In a touching pool at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, these rays fly around under water. You can reach in and touch them – a silky, velvety sensation under your fingers.
On the Bay
Way back when I was a young ‘un, I used to sail with friends out in the Santa Barbara Channel. Wet Wednesdays were the thing! Anyway, even though I get horribly seasick, and really am a landlubber, boats – sailboats in particular – always catch my eye. There is nothing like keeling to one side, wind whipping through your hair, sails snapping, speeding along. Sitting quietly on a boat, too, is wonderful – for me, it makes me really, really sick, but when that scopolamine patch kicks in and the seasickness goes away, it’s pure heaven!
Mountain Hut: A Study in Warm and Cool Greens
If you have been following along here, besides Inktober 2019, I am also working my way through Rick Surowicz’s online class “Abandoned.” Here I am trying to apply some of the points learned in his class about greens, how to mix them, and how to create warm and cool greens to demonstrate environmental temperature and distance.
To mix a cool green, Surowicz used Cerulean Blue (to give coolness), Sap Green at times tempered with Pyrrol Red, Raw and Burnt Siennas. Varying the mixture in strength and dilution determines if it is light or dark. Here I applied the mixture to the hills behind the hut, as well as put a few streaks into the foreground.
Warm greens hold the same formula as cool greens except the Cerulean Blue is not used. The result is a warmer green, and depending on need, the Pyrrol Red is added, creating a darker green while keeping it in the warm arena. The Raw Sienna creates a warmer, yellower green, and the Burnt Sienna creates a more autumnal tinge to the grasses in the foreground.
In addition to creating warm and cool greens, I also worked on lines to demonstrate direction and texture, as well as to break up horizontal and vertical.
As a study, this has been successful. Critiquing it, I would say that the right lower portion of the stone hut should be lighter so as to contrast much better with the middle ground. Right now it recedes and gets lost.
Practice is important in all we wish to master – here, a practice study to apply some lessons.
Painted on Fluid 100 CP 140# paper.
Inktober 2019: #6 Husky
In American English, “Husky” can also mean big and strong. Sumo is full of husky men, trained in the traditional art of Sumo, a form of wrestling or martial art with a long history in Japan. While I don’t really know anything about Sumo, I’ve always rather enjoyed watching it.
Inktober 2019: Days 1-6
This year for Inktober 2019 I decided to work only with iron gall ink, which I made earlier this year. I am using pen nibs and brush to create the drawings, always done directly with the pen and no preliminary pencil drawing. The first two pictures are not exclusively iron gall ink, but may be a mix of permanent ink and iron gall.
#1:Â RingÂ
Tomato cages – I saw these when I was out on the patio trying to figure what to use for rings.
#2:Â Mindless
Mindless = Brainless – been watching zombies on TV! How mindless is that?
#3: Bait
All kinds of bait – jail bait, take the bait, etc. I chose a fish lure and a mouse trap. Still warming up at this point for Inktober and getting the groove back, as they say. This is when the pure iron gall ink begins. And I decided to do away with the frames I usually use for my photographs.
#4: FreezeÂ
Again, still warming up. This one had me stumped.
#5: Build Â
Here is when the brain began to work and imagination started warming up. Heavy equipment for building. I think it would be a lot of fun to drive one of these things!
#6: Husky Â
For those of you who speak English, but may not be aware of the term, “husky” can be big and strong, at least in American English. I like Sumo wrestlers, and though I don’t know much about the sport, I like to watch it now and again.










