This is a really fun lesson! I hadn’t thought about using my old water brushes for ink! What a great idea! I have to older pens that don’t squeeze without leaking, and they’d be perfect for ink, especially if I don’t have to press the barrel! Thanks!
Girl you just read my mind! I took a water brush filled with just plain water and used that along with straight black ink using the water from the brush to get my dark, mid, and light tones. I love it ! I must try your idea with water-soluble ink. that's awesome😊🙏🧡! Thanks, Koosje.
Koosje, thank you for all your lovely ideas. I love your videos and your style of sketching. .The squeezy thingy is called a "pipette" Cheers from Australia, Muffy from Oz.
"it's really important that we allow ourselves to play in our sketchbook" That sentence has stuck with me all week and I'm finally getting it and am committed! Recalling exercises from your previous videos, have been doing single line blind contour drawings and using less dominant hand and even though they turn out completely inaccurate, I'm loving it! 🥰🥰 I haven't used my stabilo Boss chubbies very much, you know, the fat water-soluable crayon pencils? So I'll use those for tomorrow's sketch!!
I've just discovered your channel and I really like your videos. Your love of drawing and your approach are communicative and.... motivating! Do you plan to publish your book in French one day? See you soon for another video. Have a nice day! Christine
Bonjour Christine, I have written the book in English, which was enough of an effort. As I self-published the book, there is now way I can translate it into other languages.
Dank voor de leuke tutorial!Ik heb dit al vaker gedaan met een gewone vulpen. Eerst tekenen met de blauwe inkt en dan idd met de waterbrush bewerken. Met zwart geeft ook een heel leuk effect. Heet het niet een pipet? Deze week je boek binnen gekregen.
Really helpful video thank you, just one question, did you dilute the fountain pen ink beforehand with water or did you directly fill it with ink? Thank you and I wish you all the best
When you say that we can use India ink, do you mean pure, undiluted ink? I tried putting diluted India ink in a brush pen but it didn’t work well. I had to shake it constantly. Even when I did that, I mostly got barely tinted water and occasional globs of ink.
I tried that too and it doesn't work well, probably for the same reason that India ink is not recommended to be used in fountain pens, that it clogs the system. Quite by chance I loaded up a water brush with some Waterman's fountain pen ink last week and it works really well.
From what I've found, regular india ink is waterproof, and so it can't really be diluted well with water. However, there are brands that sell special types of india ink, and some of those can be diluted. So that may be where the confusion comes from. It's been something that wasn't quite clear for me either, so your question was an excellent occasion to go and figure it out. Thank you. 😊
In laboratory we call the squeezy thing Liquette, a mix of liquid and pipette. With a real pipette you could measure, with this one you just pick liquid. I love your content.
Brush pens are always nerve-racking…. but if you can learn to ‘move on’ and not focus on unexpected lines, your work will more likely turn out to be something you like.
@@KoosjeKoene True. =) My mind makes up anxiety producing stories like wasting paper or wasting time doing a sketch that will disappoint. In reality, I have a ton of papers and the only reason I get disappointed is because of expectations.
@@R_H21 Ah yes, when the inner critic pops up, we can't think rationally anymore. Keep going though, because once you're in that creative flow, the inner critic will be chased away by the good vibes
I never thought of filling up a water brush with ink 😮 great idea!
Me too, such a great idea!
Just looked at your back catalogue for ink after todays Ink TTT. This is great, thanks Koosje.
Great!
What fun!! I never thought of putting ink into a waterbrush! I have many fountain pen inks that I could enjoy that way. Thanks!!
It's a great way to use up lower-quality inks as well that you don't want to use in your fountain pens!
Thankyou Koosje for the great new idea. I never use ink but I have to try this. Love your sketch with the red ink! You are always an inspiration.
Thank you Koosje, have a great week! 🥰xxx
This is a really fun lesson! I hadn’t thought about using my old water brushes for ink! What a great idea! I have to older pens that don’t squeeze without leaking, and they’d be perfect for ink, especially if I don’t have to press the barrel! Thanks!
Great tip, thankyou.
This is exactly what I want to try. Thank you. 😊
Have fun!
Thank you for uplifting. What an excellent lesson. Thank you
Glad you enjoyed it!
I never thought of this! Thanks!!
Thanks for the fun use of a sketch book page! ✨☺️
You are so welcome!
Girl you just read my mind! I took a water brush filled with just plain water and used that along with straight black ink using the water from the brush to get my dark, mid, and light tones. I love it ! I must try your idea with water-soluble ink. that's awesome😊🙏🧡! Thanks, Koosje.
Great minds think alike
Koosje, thank you for all your lovely ideas. I love your videos and your style of sketching. .The squeezy thingy is called a "pipette" Cheers from Australia, Muffy from Oz.
Thanks for sharing!!
Great idea! I love inks! I didn't realize I could load them into an extra water brush pen. What fun! 🎉
Right?!
Yes, we love buying art supplies !!
I always say buying art supplies is a whole separate hobby to using them 😅
So true!
Perpetual inspiration from you!! Thanks
to infinity and beyond!
"it's really important that we allow ourselves to play in our sketchbook"
That sentence has stuck with me all week and I'm finally getting it and am committed!
Recalling exercises from your previous videos, have been doing single line blind contour drawings and using less dominant hand and even though they turn out completely inaccurate, I'm loving it! 🥰🥰
I haven't used my stabilo Boss chubbies very much, you know, the fat water-soluable crayon pencils? So I'll use those for tomorrow's sketch!!
Oh, I'm so glad you are having fun and playing. The stabile ones are great for that.
grand idea! Thank you for the idea!
Glad you liked it!
I always learn from you! Thanks!
Glad to hear it!
really loved this video ☺
Glad you liked it!!
Great inspiratoin and tips as usual!
Glad you like them!
Just what I was looking for! Thanks excellent video.
Glad it helped!
respect. grateful for the idea. blessed day
My pleasure
That's actually a really nice ink. Lovely color. And I've read that it's no o longer being made.
Oh I didn't know that...
In English, the squeezy plastic thing is called a pipette. They are quite useful. 😊
And .. 'we' call it a 'pipet'. Silly peeps them Dutch.
Now I can have permanent ink in my waterbrush
I've just discovered your channel and I really like your videos. Your love of drawing and your approach are communicative and.... motivating!
Do you plan to publish your book in French one day?
See you soon for another video.
Have a nice day!
Christine
Bonjour Christine,
I have written the book in English, which was enough of an effort. As I self-published the book, there is now way I can translate it into other languages.
Pipette is the squeezy thing I think
I think that it's called a pipette.
Dank voor de leuke tutorial!Ik heb dit al vaker gedaan met een gewone vulpen. Eerst tekenen met de blauwe inkt en dan idd met de waterbrush bewerken. Met zwart geeft ook een heel leuk effect. Heet het niet een pipet?
Deze week je boek binnen gekregen.
Ja, een pipet! Oh wat fijn dat je mijn boek hebt gekocht!
Really helpful video thank you, just one question, did you dilute the fountain pen ink beforehand with water or did you directly fill it with ink? Thank you and I wish you all the best
I used it directly from the bottle
When you say that we can use India ink, do you mean pure, undiluted ink? I tried putting diluted India ink in a brush pen but it didn’t work well. I had to shake it constantly. Even when I did that, I mostly got barely tinted water and occasional globs of ink.
I tried that too and it doesn't work well, probably for the same reason that India ink is not recommended to be used in fountain pens, that it clogs the system. Quite by chance I loaded up a water brush with some Waterman's fountain pen ink last week and it works really well.
From what I've found, regular india ink is waterproof, and so it can't really be diluted well with water.
However, there are brands that sell special types of india ink, and some of those can be diluted. So that may be where the confusion comes from.
It's been something that wasn't quite clear for me either, so your question was an excellent occasion to go and figure it out. Thank you. 😊
I would use India ink undiluted.
Neat idea. Does it ruin your waterbrush pen to use with plain water in the future?
It depends on the ink, but yeah, probably for superclean use of the waterbrush, you might need a "fresh" one.
Just out of curiosity: did you use the ink without diluting it?
Straight from the bottle
It's a pipette!
Yes! Thank you for enlightening
Hi. Im newly subscribed though have encountered you a few years ago. Just wanted to say hello.
Hello! Thanks for subscribing!
In laboratory we call the squeezy thing Liquette, a mix of liquid and pipette. With a real pipette you could measure, with this one you just pick liquid.
I love your content.
Brush pens are always nerve-racking…. but if you can learn to ‘move on’ and not focus on unexpected lines, your work will more likely turn out to be something you like.
nerve wrecking? It's just ink on paper, don't forget that.
@@KoosjeKoene True. =) My mind makes up anxiety producing stories like wasting paper or wasting time doing a sketch that will disappoint. In reality, I have a ton of papers and the only reason I get disappointed is because of expectations.
@@R_H21 Ah yes, when the inner critic pops up, we can't think rationally anymore. Keep going though, because once you're in that creative flow, the inner critic will be chased away by the good vibes
pippet