Monthly Archives: October 2008

I See the Moon

Oh how I love to see the moon in the daylit sky! You don’t even have to wait until dark to appreciate such a sight.

Here you can see the moon in between some beautiful autumn trees. Look close, can you spot it?
This must be the next subject for my next painting… the moon and the season!

Here is a close up view:

I love these contrast colors playing next to each other, blue and orange.

This is one of my most favorite pictures of the night. It is such a simple but peaceful picture. I was looking east as the sun was setting behind me in the west. I don’t know why but it gives me peace. It allows me to quiet down, take a breath and relax. Maybe it’s the simplicity of the objects in the picture?

Last night I awoke at 3am with the moon brightly shining though my bedroom window. For a second I was startled thinking, “Who’s light is in my window!” I was amazed when I realized…”silly, that’s only the moon.”
Only?
It truly lit up my whole room up as if a lamp was left on. With so much attention always on the sun, do give enough attention to the moon?

Let’s Re-Paint Gentle Creek!

Re-Paint?

Yes, a few months ago I painted this picture of a tree next to a creek and I HATE it:

I like the tree, however there was a hill immediately behind the tree which in my painting looks like a wall. A yucky grass wall. See, I can paint many paintings but even after all these years…they don’t always turn out the way I want them to. I make tons of mistakes. I should have used my artistic license and just removed the hill, but no, I thought I could make it work.
I killed the composition. (HAAAA, HA, HA!) Get it…composition not competition!!!! Nobody is laughing…moving on….

When your painting sucks, don’t ever give up, try it again!

So let’s paint Gentle Creek:

Step 1: I’m using my Wallis pastel paper, which allows me to make a wet underwash with watercolors. Here I slightly wet the two sections with clean water. Then I painted a wash of blue for the sky and water and a little brown in the background for distant trees. See all those drip marks? OH I LOVE them! Don’t worry if you’re sloppin’ around some…it’s time to get messy and it also makes for a more interesting painting!

Step 2: We are still using watercolors right now. Scrub in some distant trees. Don’t make one layer, give it dimension. Make the furthest trees lighter or more transparent than the closer distant trees. Do you know how I always preach about tree holes for the sky to peak through? Forget it this time. The trees are too far away for that and we don’t want to over emphasize them. Plop down some color for the land and the foreground. Don’t get too worried about what color you should choose, nature doesn’t and you don’t have to either. Just stick with the shades of the season. My season in this painting is autumn turning into winter, so I chose purples, yellows, oranges, browns, and a little green.

Step 3: I’m still using watercolors when I painted the bones of the tree. I just used every color on my pallet for this rich dark color. When dry, add another layer of the same color to the right side for a shading effect. I was using a reference photo of a real tree that was growing on part land – part creek. Don’t be obsessed with every limb, it will drive you nuts or batty because Halloween is near.

Here comes the fun part! Step 4: Add pastel. Pastel is pure ground up pigment with little a binder. The pigment is so mouth wateringly brilliant it’s hard to contain the excitement. I’m not going to go crazy with the pastel though, I want the watercolor background to show through. Here I added highlight and shadow to the tree, grasses on the field, and a few distant winter tree shapes in the back.

Final: We finish with water marks on the creek, foliage in the foreground, more twig on the tree. Don’t forget the reflection of the tree on the gentle water. Now this is much better!

Gentle Creek original pastel measures 7.5×9.5 for the image, and is matted to be able to fit into a standard 11×14 frame.

Thanks! I hope you enjoyed this demonstration!

Autumn Sunset

Yesterday I spent a brief chilly evening at Centennial Park in Orland Park, IL. What a beautiful sight.

How amazing. Isn’t our Creator a Master Craftsman (he, he, he)? Who can reproduce this moment? Who can turn the shades of the sky from yellow to salmon, rose to periwinkle, and violet to indigo, in a quick few minutes? An explosion? HA! Ooopps…I’m gunna get some people mad!

Anyway, what a beautiful sight it was! Can you see the silhouette of some fishing people on the pier? It was FREEZING! They’re brave. My hoodie wasn’t doing a very good job in the brisk wind on a 54°F evening, so I didn’t stay long.

Here is another view:

This will definitely be a painting one day! Look at all of those delicious colors! So peaceful, I hope I can translate that into my painting.

My mom found another brave soul out on this nippy night:

Why it’s a woolly bear caterpillar!!! She named him, “Orland”, because of our location…very fitting and cute. This little guy will survive our killer winter because he produces a cryoprotectant in his tissue, sort of like anti-freeze. Amazing again! Once an adult, this little guy or girl will turn into a Isabella Tiger Moth.
Neat-O!