Lands End, SF

I think every country has some form of a “land’s end” – at least if it borders on water, like an ocean. Lands End in San Francisco, CA, is a park overlooking the Pacific Ocean and part of the Golden Gate National Recreational Area. It’s a beautiful, wild, windy place – and it has a ridge of Monterey Cypress as well.

Note: Click on the image to enlarge.

I did a quick sketch in pencil, just to get the general shapes of the trees and the land. I put in the tree trunks first as I wanted to be sure I knew their placement along the land. I used a mixture of blacks and greys, pale to dark, but initially light to indicate placement. From there, the foliage and the land. Once established, detail began, with dry brush strokes for vegetation and later for the leaves on the cypress. More than anything, I wanted a loose, windswept look with a sense of direction and sky.

Planning a loose painting takes a bit of forethought. I put in the tree trunks first, then some foliage and land. The sky was done after all these with a large, soft flat watercolor brush. Final touches came after all was dry. I made this into a panorama, spanning 2 pages of my sketchbook, to give a sense of expanse. In the end, I was rather pleased with this.

Koi pan watercolors, watercolor, about 8×18.

Grass Lake

Eastern Oregon; Grass Lake.

Apparently back in the early part of the last century, this was a really nice place to come. The lake was renown for fishing and there was a hotel – resort, anyone? So, to kill a lot of fish all at once, someone decided to do it with dynamite. The result? The area is volcanic and beneath the lake was a cave or something, made from cooled lava. The dynamite broke the roof of the cave . . . drained the lake . . . lots of dead fish, and that was it.

The End.

Now it is a lovely rest stop alongside the road, with a trail, picnic grounds, pet area, and a much welcomed spot. When it rains, I think the lake may fill with water, but for now native grasses fill the lake bed.

Sage & Shadows

Sage & Shadows

I have been soooooo busy with everything! People, projects, classes, etc., etc. I finally got out for a bit of a hike, and brought my camera along, too, loaded with Portra 400. I used my Olympus OM-1n, which is a favorite camera of mine. The lens was the 50mm I had attached to it. Interestingly, my tape that I put on any camera with film in it told me I had loaded the film on 3/6/2021, exactly one year to the day that I was out and about!

I am always rather “hmmmmm” about Portra 400. A lot of people like it, but in post I always need to do something to it. I probably should just not use it for anything but portraits since that is what it is intended for, but I don’t often take pictures of people.

Anyway, the hike was fun – and kind of scary since I went by myself and part of it was rather steep, with fall-offs that could be treacherous. Getting old is not fun, and losing a sense of independence in some areas is not where I want to be. However, prudence was there insofar as my husband knew where I was, and I had my phone.

This is a little sage plant, newly growing in the moist soil above a creek. I couldn’t get a really nice shot of it by itself, and that is when I set my exposure and took multiple images to stitch together. In the end, I liked this composition, and just messed with it until I got something I liked.

A Patch of Daffodils

This is a panorama shot with a very narrow DOF. The focal point could have been better, but it is the row of daffs in front of the trees. The third clump in the very front from the left is best in focus, but I probably could have focused on the blooms in the second clump. Oh well.

I probably took 60 or so images here, and got a really well-covered area. The point is to see the different layers of in and out of focus areas. The foreground is sort of in focus, then the daffodils, and then moving back, the trees become increasingly more blurred. Sometimes doing these big panoramas can produce exciting pictures – other times, rather meh to downright worthless.  If you enlarge the picture, you will be able to see the levels of focus more clearly.

The beauty of digital! So much can be thrown away, so much can be play, so much can be a learning experience that is cheap – film does not make this an economic adventure at all.