28 ARTISTS & JOURNALISTS
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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Artist's Journal Workshop

Spring, Oh Where Art Thou?2013_03_28_kokuyo_01Mar27ArtPeople on train to PerthPaddock, back of schoolSean at Karate
10-03-13USK France - Le carnet " Maisons, cabanes, villas..."RainforestFebruary 2013: Muir WoodsFebruary 2013: Muir WoodsFebruary 2013: Muir Woods
Day 33  Dark FaeriesMar26ArtTree cave Torquay Victoria AustraliaBig223.17.13 Beidler Forest Sketches09-03-13b
Mar25ArtSomething new...Day 32  Recess FriendsSaturday morning breakfastFamily visit on sunday afternoonThe Cover of my current sketchbook
Artist's Journal Workshop, a group on Flickr.
Lots of lovely work in our Flickr group! If you keep an artist's journal--or want to!--please feel free to join us!

Just look at how many new pieces have shown up there in just a couple of days.  I'm working on a slideshow to put on the blog, too...

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

New Video up on YouTube




I did this one to go in Lesson One in my upcoming Ink and Watercolor Mini-class--thought you might like a sneak peek!

Playing with ballpoint and watercolor...who says you have to have a fancy pen? I picked these up at my local discount store.

Monday, March 11, 2013

Current Tools - and New Travel Palette

Last Day of February
I've been using a new palette lately and now like it enough to show and tell a bit about it :)

March 2013: Current Tools
I'm always looking for a way to make my palette lighter, smaller and more flexible plus I enjoy playing with different set-ups of colors. After my Alaska adventure my friend mentioned an interesting artist and avid outdoor sketcher - Maria Coryell-Martin whose work is entwined with Alaska. I looked through her we-site and blog and really liked her palette shown on one of the photos and thought that I should write and ask a few question.


A few days later I realized that it would be very useful to have watercolor pans attached with magnets as I'd like to try changing colors and their position in my watercolor kit. I googled magnetic watercolor pans and... I was back at Maria's web-site!

Impatient me probably was looking at pictures, reading every other line in the best case - but now I noticed that she is selling these palettes :)

Below are some photos of my new set-up in action. In short - it's working great for me!

March 2013: Current Tools

What I like most?
First - it's tiny! (photo above compares size of this credit card holder with my trusty Cotman Sketcher's Pocket Box.

Second - it clips very nicely to my sketchbook (this is 8.5 x 11 Alpha series Stillman&Birn - love them!). The cover of the kit and kit itself are so thin that I can close a book if I need to move or rush somewhere and have no time to pack.
March 2013: Current Tools

Third - I can move my colors and add/exchange on the go. I like that pans are rather shallow so I can add fresh colors often.
Drawing in Point Lobos

Last but not least - pans are large enough for my flat brush to get in. I am showing flat Niji waterbrush on the photo below because many of you are familiar with it's size but I've been using my 1" with this kit happily!
March 2013: Current Tools

And palette came with a nice little towel - which soaks up incredible amounts of water.

March 2013: Current Tools

Hiking and Sketching by the Creek

February 2013: San Francisco

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Sometimes things don't work out...


For years, I avoided keeping a journal of my drawings and paintings because I feared the "failed page". Then I heard you could rip out pages that are totally embarrassing, and plunged in!
I painted these orchids at a local nursery and what a disaster! The yellow orchid was very pale and the purple orchid colors just looked muddy. 


When I got home, I set about "reclaiming" the page, since it's the backside of another journal page and I no longer feel I have to hide my mistakes.
First, I drew an ink border on the page - instant balance! Then I intensified the colors on the yellow orchid. Since the purple orchid was already muddy, I didn't want to wade back in with color, but I wrote orchid facts all over the petals with a white gel pen. I especially like the texture the writing created on the orchid leaves….quite life-like.
I still don't like this page, but it's less awful now, and I learned a bit about how to save things.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Family Treasures


In a nostalgic mood, I've been scanning old family photos for my older sister, and remembered I still have her baby shoes...and my little once-fuzzy bunny slippers, ratty though they are, now.

Her shoes are soft black leather, stitched and mended, and incredibly cute...you can tell from the shoe buttons that she's older than I am, and I'm no baby!


Recently, on our trip to California--and BEFORE the TSA changed the rules again this week!--I'd forgotten my dad's pocketknife was in my purse, and it was nearly confiscated.  Happily, I was able to get out of line, mail it to myself, and get back in line before our flight...but it took three weeks for the knife to come back home.

So in the meantime, J. offered me his grandfather Ruckman's knife--the tiny green one--and when I was nervous about losing it, bought me a new Swiss Army knife from L.L.Bean.  I am now pocketknife rich, and "Rule 9" is satisfied! 

I would have hated to lose dad's knife...


I love this way of paying respects to family treasures.  I don't own many, but I've sketched my grandfather's magnifying glass before, and Joseph's bronzed baby shoes.  I need to do my teething ring, too.  It makes us look more carefully at our lives and our history...

And in case you missed it, DO check out Alissa Duke's recent post on her family history project!

I recently sketched something that wasn't really a family treasure, but something it was difficult to get rid of, anyway.  But I'm on a Discardia kick, and simplifying my life...sketching it let me pass it on while still "having" it.

So what's meaningful to you?  What would you like to preserve in this way?

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Correcting Lettering Mistakes

A lot of times I'll wait until I get home before adding lettering to a journal page. Mainly because of time and comfort. But on this particular day, I felt quite comfy perched on my camp stool and the 8.5 x 11 journal page in my Stillman and Birn Alpha hardbound journal was such a dream to work on.

However, on the way home, I began to wonder if this really was Harbour Town's Liberty Oak. There were two very large oaks in the heart of Harbour Town.  The magnificence of this tree, with it's sprawling low lying branches surely struck me as the one to bear this name...... Not!

Long ago, a skilled calligrapher taught me how to correct mistakes... Tip: correct your mistake before you lift any unwanted lettering.  Huh? Yes, write over the lettering on the page, then white out or lift off what you don't want.
That way the stroke of the corrected lettering will be smooth and you won't have to contend with the often bumpy texture left by white out or white ink.  I used a Signo Uniball broad tip white pen, available from JetPens.com.

I decided to turn Liberty Oak into Live Oak.  The RTY of Liberty would be taken out.  A good size space would be left between the two words.  I decided to put the tree's Latin name between Live and Oak.... a quirky fix, but it worked for me :)

Since this is a journal page and not a piece of calligraphic art, I was willing to live with a bumpy surface to write the smaller replacement text on.






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