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Category Archives: Quick Sketches

30 minute experiment

26-Jul-07
30 minute sketch

I’m reading a new book called “Watercolor Plus…” which has a good section in it on pen and ink with watercolor washes.

The artist, John Hoar, drew and painted this scene as a demo. I’ve not adhered to the demo at all really. I was simply experimenting with the looser style he uses.

I like looseness but it has been a bit elusive for me to “get it” in my mind’s eye. So, I’ll concentrate on it for a while. It’s faster and I’ve always liked the idea of letting the viewer’s mind complete that which is but a suggestion of reality. It makes it more interesting for them I think.

One unusual thing John does is use a whittled match stick shoved into a bamboo stick for his “pen”. He dips it in Indian Ink and draws the image with it. It forces a loose drawing.

Think about it…It’s pretty dang hard to draw a “tight” drawing with a whittled match stick shoved into a piece of bamboo and dipped into a bottle of ink. It’s sort of like painting your toenails with a whisk broom. (Not that I paint my toenails mind you.) I think this is a big key to his style. (BTW, if I did paint my toenails, which I don’t, they wouldn’t be black. But that’s a subject for a future post.)

I try to steer clear of utilizing cumbersome means toward achieving a drawing or painting or sketch, so I used a Micron “brush” pen instead. It’s a trade-off. Convenience for a slightly less “loosy” drawing. I just don’t want to become attached to some technique that isn’t practical for sketching or drawing in the car or in the field. Think spilled Indian Ink on automobile seats of Fine Corinthian Leather.

So, I’m hoping to coerce the Micron brush pen to achieve similar results with some practice.

John also uses half size watercolor sheets for his paintings…which for me is another “not so practical for the field” choice…though he does do “in the field” paintings with these tools.

Some folk like to tote along a bunch of stuff like that and do their painting thing. The attention doesn’t bother them. I like to tote as little as possible. I like it all in a fanny pack. I like being discreet when sketching in the field. When at home, hey, I may sketch in my underwear. But when in public, I’d just as soon not be noticed when I sketch. So I wear clothes…and use tools and media that are inconspicuous.

I did this on an 8×10 watercolor block I made up from Canson Montval watercolor paper. That’s about as big a sketch as I tend to tackle.

Which begs the question to my artist readers out there, have you noticed there are no 8×10 watercolor blocks or pads or sketchbooks on the market? What’s with that? Zillions of 8×10 frames in North America, no 8×10 watercolor media. Go figure. So I have to make my own.

But I digress…the book is great and the other artists in the book are top notch as is John Hoar. I’ll be re-reading and experimenting more with this style for a while now.

Chattahoochee River Birches

12-May-07
Chattahoochee River Birches

This is another sketch done on the kayak trip from the previous post.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Chattahoochee River Bank

12-May-07
Chattahoochee River Bank

I rented a kayak for the weekend and took a paddle down the Chattahoochee river this morning.

The reason? Sketching of course.

A most wonderful thing happened during this little trip. I discovered charcoal and a kneaded eraser. The two tools are great for sketching and they are fast too. Charcoal lets you get real darks, unlike graphite. And it lifts easily with the kneaded eraser.

This is just in time because I’m putting together a series of small oil paintings for presentation to a gallery here. I’ll be painting this one and I’ll post it when it’s done.

As for now, go rent yourself a kayak and paddle down a slow rolling river. You’ll be hooked. I guarantee it.

Geezer Wear

26-Apr-07
Geezer Wear

We went to O’Charley’s for dinner this evening and witnessed the latest fashion in Geezer Wear.

  • Yes, they were vivid blue.
  • Yes, they were medium brown.
  • Yes, the shorts were plaid.
  • Yes, he kept obsessively wetting his lower lip with his tongue.
  • Yes, my wife knows what to do if I ever dress like this.
  • Yes, my wife knows what to do if I ever start obsessively wetting my lower lip with my tongue.
  • Yes, she knows to make it look like an accident.

It’s a Cruel World

24-Apr-07
Daydreamer

Over the last few mornings I’ve noticed this squirrel in a large maple tree just off our deck.

He’s kind of different.

He’s the only squirrel I’ve ever seen that lounges and daydreams. Two mornings ago, he was actually lying on a branch, wide awake, but just lying there with his head resting on the branch.

This morning he was sitting there, on the same branch, staring out into the yard like a little zombie, nothing pressing on his agenda, no sense of urgency like most squirrels. I’m mean c’mon folks, it’s Spring for cryin’ out loud.

I began to wonder about this squirrel…

Then it dawned on me.

This squirrel has ED.

The Twisted Birch

23-Apr-07
The Twisted Birch

Alright. All you botanical experts out there, riddle me this.

This morning I got myself a cup of coffee and took a walk over at a park not far from home. The trail runs alongside a creek with your typical creekside flora and fauna.

I tend to look all around while walking and I looked up at precisely the right time to see this one and only river birch with a twisted trunk.

At first I thought it was one of those burl thingies, you know, those big ol’ growths on tree trunks that are prized by wood turners for making unusual wooden bowls. But on closer study I realized it was quite literally a twist in the growth of the trunk.

To top it off, it was twenty feet up in the air.

So, my botanical friends, what in the world causes a tree to develop a screw shaped twist in its trunk??

Glad I saw it. It was an interesting thing to see. Plus it gave me an opportunity to list some truly scientific reasons of my own in the sketch.

The Azalea Blossom

22-Apr-07
The Azalea Blossom

My dear wife likes to pinch off blossoms from the Azaleas and put them on the kitchen table in a little blossom bowl. I thought they made a nice subject for a sketch.

Once again, nature proves to be complicated. There are so many leaves, petals, shadows and such in that little bunch of blossoms in that little blossom bowl…it’ll make your eyes play tricks on you trying to keep up with where you are in the sketch.

So the lesson is to simplify so you can learn about how these blossom thingies are constructed.

The more you sketch, the better you become at capturing shapes and details…and simplifying. Note that “capturing” is different from “copying”. Capturing is actually better.

Even so, there are days like today, where you simply don’t do a well as you’d like. That’s the beauty of it though.
You still sketch.
You still learn.
You still enjoy.
And it doesn’t really matter if you’re “off” because you’re not trying to impress anybody. You’re just sketching for the rewards of it.

That is the goal after all. In the big picture, a year from now, you can see and review your good days and your bad days and learn from that too.