Monthly Archives: January 2009

What’s in the Winter Woods?

It’s cloudy, lightly snowing and 25°F. Of all the places on the earth, where do you wish to be the most? Why in the woods of course! Deep in the woods…I don’t blame you…

For when you are  in the woods on a magical afternoon, this beauty is all yours. Not many people share this passion so the treasure is grand and all alone. Silence is loud and the snowflakes are soft. We alone are the only ones to befriend them on this cold winter day.

Do you see the snow missing from this branch? I wonder, did the owl perch here in the midnight hour waiting to strike its prey? Did he succeed? Or did a strong wind barrel the snow down to the ground? I found no evidence of owl wing impressions in the snow, so I’m left to wonder.

No people in sight, just a tiny chickadee that followed me from tree to tree and a penetrating wind which traveled over the field and through my jacket. How do the grasses feel when they hiss in the wind? When the snow granules fly over them at 30 MPH?  Invigorated I’m sure, I felt it too.

At what point does invigorated lead to drowsy? When did this spider succumb to the cold and remain motionless? Why on top of the snow? Where was he going…or was he left there?

I leave the woods with more questions then when I had entered. I am forever learning from these woods and there is no other place that I would like to be.

Today’s trail is part of the Palos trail system (yellow and green trails) of the Cook County Forest Preserves.

Let’s Paint a Frosty Winter Morning!

Last Tuesday morning on the way to work I saw this beautiful winter sight:

The sun rises behind the forest and sets the sky on fire!
I love when winter reveals hot colors during very cold weather. How ironic the sky teases us with it’s warm yellow tones, only to be an illusion as I shiver to the bone! Oh but I love it, even still the more!

Inspired my this sunrise, I decided to do a quick watercolor painting. So let’s go!

Step 1: On a piece of  10×8 Canson 140lb Watercolor paper, I drew a light sketch with a #2 pencil. Just to map things out.

Step 2: Lightly spray your paper with a spray bottle. I’m working small here and I have a tendency to over saturate my paper…so a little spray will do. Next, start with yellow (I used Winsor yellow watercolor) and make the horizon line and some spots in the sky. Leave a little white space around your yellow paint and lay down some blue colors (Cotman indigo) in the sky. Try not to let the blue and the yellow touch too much because that will make a very angry green sky and we want a peaceful frosty sky. Lastly, mix some blue and brown for a line of distant trees, way in the back above the horizon line. Lastly, take a little cobalt blue and shadow the snow in the foreground.

Step 3: Here’s a cool trick…take a dry fan brush, add some of that blue/brown mixture and make some twigs on the top of your oak trees in the shape of an umbrella for each tree. Easy, easy, easy way to make it look like a million little twigs without pulling all of your hair out. Much less pain this way too. Just don’t get carried away in this step even though it’s so much fun.

Step 4: Establish some trunks. Darker in the front, lighter (water down the paint) in the back and don’t forget to vary the trunk size, a common mistake, make some thick and some thin. Important: to make it look like the sun is shining bright, do not have your tree trunks go all the way through the sun. Skip over it and continue out the other end. This gives the illusion of great brightness. Another easy trick!

Step 5 Final: Now, you have to connect the trunk to smaller branches. In my painting I have oak trees. Oak trees have the most beautiful stout squiggly top branches. Not long and straight like the maple. So in this step I took a rigger brush and a lot of watery paint and wiggled a little when I painted the branches. Wiggling is fun, even as an adult.

Frosty Winter Morning Original watercolor image is 7×5 and placed in a white mat, outside dimensions 10×8.
$30 free shipping in the US
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I hope you enjoyed this step by step watercolor demonstration of a frosty winter morning!

Junco Dies and It’s My Fault

Cooper’s Hawk (1) Junco (0)

RIP Mr. Junco, I’m sorry.

This picture was taken just seconds before his death.
Now, I’m all for the Cooper’s Hawk killing it’s prey for food, don’t get me wrong, but not when it’s my fault.

Here’s what happened:
This lovely little Junco sat at my feeder to eat, but then I noticed something very, very strange. He didn’t move for a straight 10 minutes. Not one feather. Matter of fact, there is half of a seed sticking out of his bill at this point and he doesn’t flinch. I have never in my life witnessed a bird do this.

I said to my hubby, “Look at that strange Junco, He hasn’t moved for over 10 minutes….stuck stiff as a statue.”
He replied, “Maybe he’s dead.”
“No, he’s blinking his eyes.” I said.

So I took some pictures.

Then I thought…maybe there is a hawk in the area and he knows it?

Being selfish, I decided to get a bit closer to the window for a better picture. Then it happened…the Junco glanced at me, freaked out, flew under and up the pine tree and all of a sudden, the imaginary hawk I wondered if existed went in hot pursuit for the Junco and also flew under and up the pine tree. Exiting with the Junco in his talons.

The Junco had a plan. The plan was not to move and it was working. It was working for a long time. Perhaps the hawk would have given up after not witnessing movement for 15-20 minutes and flown off?

Yes, this is what the hawk does. But I’m sorry I helped him out. I’m sorry because this little Junco was using his intelligence and it was working. It worked until I got too selfish.

Cardinal at My Feeder Sketch

Is this not the most perfect sight in winter?

My mom came over and took some awesome pictures out my window. Unable to use her flash because of the reflection in the window, we were a little concerned at how dark the pictures came out, but with a little computer tweaking we were able to saved them all.

How I love that deep red color against the cool winter snow! Thank you Mr. Cardinal.

How peaceful he sits munching on a sunflower seed. This pine tree sits just a few feet from the feeder. It gives the birds an opportunity to sit and take turns at the feeder. It also gives them protection, something they can seek shelter in.

So happy with my cardinal visit, I decided to make a sketch:

He likes sunflower seeds the best. He told me so. This sketchbook entry was done with a Winsor & Newton Cotman travel watercolor kit and Micron pens. D= date, T= time, C= weather conditions, and A= area of location.

Let’s Paint the Cooper’s Hawk!

Obsessed with the hawk every minute of the day since he stopped by for a visit, I just had to make a painting…so let’s go!

Step 1: I never sketch out my painting on a separate piece of paper, but  just sketch it right on the “canvas” (wallis pastel paper). This time was different. I had some cool ideas and a new approach so I was too timid to just jump in. I carefully laid out a plan with paper and a ball point pen.

Even though I’ve seen a Cooper’s Hawk before, everytime I witness a non-regular, I have to do a bunch of research on it and learn all that I can….again. Inspired by that, I decided to do a “study of” painting. This painting will have the subject and sub-subjects of interest.

Step 2: Another new step for me is adding gesso! I wanted the background to be interesting and have some texture. I mixed acrylic gesso, a little water and applied with a bristle brush, making sure I had different lines, scratches, and thicknesses. Before it dries…

Step 3: With a toothpick, before it dries, I wrote, “Accipiter Cooperii”, Accipiter means Birds of Prey and Cooperii refers to William Cooper. I’m hoping the paint will settle into the scratched out name and be darker than the surrounding…we’ll see. Let the gesso dry forever…it will take forever. I was afraid to dry it with a hair dryer because I didn’t want the acrylic to crack under the heat.

Step 4: This is my background painted in watercolors. It doesn’t look that great right now, but don’t get discouraged…this step never looks good and always makes you feel like you should not be holding a paint brush. My background has limited color this time, just some blobs of indigo, a little cobalt, and raw ocher. The paint resisted the gesso a bit and as a result looks lighter and has texture. The paint did not pool in the name like I wanted, so I just went over it with a Micron pen. I used Derwent Graphitint watercolor pencils to write some stats; wingspan, length, # of eggs, talon and tail info, and eye info. I ran some water over them to fade them out and when dry went over them again with Micron ink. I’ve never done that to a painting on pastel paper only a sketch.

Step 5: With pastels now and not watercolors…The MOST IMPORTANT thing to do right now is establish a good eye ball. If your subject’s eye does not have life or is not proportionate and believable it’s a do over. No joke. Start over. This step is soooo important…it’s all in the eyes. Tips for eyes: have a little white spot where the light reflects, make shadow under the upper lid going over the eye, and don’t forget the bottom lid too.

Step 6: Add a whole bunch of stuff! With a graphite pencil I drew a gliding Cooper’s Hawk and wrote “flap and glide”, with charcoal I drew and eye and wrote, “red=adult, yellow=juvenile”. With pastels I painted blueish-green eggs with brown spots and wrote, “4-5 egg & incubation time”. I have blood spots under the talon for special effects and a light as a feather, feather in the top corner done with graphite and white charcoal.

This painting is definitely mixed media! Here is the final:

This painting is called, “Study of the Cooper’s Hawk”. It is 12×18 and will be framed into a 18×24 frame. It will be on display in February at the LaGrange Art Gallery’s 75th Anniversary party event. More info later.

The subject came directly from the first picture in the last post. I am so happy with this painting, I’ve decided to do many “study of” paintings in the future! Nature Rocks!!!