Peony and Parakeet

Fly to Your Inner World and Color the Emotion

Creative Process

Visual Vocabulary First, Style Second

This week is about visual vocabulary and how to widen it.

I often hear the worry about finding the style, but more rarely about widening the vocabulary. Style is a quality word, but vocabulary is more about quantity. Still, it’s as important, and you can’t find the style without growing the vocabulary!

Painting with a wide visual vocabulary. By artist Päivi Eerola, Finland.

Often when we create art, we use a limited variety of shapes and lines and often the most ordinary ones. For example, your strokes may be quite straight and have very little variety in thickness. Or your shapes can be mostly basic geometric shapes. When I started, I mainly drew circles and my pieces were very symmetrical in general.

An example of narrow visual vocabulary.
In 2012, my visual vocabulary only had a few “words.”

Forget the Style, Grow the Visual Vocabulary!

When you want to widen your visual vocabulary, look at the details of your work. There are seeds that can grow into great things. For example, could you repeat a random spot that almost disappears into the background and build a subtle texture from it?

Colored pencils in Claude Monet's style. Inspiration from art history.
Create step by step: How to Color Like Monet

Look at your drawing line and think about whether it could deviate slightly from its path. Could you make a notch somewhere and thus make the shape more interesting?

Intuitive flowers with colored pencils. Step by step instructions. Exercises for building a visual vocabulary. By Paivi Eerola of Peony and Parakeet.
Create step by step: Notches change circles to Intuitive Flowers

Imagine you are a child who knows only a few words. Then it’s not important to question what the topic should be, but to find more words to tell any. Stop worrying whether you should create faces or landscapes and make a wide range of art to grow the visual vocabulary.

Combining abstract and representational in one drawing. Widening the visual vocabulary.
Create step by step: Combine abstract and representational

When you can draw a wide range of shapes, curves, lines and have many ways to color, repeat, break up and assemble them, you can produce visual stimuli on the paper that makes your imagination work. From this collaboration, art is born.

Outer Inspiration – Borrowing “Words” from Others

By looking at art, you can find words, i.e. shapes, that you want to incorporate into your own vocabulary, i.e. style.

Visiting museums and galleries. Admiring Adriaen van Utrecht's still life painting at the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.
Admiring Adriaen van Utrecht’s still life painting at the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.

Art history is like an encyclopedia where we can pick what we like. Any art can be seen as abstract – just focus on finding a variety of shapes and colors.

Vermeer Girl with hearts, step by step instructions for colored pencils
Create Step by Step: Vermeer Girl from shape to shape
Portraits in style of Helene Schjerfbeck, art inspiration for colored pencils.
Create Step by Step: Portraits in style of Helene Schjerfbeck

Your vocabulary can be inspired of not only fine art, but crafts as well.

Art inspiration from crafts.
Create Step by Step: Doodler’s Sampler

Imagination Sets Who You Are

Too much outer inspiration causes copying, so don’t leave your imagination out of the equation! Imagine you are a singer who takes a popular song into your repertoire. Then you enter a singing competition and are told: “You sound a lot like the original singer of the song, but we want to hear who you are.”

Colored pencils on an art journal. Growing your style and widening your visual vocabulary step by step.
Step by Step: Setting the atmosphere and layering with colored pencils

So we need not only to expand our expressive language, but also to develop our imagination. Visual vocabulary and imagination are a pair, and art needs both.

For example, you can draw a circle and give it a meaning, but can others see it? With imagination alone, the expression remains hidden. With a rich expressive language, we can make art enjoyable for others as well.

Welcome to My Courses + What I Want to Teach

Päivi Eerola teaches both artistic expression and imagination. This is from her course Freely Grown.
Freely Grown – one of the courses that his about growing visual vocabulary

The goal of my courses is to develop both your visual vocabulary and imagination.

First, I want to get you to draw something a little differently than you have done before and thus enrich your visual vocabulary. Second, I want to make a crack in your everyday thinking and plant imagination in it. I want you to ask: “What if?” and to respond with something completely crazy – something that makes you feel free to tell completely new kinds of stories.

When art emerges from this starting point, richly and vividly expressing itself, you will find your style.

Flower Painting Comes to Life – Watch the Video!

This week you get to paint with me in my little studio. We follow the birth of this flower painting from blank canvas to an exhibition.

A flower painting by Paivi Eerola, Finland. Aistien Sinfonia - Symphony of Senses, 50 x 70 cm, oil on canvas.
Aistien Sinfonia – Symphony of Senses, 50 x 70 cm, oil on canvas

In the video, you see me painting and chatting, and also get to visit my current exhibition at the gallery Gumbostrand Konst & Form. The exhibition is from Feb 12 to March 9, 2025 in Sipoo, Finland.

From Blank Canvas to Exhibition Piece – Watch the Video!

While I paint the flower painting, I talk about making art, becoming an artist, and what it’s like to paint freely and not use any reference photos. This is a longer video than usually because I have collected the material for it many months.

In the video, I talk not only about painting but drawing too. I love to play by drawing, and that play affects my paintings. Never underestimate the effect of play, and always keep playing and drawing, no matter how high you want to reach!

Hearts and Stories – Sign Up Now!

Let’s draw for your inner child and make the most out of simple shapes!

Hearts and Stories will begin on March 17, 2025. >> Sign Up Now!

Picture Prompts – Creating Art Journal Pages with Hand-Drawn Animals

This week, we use small collage pieces as picture prompts for art journal pages.

Hand-drawn art journal pages using picture prompts.

First you pick a small image, a hand-drawn squirrel or wolf in my case, and use that as inspiration for the rest of the page. You will need paper, colored pencils, and a pen for journaling. I also used felt-tip pens for the details that I wanted to highlight and graphite pencils for quick sketching. I attached the animals to the page with double-sided tape. My journal is Dylusions Creative Journal Square. (Affiliate link to Amazon.com).

Open Your Box of Joy and Select the Animal!

We will use hand-drawn animals as picture prompts. You can, of course, use any image, but I suggest starting with animals.

I save my hand-drawn collage pieces in boxes that I call boxes of joy. These little drawings are born from the joy of drawing. I have cut them so that they can be used as collage pieces.

Box of joy - a box filled with hand-drawn collage pieces. By Peony and Parakeet.

I started drawing these small separate little things in 2018, and have been creating them ever since. It’s so easy to pick a paper scrap and draw something simple, and then get enthusiastic about adding decorations and colors to it. I have several online courses where we draw these: Animal Inkdom, Magical Inkdom, Decodashery, and Doll World.

My animals are mostly drawn for the courses Animal Inkdom and Magical Inkdom, and I love them so much, that I have also printed copies of some of them. I have many boxes to choose from and I love to both use them and re-fill them.

For the first page, I selected a squirrel because it has pink and orange, and those have been my favorite colors recently.

Selecting a picture for creating an art journal page. Art journal picture prompts.

After selecting the animal, use its colors to color a small part of the page! Just color some layers freely (like in the course Intuitive Coloring). Don’t glue the animal yet, wait until you draw more and the story unfolds.

Picture Prompts – Go Beyond the Obvious!

We have a big nut bush in our garden and squirrels love it. So, my first thought was to draw some nuts for the squirrel. But that would be too ordinary and not fun at all. What if this squirrel would chase after Faberge eggs while others collect peanuts?

Drawing on an art journal page.

I love drawing decorated eggs. In Doll World, we draw a big egg, but this time I wanted the eggs to be small so I could fit many on one page.

Drawing decorative eggs on an art journal page. Art journal ideas.

I made the eggs a bit different in size to make the page more interesting.

Static vs. “What If …”

When using the animal as a creative picture prompt, you want to find the story – not only the connection between the starting idea and the additions but also something surprising that keeps the inspiration going. If you only draw the ordinary, the picture easily becomes static – nothing is happening. Go for the extraordinary! Change the rules of reality, change the roles of the objects, make the animal speak – by drawing, you can create a world of your own. Ask: “What if?”

When I drew the first egg, it felt like just any object, but when I drew more of them, my imagination started working. Maybe the squirrel could sit on the biggest egg? And maybe the eggs could have a bigger role than to be just a decoration.

Using colored pencils on an art journal page.

What if the scenery that I colored inside the biggest egg would leak into the surroundings?

Using a picture prompt for drawing and journaling on an art journal page.

I wrote: “A palace was born, hot summer days came here, the queen (the squirrel) had a party, and all things good and beautiful came up.”

Then I drew more and completed the page inspired by the journaling.

A hand-drawn art journal page by Paivi Eerola of Peony and Parakeet.

This is a story about an impractical squirrel who collected Faberge eggs instead of nuts and wasn’t much like other squirrels. But her eggs didn’t stay small. They grew and opened and created a place for her to live in.

“Isn’t that a story about every artist,” I realized after the page was finished.

Flying Wolf Art Journal Page

Let’s pick another animal and make the second page!

Selecting a picture prompt for an art journal page. Creative art journaling.

This wolf is the first little collage piece that I drew in 2018, so it’s time to give her a home. Decorating the animals was one of my core ideas for Animal Inkdom, so I can now color freely so that the decorations will continue to the background too.

Creative coloring inspired by a drawing.

Again, I am using the colors that the animal has: blue, black, and pink. This way the collage piece doesn’t look separate from the rest of the page.

I wanted the wolf to fly, but not with furry wings. Could the wolf be partly a butterfly?

Illustrated art journal. Drawing on Dylusions Creative Journal Square.

With the wolf, I felt a connection to my North Karelian origin. With the butterfly wings, I celebrated being a woman and loving delicate beautiful things.

Adding journaling to art journal pages.

This wolf didn’t feel like a lonely one. So, I added a small butterfly and another bigger that is showing only partly on the right edge.

A hand-drawn art journal page by Paivi Eerola of Peony and Parakeet. Wolf was drawn first and used as a picture prompt for the rest of the page.

Back in 2018, my wolf didn’t fly yet, but it’s flying now! The more you draw, the more you can imagine!

Picture Prompts – Step by Step

  • Pick the animal.
  • Use the animal’s colors and patterns to get started.
  • Ask: “What if …”
  • Answer by drawing and journaling.
Dylusions Creative Journal art journal spread. By Paivi Eerola of Peony and Parakeet.

New in Development!

I have been making a new course that has a working title “Hearts and Stories.” I have already drawn quite many pieces for it. I collect them under a plastic plate that fits the side table of my studio. There I can see the whole collection at the same time, and think about what’s missing and how I will proceeed.

Artist in a studio: paintings and illustrations. Paivi Eerola of Peony and Parakeet.

These drawings make me smile. My goal is that you too will smile when the course is running!

I want to be the advocate for drawing, because:

  • If you only think, your imagination has limited capacity.
  • If you only paint, you will stop playing and eventually run out of creative ideas.
  • Drawing is important for any artist and for any human being.

What do you think?

Choosing the Word for 2025

Have you ever chosen the word for the new year and then happily forgotten it? Me too!
But last year, I had a word that stuck in my mind. It was “Integrate”. My word for 2025 is “Release”.

Word for 2025, illustration by Paivi Eerola, Finland

Here’s what I have learned about choosing the word!

Too Much Emotion, Too Little Impact

Some words appeal more to emotion, some to reason. Most often, I have chosen a word that has an emotional appeal. For example, “Imagination”, “Depth” or Play. There are plenty of these kinds of soft words, here are some common ones: “Joy”, “Courage”, “Inspire”, “Create”, “Focus”, “Nurture.”

These soft words that make your imagination run wild may seem like good choices, but they have this downside: when you’re busy working, your head is full of rational words. Emotional words don’t come to mind at that moment. This way, the practical connection to the word is missing.

My word for 2024 – “Integrate” – was a rather uninspiring word at first, but it became more and more inspiring over the course of the year. The idea was that even though I was doing a variety of art – drawing, painting and programming digital motion art – I could look for connections between different art forms so that I didn’t have to reinvent everything. I could also value more what I had created in previous years. This union of old and new worked out nicely, and with the word, I began to see my artistic career as a whole and not just an attempt to improve my artistry piece by piece.

The best thing about the word was that it didn’t describe the actual result but solved how to get there. So when I encountered problems, “Integrate” often offered at least a partial solution. That way the word came to mind repeatedly and helped me in situations when my inspiration was at its lowest.

Word That Changes Your Life

I think the best words are those that initiate change for the better. I have often chosen a word that is already familiar and doesn’t make me change anything. This year, my first candidate was “Elevate.” It sounded too soft, so I found a similar rational word “Upgrade.” But since I always try to improve my actions and the level of my art in general, I rejected “Upgrade” and chose “Release” instead.

To me, “Release” means letting go of what I’ve been holding in my heart and letting it come out. I want to give myself permission to be naive, naughty, brutal, overly cute, everything and anything, and start to blindly believe in my artistic vision. Release also means publishing what I’ve done openly and regularly and working with that in mind. Letting go and publishing is a bittersweet combination that really challenges me.

Release also means that I can let go of things if they hinder rather than help the cause.

Drawing the Word for 2025

Writing about the word is good, but I also wanted to process the word by drawing.

First sketched lines and some coloring - creating an illustration by moving from one idea to another.

By drawing, you always find new dimensions. Even the hardest words become softer and create emotional connection.

Sketching with a pencil. Drawing without a big plan. Illustration of the word for 2025 in progress.

One thing leads to another. I love this way of drawing where the result remains a surprise for a long time.

Coloring a pencil sketch. Working with colored pencils and felt-tip pens.

I combined colored pencils and markers here. I like the soft impression of colored pencils, but I used felt-tip pens in the highlights to intensify the colors.

Using colored pencils and felt tip pens for creating art. Illustration in progress.

When the drawing was half-finished I compared it to the little pieces I had drawn during the Christmas holiday.

Drawing in progress. Comparing the unfinished piece with the finished ones. By Paivi Eerola.

The colors still needs to be strengthened and details adjusted.

Finding the Connection with the Word

Even though this drawing isn’t very big, about letter size, there are a lot of details. I took many breaks and it took me about 3 days to finish the drawing. For the illustration that combines the right and the left brain, it’s important to find the connection between all the details and understand how they express the word.

Illustration in progress. Colored pencil art.

This drawing depicts my childhood in the 70s with plastic animals and daydreaming. The drawing feels revealing to me, although its style is playful.

Finishing a colored pencil illustration with felt-tip pens.

Even if the picture feels a bit private, I want to share it with you: release, you know!

Drawing your word for 2025, illustration by Paivi Eerola, Finland

What’s your word for 2025?
Are you going to draw it?

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