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Book Review: Coloring to Calm Volume 1 Mandalas by Shelly Fagundes

August 18, 2015 by Admin Leave a Comment

Title: Coloring to Calm, Volume 1 – Mandalas
Author: Shelly Fagundes
Publisher: Flying Donkey Press
Format: eBook (includes link to print pdf copy)
Release date: 13 August 2015
Available to buy from: Amazon Kindle Store
Cost: US$2.97

Number of drawings to color in: 25
Type of drawings: Mandala line drawings
Level of difficulty: some basic, mostly intermediate

DISCLAIMER: As a reviewer, I received a free ARC (advance reading copy) of this book. This has not affected my review in any way.

Released this week, Coloring to Calm, Volume 1 – Mandalas is the first offering in a new series from author Shelly Fagundes.

Interestingly, the book is currently only available as an eBook at the Kindle store.

‘But how can you color in an eBook?’ I hear you ask. ‘You can’t even PRINT a Kindle eBook.’

Ah. In this case you can. Fagundes has been smart enough to include a hyperlink at the back of the eBook that will allow you to download a pdf version of the book. This allows you to print out as many copies to color in as you wish (though I suspect that if the book does well, it will also be available in print form fairly soon).

The book contains 25 mandala designs, including the one below, which shows about the average level of detail for images in the book. A few of the drawings are more basic, and some are very intricate, but generally the book will suit intermediate colorers with a bit of experience.

If you tend to use markers instead of pencils, then you will need to ensure that you have a selection with finer tips (I like Staedtler Triplus), because there are very small, detailed areas to color in many of the drawings. Those using colored pencils should be fine, as long as you have a good sharpener.

Coloring in a mandala from Coloring to Calm Vol. 1

Coloring in a mandala from Coloring to Calm Vol. 1

All mandalas in the book are bound by a square box outline, so there’s the option of coloring to the edges of the box, or treating it as a frame of white space surrounding the mandala. Each mandala is placed in the middle of the printed page, making it easy to fit to a real frame in the future if desired.

The line designs have clear, clean edges and are of good quality. There is plenty of variety in the designs to keep you engaged, and for those who love coloring repetitive stripes and small chains of squares, there are enough to keep you occupied for hours. The most basic designs in the book can probably be colored within an hour, but the most complex are likely to take you several hours each (the fully colored image at the bottom of this post took me around 90 minutes to complete).

At US$2.97 the book provides excellent value at around 12 cents per design, with the bonus that you may print the drawings from the pdf copy of the eBook as many times as you like for personal coloring. This kind of freedom is especially likely to appeal to those of us who prefer to color on specialty papers instead of the cheaper paper stock usually utilised in printed coloring books. Great designs and value for money.

My completed colored mandala from Coloring to Calm Vol. 1

My completed colored mandala from Coloring to Calm Vol. 1

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: adult coloring in books, adult coloring in books review, adult colouring in book reviews, adult colouring in books, book review, Coloring to Calm, mandalas, pdf coloring books, Shelly Fagundes

Review: Colorfy Coloring In App Ups the Coloring Games

August 10, 2015 by Admin Leave a Comment

Image[1]
These days there’s an app for everything, so it was only a matter of time before iPhone and Android developers jumped onto the adult coloring in craze bandwagon. The most successful adult coloring in app so far was released just last month. It’s free to download, and it’s called Colorfy.

I saw my niece playing with similar coloring games on an iPad about a year ago. But while kids can use Colorfy too, it’s aimed squarely at the grown up colorists’ market.

The simplest image in the Colorfy coloring in app

My first Colorfy masterpiece, and the simplest image in the Colorfy coloring in app

At the time of writing this post, the Colorfy app has an average rating of 4.5 stars out of 5 in both the iTunes store and Google Play (from thousands of reviewers), so both iPhone and Android users appear to be pretty happy with it. Although it’s definitely popular with the majority of its users, I downloaded it because I’m curious as to whether it has much in common with the kind of pencil and paper, analogue coloring in that so many of us enjoy.

How to Download Colorfy

Colorfy is free to download from the iTunes store for iPhone users, or via Google Play for Android. The developers make their money from additional in-app purchases such as extra color palettes and coloring images, but you can use the app without spending any money.

How to Use Colorfy

From a usability perspective, Colorfy is simple and well laid out. It has a ‘Library’ of coloring images, divided into six sections which each feature different types of images. These are:

  • Florals
  • Animals
  • Famous (based on famous paintings by Munch, Van Gogh, Klimt, Monet)
  • Mandalas
  • Oriental
  • Exotic

Users may scroll through designs and select one that appeals to them. Those with a small padlock symbol next to them need to be purchased before you can color them in, but there are plenty of free images available too.

Screenshot - scrolling through the Colorfy libraries

Screenshot – scrolling through the Colorfy libraries

 

After selecting an image by tapping on it, a palette of colors is revealed. To ‘color in’, users select a color from a palette by tapping on it, and then apply the color by zooming in and tapping on the area of the coloring in picture they want to apply it to. Then tap on another color, and tap on the image again to fill in another section, and so on until you’re done.

When you’re finished, with a single button click you can share your designs via Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp, Pinterest, Google Plus or Twitter. The image is exported with a white border and the Colorfy logo at the bottom, as shown on the images in this post.

Screenshot - the standard Colorfy color palette

Colorfy app Screenshot – the standard color palette

But is it really coloring in?

Good question. It’s certainly ‘filling in with color’. Imagine having a magic painting finger where you only need to point at the leaves on a tree and they all turn green, and that sums up the experience. Then you fine tune your magic finger, point to the sun and make it purple. Or teal. Or even conventional old yellow.

The Colorfy app has little to do with the action of coloring in, so if it’s the soothing shush of your shading pencil moving back and forth across soft paper that floats your boat, odds are that this app will not be your thing.

If, however, the thing that thrills you about coloring in is mainly playing with color combinations, or if you’re someone who buys more than one copy of a particular coloring book to try out different colors on the same image, then you might enjoy the flexibility of the app. Colorfy has an undo button, so color choices may be changed in an instant. If color commitment is not your thing, that could be quite an attractive feature.

 

Screeshot - Van Gogh in progress

Colorfy app Screenshot – Van Gogh in progress

Summary

What I like most about coloring in is that it’s quite relaxing. I didn’t find Colorfy to be particularly relaxing, and as I already spend way too many hours staring at various screens throughout my day it ended up straining my eyes after a while. This was probably because I ended up zooming in and out a lot to get to smaller coloring areas on detailed pictures such as the Van Gogh.

That said, it was definitely a little bit addictive, and once I started an image I wanted to finish it. There’s something quite satisfying about ‘magicking’ a large section of color in with just the touch of a finger – minimal work and a quick reward, which no doubt accounts for much of the app’s popularity.

Of course you need to pay to expand your color palette and the available designs if you really want to get more detailed shades and images, but although I enjoyed playing around with the app, I didn’t feel compelled to go that next step and pay up. All the images on this page are free, as are the color palettes that I used.

Colorfy app Mandala design

Colorfy app Mandala design

What I enjoyed most about the app was completing a design and then playing with the background, or changing just one or two larger areas of color to see how different the image looked. This is something that cannot be done easily on paper, so if you like to experiment in this way, the app is quite freeing. The images above and below are the same, except for two large areas that I changed to black. The effect is quite striking.

The same Mandala design, with two areas changed to black

The same Mandala design and color scheme, but with two areas changed to black

If you’re a coloring in purist who enjoys the relaxation factor of coloring and subtle nuances of pencil shading, I doubt you’ll be too impressed with the blocky cartoon colors produced in this app. But if you can accept that Colorfy is essentially a more elegant version of a kids’ coloring game app, and has little in common with actual pencil and paper coloring in, it’s not a bad way to spend a few minutes here and there, creating attractive images to easily share online. It certainly feels like a more productive use of screen time than crushing candy.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: color palette, Colorfy, coloring app, coloring game, coloring in app, coloring in purist, colouring app, colouring game, colouring in app, Van Gogh

What do Ryan Gosling and Benedict Cumberbatch have in common? Adult coloring in books

August 8, 2015 by Admin Leave a Comment

Cover of the Color Me Good Benedict Cumberbatch coloring book, alongside the man himself (photo credit: <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/9850/9138436150/" target="_blank">touchedmuch on Flickr</a> under <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/legalcode" target="_blank">CC BY 2.0</a>)

Cover of the Color Me Good Benedict Cumberbatch coloring book, alongside the man himself (photo credit: touchedmuch on Flickr under CC BY 2.0)

What do Ryan Gosling and Benedict Cumberbatch have in common – aside from being genetically blessed in both the looks and acting departments?

The unlikely answer: they are each the subject of an entire adult coloring in book.

The very cool Color Me Good series of coloring books by funky independent label ‘I Love Mel’ feature a range of famous male faces to color in, including:

  • Jamie Dornan;
  • Eddie Redmayne;
  • James Franco;
  • Benedict Cumberbatch; and
  • Ryan Gosling.

There are also coloring in books of stylish females, for those who prefer to deal in fashionistas, including Taylor Swift, Kate Moss, and Cara Delevingne.

If you cannot commit yourself to just one man, or woman, then one of the Color Me Good collections may be for you.

Color Me Swoon is a single coloring book featuring a huge array of famous men, including Ryan Gosling, Aaron Paul, George Clooney, Ben Affleck, James Franco, Prince Harry, Zac Efron, Bradley Cooper, Javier Bardem, Channing Tatum, David Beckham, Gerard Butler, Jake Gyllenhaal, Pharrell Williams, Tom Hardy, Ryan Reynolds, Christian Bale, Alexander Skarsgard, Patrick Dempsey, Hugh Jackman, Damian Lewis, Brad Pitt, Justin Timberlake, Benedict Cumberbatch, Wentworth Miller, Jared Leto, One Direction, Hugh Grant, Joaquin Poenix, Gary Barlow, Daniel Craig, Henry Cavill, Colin Firth, Usher, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Idris Elba, Rob Lowe, Matt Dillon, Kevin Bacon, Ralph Macchio, John Cusack, Michael J Fox, Tom Selleck, Matt Damon, Keanu Reeves, Robert Downey Jr, Johnny Depp, Robert Pattinson, Taylor Lautner, Michael Cera, Afam Driver, Andrew Garfield, Jason Segel, Chris O’Dowd, Jon Hamm, Jim Morrison, Russell Brand, Richard Gere, Jude Law, Will Smith, Michael Fassbender, Nicholas Hoult, Paul Newman, and Steve McQueen (phew!).

With a list like that, I’m reasonably sure that most women will find someone they’d be quite happy to spend a few hours coloring in.

There’s also a Color Me Girl Crush book, featuring female film stars (Jennifer Lawrence, Natalie Portman, Keira Knightley), pop stars (Beyonce, Adele, Lana del Rey), fashion icons (Cara Delevingne, Alexa Chung), a special 90s section (Sherilyn Fenn, Winona Ryder, Naomi Campbell), as well as stars old (Audrey Hepburn) and new (Emma Stone).

On her website, Mel Simone Elliott, the Royal College of Art graduate behind the Color Me Good series of coloring in books, says:

My work has always been influenced by pop culture, celebrity, fame, glossy magazines and the aesthetic perfection that goes hand in hand with all that stuff. The colouring books … were developed when I realised that the things we enjoyed doing as young children, such as cutting out and colouring in, would still be enjoyed by adults, if only the activity books had ‘grown up’ with us.

These books are good fun and likely to make great gifts for colorists everywhere. The quality of the illustrations makes the famous faces instantly recognisable, yet they are not too intricate for beginner ‘color-inners’ (a great term used in these books) to tackle.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: Aaron Paul, actors, Adele, adult coloring books, adult coloring in books, Afam Driver, Alexa Chung, Alexander Skarsgard, Andrew Garfield, Audrey Hepburn, Ben Affleck, Benedict Cumberbatch, Beyonce, Brad Pitt, Bradley Cooper, Cara Delevingne, celebrities, celebrity, Channing Tatum, Chris O'Dowd, Christian Bale, Colin Firth, Color Me Good, Damian Lewis, Daniel Craig, David Beckham, Eddie Redmayne, Emma Stone, famous, Gary Barlow, George Clooney, Gerard Butler, Henry Cavill, Hugh Grant, Hugh Jackman, I Love Mel, Idris Elba, Jake Gyllenhaal, James Franco, Jamie Dornan, Jared Leto, Jason Segel, Javier Bardem, Jennifer Lawrence, Jim Morrison, Joaquin Poenix, John Cusack, Johnny Depp, Jon Hamm, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Jude Law, Justin Timberlake, Kate Moss, Keanu Reeves, Keira Knightley, Kevin Bacon, Lana del Rey, Matt Damon, Matt Dillon, Mel Elliott, Michael Cera, Michael Fassbender, Michael J Fox, Naomi Campbell, Natalie Portman, Nicholas Hoult, One Direction, Patrick Dempsey, Paul Newman, Pharrell Williams, Prince Harry, Ralph Macchio, Richard Gere, Rob Lowe, Robert Downey Jr, Robert Pattinson, Russell Brand, Ryan Gosling, Ryan Reynolds, Sherilyn Fenn, Steve McQueen, Taylor Lautner, Taylor Swift, Tom Hardy, Tom Selleck, Usher, Wentworth Miller, Will Smith, Winona Ryder, Zac Efron

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