Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Durham Fair Sketches 2016


Sketches from the Durham Fair 2016 from Jan Blencowe on Vimeo.

This video is in high def, you can enlarge it to full screen , and pause on any sketch you'd like to see close up for details etc. 

One of the sketching highlights of my year is sketching at Connecticut's largest agricultural fair. The Durham Fair turned 100 this year. There have actually been 97 fairs, a few being skipped due to war or hurricanes (not much gets in the way of New Englanders and their country fairs!) 

Fair day is always so exciting for me. It's a test of skill, focus, creativity, powers of observation.  For me, challenges are fun. 

Every year I prepare, select a sketchbook, and decide on materials and a few goals for the day.

Here's what I decided on for this year.

Sketchbook

I went with a Handbook Journal Hot Press Fluid 100 7x10 inch spiral bound field watercolor journal. These are very hard to come by in the smooth hot press paper surface. Once again I have forgotten where I ordered it from and I searched the internet and still can't find one. The cold press ones are readily available though. In case you're searching for this, it's the one with the green cover. Blue cover is cold press paper. (and also very nice)

I like this size because it's a horizontal format, longer that it is high, which is great because most animals at the fair also fit those proportions. Cows, goats, sheep etc. will all fit nicely on a page.

I also love the very smooth Fluid 100 paper. It's not an outstanding watercolor paper but a very serviceable and reasonably priced one that I enjoy using.

Pen

I decided that the fair was a good time to really give my brand new Sailor Fude de Mannen fountain pen a workout. It's always a risk taking a brand new tool you're unfamiliar with to the fair but I decided to take it anyway. I did pack several other pens just in case it was a disaster. 

My Sailor Fude came with two cartridges of  black ink that are not waterproof. I ordered the converter so I can fill it with waterproof ink but it hadn't arrived yet. However, that didn't really matter at all since I love working with water soluble inks.

I know that almost every water soluble ink is dye based and likely to fade over time. Yup, bummer. But, the ease of creating tonal ink washes one the spot with just a water brush, and the ability to soften misplaced lines and "mistakes" really takes the pressure off me when I'm working very quickly in a crowded venue where a lot of people are likely to ask to look at my sketches. It's just a little bit of protection against having sketches that go horribly wrong and feeling crappy about people looking at my work. 


I also took my Lamy Joy filled with De Atramentis Black document ink (waterproof) for writing.


Paints and Brushes

I took my 14 color set of QoR watercolors and a few brand new Pental Aquash water brushes in various sizes. 

Pencils

Two cheap PaperMate mechanical pencils and a stick eraser


Miscellaneous

Mini spray bottle, paper towels, and a bunch of extra pens that I never touched. (They were there "just in case")



Field Bag

I have recently switched from my over the shoulder Eddie Bauer bag to an around the waist bag. I've  had it for a couple of weeks but my trip to the fair was the big test. I found it incredibly helpful to have the bag around my waist. My shoulder didn't get painful and I had an easier time finding my supplies because I can look down into the bad. It also has an attachment for a bottle of water, which is wonderful, except that I was so engrossed sketching that I forgot to drink until I stopped for lunch. 

This is the bag I bought. It might be a bit small for some of you but I am always trying to eliminate and bring only what I truly need. I can fit my wallet and cell phone in the bag also. This is a keeper. 


Process

Sketching at large, crowded venues with live subjects (or complicated subjects like at the natural history museum) is challenging and I have finally worked out a process that works well for me. I start with a very brief pencil sketch. This helps me identify the absolutely essential characteristics of my subject. It often includes things like the angle of ears, the shape of the nose and mouth, the slope of the shoulders and angle of the hips. This is typically a very loose, contour line sketch, with special attention paid to the things I just mentioned. This is also an opportunity to make changes if the animal moves, turns it's head etc. It also lets me quickly choose another animal (same kind of course) if the first suddenly becomes active but another in the pen is resting quietly. Generally, I leave the pencil lines as part of the sketch and don't erase unless there's a build up of graphite that's likely to smear. 

Next, I switch to fountain pen.I am not simply tracing over my previous pencils lines, but I am looking with fresh eyes, making new observations and correcting and adjusting, which is unavoidable with moving subjects.  I may also indicate lines for shading or markings. I include the ground that's usually covered in straw, hay or wood shavings, to place them in a bit of a setting.

I bring out the water brush and watercolors next. First, I work with the ink to create some tonal washes which helps create the form and pattern of light and shadow. Then I go right in with the watercolors. Sometimes I let the watercolors touch the ink and mix, other times I allow a bit of white space to remain so the watercolors stay clean.

One of the advantages to working with water soluble ink is that it does mix with your watercolors and creates a harmonious look to a series of related sketches. 

Once the color is dropped in I use a pen with waterproof ink to make a note of the breed of animal, or the farm that's exhibiting. 


Goals 

My goals for the fair this year were to give the new Sailor Fude a really good workout and to focus on quantity, creating as many sketch as I possibly could. That goal really helped me to focus, push forward and keep my sketching fast, lively and loose.


How Long Do They Take?

I got asked that question at least a dozen times at the fair. Here's how the day's sketching panned out. I was at the fair for 5 hours and 45 minutes. I took a very quick lunch break and spent a little time talking with a few of the exhibitors (rabbits and Shropshire sheep) and picking out a dozen bars of my favorite goats milk soap, I think that basically takes care of the 45 minutes. That leaves five hours of sketching. During that time I did 26 sketches, that works out to approximately 8 minutes per sketch, which seems about right to me. I think the break down would be something like 3 minutes for the pencil sketch, 2 minutes with the fountain pen, and 3 minutes for the watercolor. 

Backgrounds

All of the pencil, ink and watercolor work was done on the spot. Later that evening I added borders, backgrounds, a little more writing and cleaned up a couple of sketches. The mini lop rabbit needed the addition of white to help get him looking really fluffy and the Brown Red Modern Game Hen's head got too dark from the ink and I used an acrylic marker to bring the color back. The backgrounds were made with Faber-Castell brush tip markers, and a Higgins India ink marker.

Hope you enjoyed hearing about my day at the fair. I encourage you to sketch at YOUR local fair this year ! 




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Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Durham Fair Sketches 2015





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It is now officially fall, now that the Durham Fair is over. This wonderful agricultural fair, the largest in Connecticut always ushers in the autumn for me.


I've gone to the fair many, many times in my twenty-seven years living in Connecticut. However, this is only the second year that I have sketched at the fair. Children and sketching at the fair don't really mix well. but now my children are all grown and I can take an entire day to enjoy the fair through my pens and paints. 


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A big sketching outing like the fair takes some preparation to make the day really successful, I like to arrive early when the gates open on Friday to avoid the large Saturday crowds. Friday is the day for school field trips to the fair, and I think it's good for kids to see someone sketching in public.

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Wear the right clothing and shoes. I stand to sketch at the fair and our fair is on very hilly terrain so a good pair of light hikers is a must for me.  ( also Advil before I leave so my back is not totally screaming half way through the day) Light weight sweater which I can roll up and stuff in my sketch bag, and vest with lots of pockets to stash pens, brushes watercolors etc. for easy access while I'm sketching. I clean out my sketch bag and travel with a minimum of carefully chosen supplies.

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I've learned over the years that a big "in public" day of sketching is not the time for me to be experimenting with new stuff. That said I ordered a totally new sketchbook to use at the fair, one I've never used before. I had every intention of testing it out first but I was just too busy with other projects so I went in to this not knowing how the paper would be.  Fortunately, the paper was fine, not outstanding, but fine. Although it's 140 lb. hot press paper, I was surprised that it buckled a bit, not enough to be very concerned about and it flattened after drying I was just surprised and didn;t expect that to happen.  In case you're wondering the sketchbook was The American Journey Journaling Sketchbook from CheapJoes, see it HERE


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The journal is 9x12 and one of my intentions for the fair was to work large. I've been working in small sketchbooks since the beginning of the year and I really felt it was time for a change. I'm glad I did , as working large at the fair was very freeing and I think contributed to the bold character of the sketches. I also decided from the get go that the sketches would be large two, possibly only one per page. I didn't want to cram the pages with lots of little sketches, because then I might as well be working in a small sketchbook. So it felt really good to spread out and draw large, 

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My usual method for sketching at big events like this is to start with a loose, quick light pencil sketch, just to get my bearings on the page and get the basic shape and gesture of the animal. then I switch to a Tradio Stylo pen. This is not a waterproof pen and I use it for exactly that reason. I can very quickly get tonal washes, areas of shadow, and deep ink blacks as well as interesting fluid inky areas n my sketches. The black ink also mixes with the watercolors toning down things a bit which is perfect for earth, natural subjects like farm animals. That ink mixing in with the colors in every sketch also brings a consistency to the look of each page of sketches from the fair, so they work as a whole series of related images.

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Using non-waterproof pen also reminds me to only use minimal washes and not get caught up trying to do complex many layered paintings, and it reminds me to leave bits of white for sparkle. When sketching at the fair I always try and remember that less is more.

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I took along my QoR watercolor set, and a brown Sharpie ultra fine point to write in the animals names, breeds, farms and any other information I could gather.

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During the rest of the weekend at home in the studio I added the borders, backgrounds and the stamped lettering.

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All in All after sketching for 6 hours I had filled eighteen pages with thirty sketches!

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Keep scrolling down to see all the rest of the pages.

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Friday, June 26, 2015

Sketching Farmyard Animals

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Always love sketching at the zoo. Even our small zoo in Connecticut has lots to offer.  I find chickens so much fun to draw. I love using a fountain pen that writes fast and smooth like the TWSBI mini that I used here. I favor sketching in a continuous line style keeping my pen on the paper and moving around in and out of the subject.

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Noodler's Lexington Gray ink is also a free, flowing ink that glides right on to the paper making it easy to stay fast and loose while sketching.

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Splashes of watercolor bring volume to my little bunnies and give them personality. When I'm at the zoo I try to keep my sketching relaxed and go in without expectations. Animals move all the time and so sketches will be very fast and really just an impression, of shape and gesture. I've done so many of these that I've really come to love the simplicity and spontaneity of this way of working.




Friday, May 29, 2015

Zoo Trip

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Always love a sketching trip to the zoo. I began the day with my favorite tiger, working some gestural studies with a Stabilo Woody pencil.
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Primates in the Rain Forest building and River Otters.  I didn't bring my usual paints with me today because I wanted the pre-prepared backgrounds to play a big role in the page. So I used a Tradio Stylo, and some Color Brush pens. All are water soluble and allowed me to fill in and create tonal washed quickly using a water brush.

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I went back to my favorite tiger several times throughout the day. He's an excellent model.

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The barnyard was fun. Everyone I met kept talking about the piglets, which I guess are really hoglets! (Actually not, they're still called piglets!) 

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This is my favorite page of the day, all these crazy contour sketches of the chickens. Fast and fun. Now I'm exhausted but really happy with the day and the variety of sketches I got out of it. 

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Sketching The Dogs


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I love animals and I especially love dogs. I'll never be without at least one in my life.  Dogs are so incredibly faithful, loyal and loving. They bring joy and goodness to your life, enriching your days and blessing your soul.  So, in many ways dogs are like sketching which also brings joy and goodness to my life, enriching my days and blessing my soul.  Thus sketching my dogs is a doubly good experience. Above is Quinn sketched with a Platinum Carbon fountain pen. It's my favorite pen above all my other fountains pens that cost many times more. Sometimes the simplicity of black and white and the rhythmic laying down of cross hatched lines is a wonderful way to sketch.

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Here's Molly in three views, also sketched with a Platinum, Carbon fountain pen but this time using Platinum Mix Free ink in Brown Earth. This ink unlike the black used for Quinn above is water soluble and allows me to go in with a wet brush to create tonal washes.

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Quinn sleeping on the sun-room sofa captured using a Pentel Pocket Brush Pen and QoR watercolors.

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Molly and Quinn together, sleeping on the rug in the studio. Pets also make wonderful models. I have hundreds of sketches of our various pets from over the years. Dogs, Chip, Dale, Maggie, and rabbits Marshmallow and Rosie, guinea pig, Butterscotch and turtle Shelly.  Not only are they always available but you can sketch them while they're sleeping or in action. It's great drawing practice, but more than that it's a way to honor them and keep them with you even after they pass. Losing a beloved pet is a heartbreaking thing but intimate sketches drawn over years memorializes them and anchors them in your heart and mind far better than a photograph ever will.

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Quinn is young, not yet a year and joined our family in November 2014, at just six months old. He's quite a clown and very much my companion, always at my side. 

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Molly is just a bit over two and joined us in December of 2013 when she was 15 months old. She was a rescue, a cause that we most definitely support. She is a consummate watch dog, so even when she is sleeping she is usually sprawled out in front of a door or entry way, guarding us even in her sleep. This sketch was done on top of a mono-print, created with a Gelli plate, and framed with japanese washi tape.

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This has been a very cold, snowy winter and I've been forced to find creative and challenging ways to sketch primarily indoors. So an exploration into mono-printing rich, colorful and textural backgrounds has been something that's interested me lately.

Winter certainly curtails my ability to get outside into nature to sketch and as much as I bemoan that fact, I do find that, the limitation of having to stay indoors pushes me to find other ways to engage my creativity and my world. Whether that's trips to museums, flower shows, cafes, shopping malls and other indoor venues to sketch or exploring new approaches, materials and tools as above, the winter can be a rich time of discovering new things in my sketchbook. That said....I'm still very much looking forward to getting back outside to sketch!!






Thursday, March 26, 2015

More Museum Sketches

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 Canoptic jars from ancient Egypt at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History


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 Great Black Backed Gull, Pentel Pocket Brush Pen and gouache

Always love a trip to the museum to sketch. Satisfies so many of my interests, art, sketching, archaeology, ecology, ornithology, paleontology etc. All wrapped up in an enriching, enjoyable environment.


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 The falcon headed Egyptian deity Horus.


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 Common male eider duck. I don't think he's common at at!  He has such beautiful subtle colors, like the pale green on his head.


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 This was a second trip to the museum with the Connecticut Sketchers Group. Fabulous afternoon indulging my new fascination with bison.


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And what's a trip to the natural history museum without sketching some of the amazing dinos and extinct species!

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Sketching Squirrel

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You see them everyday. They're funny, annoying, and they're everywhere. One of my New Year's rituals is to be aware of the first animal I see on New Year's Day, (other than my pets) and take that animal as my totem, or guide animal for the year.

This year it was a common gray squirrel. I was frankly a little disappointed.  Other year's I've seen a red tailed hawk, a black horse, a white tailed deer, but this year just a squirrel.

Then  I do what I always do, and that is look up the symbolic meaning of the animal and boy did I get a surprise! The squirrel is a power animal, with many, many lesson to teach us!

I will have much to think about and learn from this year with Squirrel as my guide. You can read about Squirrels symbolic meaning HERE.

My new sketchbook to start 2015 is a Stillman & Birn, 5.5 x 8.5 Zeta, with beautiful smooth, heavy weight, mixed media paper. It's such a great sketchbook to work in because it really does handle all media. It's not the same as good watercolor paper, but it does take watercolors remarkably well.Plus its smooth surface is beautiful for all kinds of pens and markers. My new favorite watercolors (and maybe my all time favorite from now on) are the new QoR watercolors from Golden.  I like them for their radiant, clarity and juicy pigment saturation. They also have an excellent "flow". I'm not really sure how else to describe that but the paints move and flow in such a beautiful way on  practically every surface I've used them on.

My new pen of choice (and again I *might* have found the ONE) is a Platinum Carbon fountain pen, using Platinum Carbon ink.  This is not an expensive pen. I think I paid $12 for it, bought the converter ($10) so I can fill it from an ink bottle and not have to buy expensive cartridges, and bought a bottle of carbon ink ($20).

I m so surprised at this pen's versatility. It's really quite elegant, especially so for a $12 pen!  The body is long and tapered, similar to a paint brush, which allows yo to hold it further back and loosely which helps loosen up your mark making and allows for lots of expressive qualities.  The nib, is also very responsive (though not a flex nib it actually has a lot of movement to it) and you can turn the pen over and draw easily with the other side of the nib for very thin lines.

The carbon ink is very waterproof and dries very quickly a big plus when you want to put watercolors over your ink work. The only thing I don't like is the plastic cap which does not post the the end of the pen. I always have to be sure I don't drop it and lose it. Other than that I'm really loving this pen!



Friday, October 3, 2014

New Zoo Sketches

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 Lately, it seems that I just can't get enough of sketching animals. This is the Beardsley Zoo in Bridgeport, CT
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Birds are also something that I keep coming back to over and over through the years. It's not that I ever felt I had any particular interest in birds, never really wanted to own one as a pet, but I've always been fascinated with bird watching and with birds of prey in particular.  Yet, I'm certainly no expert when it comes to birds and I only joined the Audubon Society this year!  But over an over again I keep coming back to birds as a subject.

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It's taken me a few years to get comfortable sketching live, moving animals. I think I've finally expanded and strengthened my visual memory enough to get at least a reasonable likeness on paper.  The great 19th C artist and teacher Robert Henri, author of The Art Spirit, used to make his students look at a figure model in one room and then run up a flight or two of stairs to the studio to work on their drawing.  That was to develop their visual memory. Can you look at something with enough concentration and focus that when the object is no longer in front of you you can draw what you saw with reasonable accuracy? 

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I've heard some artists describe the process as taking a snap shot with your mind.  Look intently with awareness and then quickly shut your eyes tight as if they were the shutter of a camera and then visualize what you just saw. The next step is to be able to put what you hold in your mind's eye down on paper.

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I started years ago drawing our pets. Back then we had two dogs, two rabbits, a guinea pig and a turtle, so plenty of variety. LOL.  After a while I could draw them with ease. New types of animals though continued to remain a challenge.

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I've read some good books about sketching animals, and working from specimens at the natural history museum and nature centers certainly helps also. These are far better exercises that using a photo, always better to work from a three dimensional model. Though a photo will do if that's all you have at the time.

I have some sketches from the Beardsley Zoo from several years ago, in particular of the tiger above, and honestly the sketches are pretty bad. But that's one of the great things about keeping a sketchbook, you can see how you've improved.  There's no magic and no short cut. Just draw, as often as you can, and over time you improve. Sometimes a good book, workshop or class can really help introduce you to information or techniques that make things easier, but in the end it just amounts to practice. The most important thing is to enjoy the process and trust the process .

31 Days 31 Drawings

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