Friday, October 23, 2015

Scarecrow Figurine

Yesterday I received an order of these cute scarecrows (there are three of them) and today decided to sketch one along with my lucky bamboo as a backdrop.



Worked in the Strathmore Visual Journal (Watercolor) pencil first; scarecrow figurine in watercolor first and then pen and ink and the rest pen and ink first before deciding if I wanted to finish in watercolor.

I debated whether to attempt the stucco background or leave it unpainted.  I chose to leave the background white as I feared making it too busy trying to capture the stucco.

Pen and Ink using Platinum Carbon pen and Lexington Grey ink and QoR watercolors.



Study of a Wren Using John Muir Law's Step by Step

One of my favorite artists and authors is John Muir Law.  I have his first book, Law's Guide to Drawing Birds, and patiently waiting for his new book to be released, which you can pre-order through Amazon, Law's Guide to Nature Drawing and Journaling.

UPDATE:  I'm REALLY excited now for the release of John's new book after Cathy Johnson let me know this morning that she's seen it in production and it's WONDERFUL!!!

In addition to the book I presently have, I follow his posts to his website at www.johnmuirlaws.com.  One of his recent posts was a step by step on drawing a wren.

I'm not accustomed to drawing by using basic shapes and find it a bit challenging if not awkward. And because of that, I occasionally like to try that technique hoping to hone my skills.  Here is a study I just worked based on his post.

Worked in the Hand.book.




Monday, October 19, 2015

Opal Bear - Autumn and Halloween Pages

My eldest son and his wife came down almost 4 weeks ago living with us until they found jobs and a house to move into. They came with only their clothes and a few personal belongings.......leaving everything back in storage.
This weekend they had to travel back from FL to WV (along with my youngest son) to pack up a moving van and get it back in time for Ron to go to work today. They didn't leave until after noon on Friday. They ran into one delay after another so it's not been a very easy trip. And to think they have to go back at some point to get the rest of their stuff they couldn't fit this trip. Boy do we know what that's like. For us it was four trips but then we had two households to move.
We kept the girls this weekend and earlier last night, as they got ready for bed, I sketched this. 
Poor Opal looks so stiff.......probably how my two sons are going to feel after they've had a chance to stop and relax......LOL.
Hand.book Square, Micron, and QoR watercolors. I like this journal paper OK but it's not as fun to work watercolor as other journal papers.
And while waiting for them to return, I spent my time playing with this next page in my journal.  There was no sleeping until I knew they were safely home.  It was after 2 a.m. when they finally pulled in and then another hour before we could settle enough to sleep.
Again using Opal as my model.  This started out as a pen and ink only sketch but then when I reached all those areas of black, I changed my mind.  I started using watercolor pencils (dry) to fill in and shade.  Just too much hatching and cross hatching otherwise and I didn't feel like doing that.
Hand.book square, Microns 005 and 01, WC pencils.

Quick Pen and Ink Sketch - Tree and Shrubs

Saturday a week ago, we had to drop my Highlander off at Toyota for a regular maintenance check.  While I waited on hubby to check the vehicle in, I sat in his truck and started this quick sketch.  I didn't finish it but I knew I would return later to pick my car up and would work on it more at that time.

The squiggly pen and ink technique is my #1 favorite for foliage.

Hand.book journal using Pilot Prera and Lexington Grey ink.


Saturday, October 10, 2015

Old Time Relics - Lakeshore Dr The Villages

Back in July, Terry and I drove to Lakeshore Drive at the Villages.  What really grabbed my attention as we walked around were the various relics outside shops and restaurants.

Here's a sketch of what drew my attention at Cody's Roadhouse.



Steps as I worked the page:





Friday, October 9, 2015

Venetian Garden Ink Sketching

Sketched this little scene from one of our trips to Venetian Gardens a few weeks ago.  Still trying to get back into the swing of things where I went for weeks not doing much of anything.  Didn't have a lot of time so I worked this quickly in just a few minutes (probably looks it too........ha ha ).  :-)

Worked in the Handbook with my Pilot Prera (that I haven't used in ages) and Lexington Grey ink.  Grabbed the palette with the QoR watercolor pigments and water brush.



Thursday, October 8, 2015

Madison's Tiger - Graphite

This is another graphite drawing my granddaughter, Madison, finished yesterday.

Strathmore Visual Mixed Media Journal and mechanical pencil.


Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Eastern Lubber Grasshopper - Ink and Brush Pens

Earlier in the year I purchased a few pens and brush markers intending to do some play and practice.  Only I've gone all these months not really thinking about them.

Tonight I decided to play using materials I hadn't used...........Pentel Art Pocket Brush pen and Zig (Kuretake) Clean Color Marker brush pens.

Using the Strathmore Visual Watercolor Journal, I first sketched using the Pilot Falcon fountain pen.  Then after the ink was dry, I went over some areas with the Pocket Brush pen.  Then I grabbed the brush marker pen colors I wanted or needed and laid down color.  Immediately after adding the color, I would take a waterbrush and blend the color on paper.

I had a lot of fun with these pens.  The colors were vibrant even after drying.  They blended beautifully together and using the waterbrush pushing or pulling color from the initial color stroke made.

After playing with these and seeing how nice they are to work with, I might just have to purchase additional colors to add to the 12 purchased months ago to try out.




Unfinished Wood Birdhouse - Pen and Ink

Night before last I worked this pen and ink sketch using my Platinum Carbon pen with Lexington Grey Ink.  It was nice going back to my fountain pens for a change.  The Microns are great to grab for drawing but realized I missed the feel of using the fountain pens.

Worked in the Hand.book




Saturday, October 3, 2015

It's a Start - Banana

It's been a busy time this past month or so trying to finalize the sale of our house in West Virginia (with one obstacle after another along the way) and then preparing for my eldest son and his family to come live with us for awhile as they find jobs and a place of their own.

We are one big happy family of eight - 6 adults and 2 children plus 4 dogs and 2 cats trying to adjust to living in limited space with various eating and sleeping/waking schedules.  I think we're doing pretty good too :-)

With this going on plus the digital filing organization and giving my 13 year old website a face lift, I just haven't felt much like sketching or painting.  FINALLY this morning I worked this little sketch after two sons and my granddaughters left (before daylight) to go fishing.

We have a banana tree in the back we thought was on it's way out.  Terry gave it some TLC last year and it helped perk the tree up and this year producing bananas.  I've never seen how bananas grow so this is a new learning experience for me.

This is just a little pen and ink sketch of how each banana has this little flower at the tip.  As the banana grows, this flower fades and drops off.

Worked in a square format Hand.book with a Lamy Safari pen and Lexington Gray Ink


Thursday, October 1, 2015

Madison's Latest Sketch - Owl in Graphite

Madison is my eldest granddaughter, who is 12.  The family is living with us now for awhile as they transition from West Virginia to Florida.......looking for jobs and a place of their own.

Both granddaughters (the youngest is 9) love to draw and paint and Madison just finished this last night.

Worked in a Strathmore Visual Mixed Medium journal and mechanical pencil .07


Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Where Are You At Today With Your Art?

I've been working with digital files now for weeks.  Renaming, resizing, rescanning if necessary, etc.  It's really interesting to re-visit what I used to do years ago compared to the direction I've taken the last few years.  And what's even more amazing is my attitude change.

When I first started out back in the late 1900s, I was all about full size paintings to hang on the wall. Trying to learn and follow all the rules and guidelines about composition, trying to understand proper perspective, etc.  And in the beginning I leaned towards trying for realism, especially with flowers.

I sit and think about the stress I put myself under trying to get everything perfect or as perfect as it was possible for me.  If the results turned out to my liking (which I seldom felt), I would feel good about it.  Unfortunately because I was striving for perfection, I didn't enjoy the process.  All those rules!  Trying to please everyone else!  Trying to please my inner critic.  I actually went for over a year not wanting or being able to do anything.  It just wasn't worth how I felt tediously painting trying to obtain perfection.

I don't draw or paint to sell.  I have no desire to enter into competitions.  All those frame sized paintings that I didn't give away as gifts sit in a box seldom ever looked at.  I'm not big on hanging a lot of stuff on walls either.  So............. what was the point if I didn't actually enjoy the process?

Then I came across Cathy Johnson's Artist's Journal Workshop group in Facebook, purchased her book on the subject and took a few of her online classes or DVD courses.  That was the fork in the road for me that I chose to take with my artwork.

Keeping journals has definitely been a positive change for me.  I don't worry about the results (or at least I'm doing better keeping that inner critic quiet........lol) and I feel free to play and experiment.  I love working with individual illustrations of subjects or vignettes rather than full compositions so journaling just seems to fit.  Most important............I'm enjoying the journey or the process.  Of course if the results turn out to my liking, that's just icing on the cake.

My journals are not only my canvas but are my means of display as well.  I love flipping through these books to see what I did along with reading my notes I might add.  My family (especially the grand-kids) love going through these journals and reading these notes often inspiring questions and discussions.  For me this is what it's all about :-)

Just to share a bit of my past, I've created these digital collages of many of my past paintings.  Yeah, it's a bit different from what I do today ......don't you think???          LOL











Sunday, September 13, 2015

What I've Been Up To Lately

Besides the renaming of art files and better organization as mentioned in the previous post, I have been putting together pdf files of demos and art reference sheets.  My latest project using bits and pieces of my artwork to create cover pages.

Here is an example of one cover in both portrait and landscape orientation.



And because I save my blog posts converting to pdf files, I've played a bit using Photoshop Elements to create covers.   Some are using scans from my artwork and some are playing with brushes in the software program itself.

I still have some work to do .....  like how I want to place a title on them but these are a good start to work from.









How Do You Name and Organize Your Digital Art Files?

WARNING:  Not for the faint of heart :-)

Through the years, this has been an ever changing task of naming and filing my digital art files.  

I started out just trying to choose a name that I might remember for a search.  Unfortunately, I'd find myself not remembering what I might have named something making it difficult to find later.  

Then I started naming my files with Month/Year plus short name but then later changed that to Year first and then month plus name.

This latest way of naming my files is proving to be the best for me and I've been going through folders renaming my art files using this method.  Talk about a task but at least I've found a nice free program to help with batch renaming of files............. FastStone Image Viewer.

Then of course comes the task of maintaining a file folder structure that makes sense to me helping to locate my files based on media used.   My system may be overkill for some people but because I use my files for various projects, I have managed to come up with a filing structure that more or less works very well for me.

First the naming of files:

For every painting or sketch I scan, I create several files.  I first scan at 300 resolution and save as a TIF file. From that scan I end up with the several files.   Let's take an example of sketching a bear in a Strathmore Visual Journal using watercolor and pen and ink completed this month:

Year first and then month plus short name and scan number.  The scan number helps when I might sketch or paint more than one page of a bear within the same month.

1509bear001.tif = Original Scan

1509bear001ws.psd =  Evaluate the tones and colors against the actual journal page and with layers in Photoshop Elements, make corrections and add a signature layer for web posting.  My scanner tends to struggle with certain yellows and blues for which I try to correct and it always scans with more contrast than the actual painting or journal entry.

1509bear001ws.tif = New tif file with changes and signature at 300 resolution in case I want to make a good print.  Tif files do not compress the file as jpgs do.

1509bear001ws.jpg = Jpg for use in document/pdf demonstrations, etc.  Resolution still at 300 but saving at the low end of maximum quality which is 10 in Photoshop Elements.  This gives me a smaller file size making it more manageable in a document or if I create a disk of my images to share with family.

1509bear001wsweblg.jpg = This file is for uploading to the web.  I change the size to 7" or 7.5" at the longest edge with a resolution of 120 (instead of 300) and then "Save for Web" at high quality or whatever I need to achieve a file size of about 120 k.  I don't want to go much higher than that due to total storage in Picasa where my blogger images are stored.  Plus if an image is too large in file size, it can take awhile for it to load when someone goes to your website or blog....especially if you share several image files within a post.  I also use these weblg size files for my Ipad and smartphone.  Takes up less space but still shows a decent quality picture on these devices.

Although I can end up with several more files from one scan (crops, ATC size, etc.), the above is my main system of naming and saving files.  

So where do I save these files?  

First I work in a Temporary Folder under Documents called NEW Files.  All my art files are saved there where I later distribute between various places on my hard drive often making copies of the jpg files (either full size or weblg jpgs depending what I might need for demos or contact sheets (later explained), etc).


To share how I distribute between folders is quite involved and not sure I can explain without causing confusion.  But I'm going to try using what you see in red as my main example.  I also use the subfolders like Flowers, Landscape, Other, People, and Wildlife under Cameos Journals.


Also under the main Art Folder I have a folder called Sketchbooks and Thumbnails (not showing above).    In that folder I have subfolders by name/type of journal where I store a COPY of each weblg image file I created.  Using FastStone Image Viewer, I can put my individual scanned page files in page order of the journal(s) and then create a contact sheet that I can print out and view thumbnails of those sketches and paintings worked in that particular journal.  My contact sheets not only show a thumbnail image of my paintings/sketches but also show the name of the file which can help with searches.


If I have scanned steps of my progress for a demo or visual demo, I will save a COPY of the jpg files (not the weblg jpgs) under a subject subfolder of Demos.

Once I'm satisfied I have saved the COPIES I need to distribute to various locations on the hard drive, I then move the main files temporarily saved under the NEW Files folder to their proper places under the Media Folders such as Paintings Watercolor, Sketching Drawing, etc.

Although this probably sounds like a major pain, it pays off in the long run............at least for me.  My file structure goes beyond what I've shared here but this is my starting point and main system for naming and saving my art files.

Taking the above file name of 1509bears001, I would:

1)  Save a COPY of the *weblg.jpg to the Sketches and Thumbnails folder under Strathmore Visual WC #1 (#2 if working in a second Visual WC journal, etc.)

2)  I didn't scan steps so no need to worry about saving a COPY of the jpg file under Demos.

3)  I would then MOVE all the related files to the appropriate Media folder which in this case would be Paintings Watercolor / Actual Paintings or Cameos / subfolder Wildlife.  (Subfolder named Other if a stuffed bear.)

File Names and Searches:

This is where it pays off for me with the way I name my files....

Let's say I want to look up all my files regardless of medium used for the month of September.  I would start my search under the ART folder and type the following under Windows Explorer Search Box:

1509*.jpg > 200k

This tells Windows I only want the files for September of 2015 for jpg files greater than 200k.  That way I'm not seeing duplicates of the regular size jpgs plus those scaled down with the added "weblg" named files.  You could always just search for the Tifs which would read:  1509*.tif. 

Another example:  Let's say you want to see all the artwork you did in 2014.  Maybe you've misplaced a file and you can't remember the month or the file name.  You pull up this search, locate the image of the file you're looking for and you right click and select Open File Location.

15*.jpg > 200k

This tells Windows I want to see all the jpg files greater than 200k (in file size) for the year 2015.

There are many other search parameters one can use but that's beyond the scope of this.  Searches can be saved but I haven't quite explored that yet to share here.



Hopefully sharing this might help others with a general idea or starting point in naming and organizing files :-)

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Painting Cameos

Doodling with watercolor.  Cameos that I prefer to call them as they are a little more than just mindless marks put on paper.

Playing with different brushes; different colors; and different techniques.

Mixed Pen and Ink Sketches

Various sketches I've worked on over the last several days........all in the Strathmore Gray Toned sketchbook.




Fort Island Beach, FL

Here are a couple pages in different journals of our trip to Fort Island Beach a few weekends ago.

This first page entry is standing on the pier looking towards the man-made beach and the second is from the beach area itself looking towards the pier.

This one worked in the meandering journal an art friend made for me back in January out of Arches paper.


Second painting/sketch from the Strathmore Toned sketchbook.  I chose the gray paper for this one because it actually depicts the gray skies with storms that were coming in off and on that day.  At the time we were there, it wasn't storming (had already hit earlier that morning) but then the sky opened up about the time we were leaving.


Sunday, August 16, 2015

August 15, 2015 Virtual Sketch Crawl

There are groups of people across the globe who physically get together in what are called sketchcrawls.  They meet up somewhere walking around and sketching what they see and experience.  For many people, they don't have this luxury often because of where they live and/or not knowing others who enjoy this type of get together.

Cathy Johnson holds an event each third Saturday of the month pulling people together in what's called a Virtual Sketchcrawl.  Individuals, small groups, and even larger groups from all over, utilize this third Saturday to go out sketching and then come together to share their day out in Cathy's Artists Journal Workshop group under Facebook.  A way for all of us to come together as if we actually met up in one huge group.

This is what I did for yesterday's sketchcrawl.  I've missed out on the last couple of months but managed to participate this month.  This little building stands at the entrance to a shopping mall area in The Villages / Lady Lake area in Florida.  I left the lettering off the building as I just wanted to keep the sketch simple.






Missing Our Hummers

Where we lived in West Virginia, we had an abundance of hummingbirds perched in our front yard trees; zooming back and forth to include under our porch roof; and we went through a lot of sugar water keeping them fed and readying them for their trip back south each year.

They would fly around us, at times hovering right in front of our faces as if checking us out.  They knew we were not a threat and it was such a treat to have them each summer.

Now we live in Florida and we saw one last year that didn't hang around.  We've put out feeders and all we seem to attract are ants.  We so miss these little guys!!!!


Sunday, August 9, 2015

A Tree With a Heart

One of the things I find amazing are the various shapes of trees, how their branches might grow twisting and turning in unusual ways and some of the holes you see in trees.

What caught my attention with this particular oak was the heart-shaped hole.

Working with pen and ink on toned paper, trying to depict moss against leaves and branch/trunk under heavy shade, was quite a challenge.  I was in unknown territory as to what to do or how to go about it without making it too dark and showing some depth.

This is what I ended up with and I'm not real sure at this point how I feel about the results.  I'll have to revisit this page days or even weeks down the road when my mind is fresh to really know :-)

Strathmore toned paper; Microns 005, 05, and 03 and some smudged graphite to gray some of the canopy area that was a bit too bright so that the main branch came forward more.