Monday, August 8, 2011

Charitable endeavors


For the second time, my coworker is auctioning off handmade items for charity on her blog. I wanted to create something different than last year, and what better inspiration than my recent trip to Italy with my husband?


The first time I visited Rome, in 2004, I returned to the Colosseum about
four times, alwaysat different times of day, to see how the light changed the shadows and colors of this amazing ruin. This trip was no different, and I was especially inspired by a photo I took on our last night in Rome -- accidentally in sepia tones because I was screwing around with my camera settings.
(Inspiration: Monet's Rouen Cathedral series, which I've been obsessed with for years.)


Since I screwed up the color settings of the photo, I just painted it the way I saw it in my head. I knew I wanted to use many transparent colors, and watercolors are great for that. I hadn't put any real efforts into using watercolors since high school, and when I realized I wanted to use watercolors, I went out and bought a set of eight. And came home and realized I really need to inventory my art supplies...

(You can't have too many!)

A few sausage-making shots, taken with my cell phone camera, just because I think it's interesting to see how these things evolve. In my case, it was layer by layer by layer; I just kept painting until things looked pretty to me. It took a few hours total, long enough for "Blazing Saddles" and Part I of A&E's "Pride & Prejudice" to play on the DVD player in my craft room. :) (What can I say, I have diverse tastes!)


In the end, I'm happy with the way this turned out. I didn't quite get the perspective I wanted, and by the time I realized that, it was too late to fix that problem, but I accomplished my goal of rediscovering watercolors and painting the Colosseum the way I saw it -- in so many different colors.

"Colosseo, Roma," 8" x 10" (matted to 11" x 14"), watercolors on paper, 2011

Blast from the rockin' past

I just found these (blurry) pictures on the hard drive and they made me smile. I sketched this, I think, during the summer of 2001 (10 years ago?!) while hanging out at my sister's and listening to some Aerosmith. (We went through a serious Aerosmith phase.)

It looks better in person; the paper was cheap, and wrinkled a bit under pressure, and the sketching pencils I used don't photograph well because they're a little shiny. Even so, I remember being a little in awe of how well my experiment turned out. I keep it around to remind me how much I love to draw and to see my style evolve with time and practice.


Graphite on paper, 2001(?)

More Feathers

Bigger birds; a house-warming gift for my brother and his girlfriend. (At her special request, the design was largely taken from a print she saw at a department store; I tried to improve upon it.) The canvases are now framed in white and brightening their kitchen. :)





Acrylics on canvas, 2011

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Birds in a field

What could be more fun than taking three white 5" x 7" canvases, painting them three pretty colors ...


... to eventually become these? (For a friend's charity auction; final price, to my friend Becky, $65. Thanks, Becky!)


Creative process: Sometimes messy, always a good time. In the background are some notecards I used for inspiration.




Acrylic on canvas, 2010

More cartoons, by special request







A few more cartoons, also for a nursery. The first one is probably my favorite! (The shading on the edges is from the scanner; I can master colored pencils, but not technology.)

Colored pencil on vellum (2011) ...

Back to the Days of Pooh


Catching up: A gift for a friend's baby shower. Little Robbie's nursery theme was, obviously, Winnie the Pooh. These two sides of the unframed canvas were lilac and yellow; the other two sides are blue and green. Not an original quote, but an original design, and really fun to paint! (I am way behind; the baby is more than a year old now!)

Acrylic on canvas (2010)