits

Pen & ink house portraits by artist Stephen F. Condren.
House portrait in pen & ink.

Though I greatly watercolor house portraits, there is an elegant robust beauty to the pen & ink renderings. There is an exactness that you get with the pen & inks that you do not get with the watercolors. Generally speaking, the pen & inks are more robust and stronger as the delineation brings out all of the architectural detailing of the dwelling.

Townhomes

House portraits for townhomes make a wonderful closing gift as you can see for the image below.

House portraits for townhomes
Townhome watercolor house portrait.

Ranch Homes

Ranches make for an excellent house portrait for closing gifts and housewarmings.

House portrait by artist Stephen F. Condren
Ranch watercolor house portrait.

Ranches are of course a very popular style of home and as you can see for the image above they make a lovely image for any house portrait.

Conclusion

No matter what style or age of a home is, the most cherished of all closing and settlement gifts are House Portraits, the gift that keeps on giving!

Condren Galleries Ltd. Link

condrengalleries.com

Stephen F. Condren ~ Artist

312-303-0207

School of the Art Institute of Chicago ~ BFA