Author: -N-
Garden Sketches

I’ve been rather busy of late – running here and there, sewing, hanging out with friends, and so on. As a result, I have not been able to sit down to paint for the past few days. Today I made the determined effort to do so, and am glad I did. Instead of working in the studio, I went outside onto my rather warm and sunny patio – 95F / 35C – and moved what I could into the shade of the canopy. A small table, a chair, some water and paints, my home made iron gall ink and my dip pen all accompanied me. Pandora and Donna Summer, too!
I pulled out a watercolor sketchbook, and immediately found that the paper has a sizing issue, as well as cannot handle water in any amount. Wah! However, for pen and a small amount of color, it will do. I also used a Rhodia tablet, very smooth and polished, and works very well with a sharp pen nib. The results are straight above – and captioned! It worked out quite nicely.
Watercolor sketchbook. Iron gall ink applied first, then watercolor paint. Milkweed in bloom.The watercolor sketchbook, as I said, was disappointing for wet work. However, for ink and color, it is not too bad. Here, I did the ink drawing first and then applied the color. The color rather overwhelmed the lines at time, so I went back and added more ink after the paint dried. In 95F weather, it dries pretty quickly.
A flowerpot with a dead sunflower (left), oregano in bloom (middle), and the stalk and leaves of milkweed plant. Color applied first, dried, and then iron gall ink drawing.This last picture was an afterthought. The first drawing found the color overwhelming the ink at times, so I decided to paint first, and then draw. Artistic experiment!
Anyway, the art bug has been temporarily allayed. More tomorrow I hope!
Time, Paper, and Tape
The sewing bug has bit me again! Now that I have time to sit down and think, I also have time to sew. I just finished a flannel robe in the past couple of weeks, as well as hemmed a couple of pairs of jeans for Josh. Now the plan is for a new blouse out of some gauzy material with gold printing on it. Yeah, sounds bizarre, or gaudy, but it really is rather pretty.
I have any number of patterns, but none seemed especially suited for my very first foray into sewing with gauze. Looking around on the internet, I came across some patterns by StyleArc, an indie pattern company out of Australia. They get good reviews, so I decided this blouse would be perfect. A bit of a challenge, but simple enough . . . .
When you buy online patterns, often they are downloadable as a PDF file that you print out at 100% (to make sure you get the right size). From there you tape everything together to create your pattern pieces, and then cut. And then tape some more, front and back. After that, you get to sewing!



