Skip to content

Category Archives: Building details

Bird Watcher

03-May-07
Bird Watcher

Our hotel room in Destin had a nice little balcony overlooking the boulevard, and beyond, a spot or two of ocean peeking between condo hi-rises.

As I sat there in the morning, drinking a cup of coffee, I realized I was being watched from above.

All about were these little sparrows flitting. We were four floors up so I was a bit confused as to why they were up there. Then I looked up and saw one of the little stinkers guarding the entrance to his nest…in the eave.

At the corner of the terra cotta roof there was a cavity. And in it, a nest, the straws of which were barely visible. When I moved my coffee cup to my mouth, the little fellow popped into the cavity.

I took a look at all the other eaves within sight and those too had nests in the cavities at the corners.

Later on, I put a few crumbs on the banister and they of course lit there and flew away with the booty…sometimes to the nests.

The roofing system seemed well made and well thought out. The entire front of the roof, where it ended along the fascia, was blocked off with a black piece of aluminum or plastic the exact shape of the undulating terra cotta tiles. But at the corners, no such thought had been given.

This of course was quickly found out by the sparrows. And feeding the sparrows became amusement for hotel guests (I being one).

It is an interesting maintenance battle that builders and architects have waged over the ages against nature. Just when they think they have it licked, nature finds a way ’round it.

I suppose some maintenance manager will requisition some of those large fake owls for the corners of the building before long. Thus putting a bit of a damper on the “vision” the Architect had for the place.

Destin Condos

30-Apr-07
Condos in Destin

We took a short trip to Destin, Florida for a wedding over last weekend. There were several opportunities to sketch so I’ll post five of them over the next five days, in consecutive order.

These sketches are going to be examples of stuff you can sketch on a vacation. You don’t have to sketch “all beauty, all the time”. It can be fun to sketch whatever is available in a particular situation.

As always, you learn as you study the subject, beauty or not.

This one is a view of the condos across the highway from our hotel room. We were on the fourth floor. That provided a different angle, semi-aerial. The colors were bland…just one green roof, the turquoise Gulf of Mexico, and a ground cover of pale green palm trees galore. It’s tough to make “pretty” out of that but sketching it anyway is good for the mind.

There were condos to either side of this building but my sketchbook is a small one. So, all you get is one building.

Yes, the eyes went crossed several times getting all those windows. This was a real test of patience.

Get Twiggy Wid It

15-Apr-07
Twig and Bark Picture Frame

About two hours north of Atlanta, in the mountains, is a nice resort called the Brasstown Valley Resort. It’s a beautiful place for conferences, golf, company meetings…or just to get away for a long weeknd.

We go there for special occasions, usually for one reason…the Friday night seafood buffet.

Ever since I first visited the place, I loved the decor. It’s elegantly rustic. It reminds me of the upscale lodges the really wealthy people of the early 20th century used to retire to in the summers.

Throughout the lobby and grand dining room, they have wonderful rustic furniture made by Old Hickory Furniture. They also have a lot of unique, one-of-a-kind furniture pieces and picture frames.

I set about to document these picture frames. I try to get one down on paper each time I visit. I even made one a couple of years ago. I’ll write it up soon with some instructions on making it.

They are really beautiful in the right setting. The thing I like is that they are made by hand.

I purchased a 75 year old steelprint out of an old book on eBay. It’s an image of a family of beavers busily chewing twigs, downing trees, and building their lodge. That’s the image that resides in the twig frame I made. It hangs in my studio.

I couldn’t think of a more appropriate scene for framing with a twig frame.

John Singer Sargent

14-Apr-07
Ballustrade, After Sargent

John Singer Sargent is by far my favorite artist. He passed away back in 1925. He made a good living painting high society portraits, many well known (Teddy Roosevelt and others), but he also did a ton of drawings and watercolors too. He’s best known for the portrait works and rightfully so.

However, in the last few decades, it’s those watercolors and drawings that are becoming widely recognized likewise, as truly remarkable work.

I first saw one of his portraits at the Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina. George Vanderbilt, the owner of the estate, commissioned Sargent several times. I was totally amazed when I got up close to one of the paintings. They were oils, very large. Up close, you see how a few strokes make up the whole…amazing.

Go there. You’ll be amazed too at both Sargent and at the Estate. I’ve been a bunch of times. In my opinion, it’s one of those places you want to visit before you go to the great beyond. Spend the night there or at the Grove Park Inn. Then take the tours, all of ‘em. Make it a mini vacation. You won’t regret it.

I’m tellin’ ya it’s an amazing place. And no, I’m not getting paid to say any of that.

But I digress…

Sargent. It’s time I studied his work more. I’ve got a book on him. I read it. I’m going to read it again. Why? Well, you learn from others. Turns out there is a wonderful resource of Sargent drawings at Harvard and they are all online.

Man, I love the Internet!

This little sketch is from one of the sketches in the database. I sketched it and added color just for fun. The objective in drawing others’ drawings is to obtain tactile, first hand familiarity with the lines the original artist laid down.

You don’t necessarily worry with getting anything “exactly” as they did it. Instead you pay attention to what technique they used and you learn how to introduce it into your own sketches and drawings.

By drawing their drawings, you really pay attention to what they did. That makes the ol’ synapses in your own head lay down a memory of how to do the same thing but “your way”.

If you put your mind and pen to it, you’ll get better and better.

Keeping Up With The Jones’s Rooflines

13-Apr-07
Keeping up with the Jones

I went and rode my scooter for a while today and came upon another new neighborhood of homes “Starting in the $900’s”.

Seems when one reaches the $700’s or so, it becomes a game of how many rooflines one can put on a house. Of course it escalates on up as the “00’s” get added.

I suppose this is because there isn’t much else to measure one’s self esteem by when you reach this level of housing.

I mean three $70,000 cars is enough cars to get bored with.
10,000 Square feet is enough space to forget you are married.
More than four different textures on the facade is getting into the realm of tacky so you can’t get showy there…
Three kids, two in private school, one at Harvard…ho-hum…”more kids dear? NO! get back on your side of the house!”

So what else is there to compete with the Jones’s over?

ROOFLINES!

Pause…On The Golf Course…

“How many rooflines do you have on your house George?”
“Last time I counted Paul, it was eleven.”
“I thought it looked a little sparse over there. I’ve got fourteen rooflines on my house George.”
“Hmmmm…well we’re about to add on a couple of rooms-the kids are coming back-you know. I plan to have sixteen rooflines then Marvin.”
“That’s impressive George! That will make you the neighborhood roofline king I believe.”
“Yeah, well I hate that we have to add those rooms…but the kids are coming back-you know…”

Back to Sketching…

I stopped sketching on this one and it’s really sloppy because:

  1. I ran out of room.
  2. I got disgusted with drawing all the dang rooflines!

Trust me, there are about twice this many I didn’t draw because this is only about 2/3’s of the house…on the front!
The back has a bunch more, different rooflines! (I can only assume the one’s on the back count in the competition.)

I’d like to see John Singer Sargent whip this one out in speedy fashion…I bet he’d be cussin’ up a storm at all the dang rooflines just like I was.

I Know What You’re Thinkin’

So Don, How many rooflines do you have on your hoity-toity house?
Three.
Stop it! Stop that laughing!

Red Door

17-Mar-07
Red Door

I’ve driven by this shed a hundred times. It sits just off the road to the side of a house in an aging neighborhood. The neighborhood replaced what was once rural land maybe forty years ago. The land was cut up into lots, one to three acres I would guess. This place may be a couple of acres.

Today, people use the road to bypass traffic jams on the primary roads. The neighborhood is surrounded by new neighborhoods packed with $700,000 and up homes on 1/2 to 3/4 acre lots. No doubt this place, and the rest of the neighborhood, will be “consolidated” and sold to a developer in the next ten years or even sooner…to pack in more people and mini-mansions.

The old shed survived the first round of development and even got a shiny red paint job on the door. Though no one has seen fit to keep it that way. Now the shed sits facing the road, the door being the first thing one notices when the place comes into view.

Like an old dog, lying in the sun, wearing his old red collar, watching all the traffic pass by…long since having served his master. Not a care. Not a worry. Biding time.

Starbucks, Seattle, Pike Place

07-Nov-06
Starbucks "original" store in Seattle

Back at the end of August we took a quick little trip to Seattle. The flights were on special so off we went to this city we had never seen. Seattle is known for coffee. Starbucks, among others, is headquartered there.

Originally, Starbucks was located inside the Pike Place Market in Seattle. Now, the first store is across the street and this is a sketch of the place. I would equate it to a shrine of sorts. Apparently, coffee lovers that visit Seattle, take the pilgrimage down their to get their picture taken in front of the “original” Starbucks. And of course they buy something.

On the inside it looks like a typical Starbucks. On the outside, it looks like a family diner you would see in a small rural town….nothing to write home about. I’m glad they kept it that way. It puts on display for all to consider, what humble beginnings and a good idea can turn into.

If you ever visit Seattle, go by there for the heck of it.