True Love

Posted by mobile phone:
True Love
It’s 1 am. I have just walked through the door and what do I find waiting on but Milk and cookies. Not only that, but my girls made a fresh pitcher of iced tea and left it in the fridge for me.

LOVE MY GIRLS!

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True Love

Lost in the wilderness

Posted by mobile phone:
Lost in the wilderness
Once again, dear friends, I am out on the road making calls for my day job. I am in beautiful Alexandria, Louisana. You will just have to take my word for it that it’s beautiful here because I am not able to stop and get pictures of the countryside because of the tight driving schedule we are expected to keep and because I shouldn’t take pictures while I’m driving.

When we do stop, it’s at a fast food restaurant or a gas station, just like any other fast food restaurant or gas station anywhere else in the world. Not very beautiful. But the landscape we are driving by is absolutely stunning!

Hotel accomodations (no spell check from the phone) are completely devoid of any semblance of Internet access. In that regard, I am alone. Cut off from civilization. And while that means that I’m not able to check my e-mail, facebook, or twitter without extreme frustration on my phone, I will at least get to bed at a decent hour. Y’know, if 1:00 a.m. is decent.

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Lost in the wilderness

Yay!

Posted by mobile phone:
Yay!
FINALLY! After weeks and weeks of not being able to go to figure drawing, I finally was able to go! I almost couldn’t believe it when it wasn’t raining *AND* I wasn’t out of town *AND* I wasn’t destitute. So, I will get the work I did tonight uploaded and blog all about it on next Wednesday’s post.

Tonight, in preperation of being out of town for another couple of nights, I spent some time setting up my mobile blog. “MoBlogging” is the only way I post to http://smalltownbiglife.com anymore. For The Artistic Biker, I need a little more control over the appearance. Also, my phone cuts off the post if I try to go back and spell check or edit. Still, this will be handy when I am out and about and just want to share something with my subscribers. Until I get my post updates under some kind of control, this will be a lifesaver while I’m out of town.

This concludes this test of the Emergency MoBlogging System.

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Yay!

Let the Cravings Begin

Pickles and Ice Cream

Pickles and Ice Cream

Saturday night when I decided to play with and demonstrate my new sketchbooks, I went ahead and splashed out this week’s Illustration Friday challenge: Cravings.  That morning my beautiful young bride had told me that she was “with child.”  So of course, pickles and ice cream was on my mind for the challenge.  I thought also about a pin up model wearing a beef jerky bikini holding a pizza and a beer.  I went with her cravings instead.

Go Avery!

Go Avery!

I had some cards printed to hand out to prospective student’s parents, but the printer spelled my name wrong.  You would think they would have looked at the CHECK for the name spelling.  Really frustrating when you are on a schedule and no one else thinks it’s important.  Luckily, I had the standby Avery Smooth Edge cards around.  They’re not bad looking, but the ink in my printer is not as smooth looking as the professionals.

Experimentation Part 1

2oz Glue Moistener

2oz Glue Moistener

As I was walking through the stationary and art supplies section of our local Wal*Mart, I happened upon these little bottles with a sponge on top.  They are for moistening glue on stamps and envelopes.  I wondered, though, if they might be used as a type of waterbrush.  I immediately began thinking about washing paint, painting wet on wet, or… TREES!  I don’t know if Bob Ross is the one who invented the idea of “stabbing” paint at a canvas to make happy little trees, but I remember watching it every weekend on PBS.  He would take a fat round brush and stab paint, then come back and create highlights with a stiff, flat brush, his knife, or just the stick end of the brush.  Then, of course, he would make some white and gray M’s in the sky and call them birds.  Happy little birds for the happy little trees.  So I bought two of them to experiment with.

wctreesii2I decided to do a quick evergreen.  I filled the little bottle up and proceeded to load it with paint.  If you decide to do this, remember that for most evergreens you stab from the top down and out in a triangle.  For most diciduous trees, start in the center of the base of the triangle and work out and up.  That may be a different lesson some day, today we’re just playing with a sponge bottle.

wctreesii3The first thing I noticed was the rapid flow of water on this thing.  Loading it with paint was a chore.  As a matter of fact, it was hard to tell if I was loading the sponge with paint, or if I was just flooding the pan.  Application wasn’t much different.  You can see that I was able to get a couple of good stabs in, but after that it just washed the paper.  Not bad if wet on wet is what you’re going for, but I was really going for stark and bold.

wctreesii4As the paint dried, I decided to try and add some branches and some highlights with my regular water brush.  This is when I decided that I should really look into getting some opaque paints.  I knew that if I tried to add another layer of green on top that this would just become mud.  Then I remembered the lifting technique that I played with last week.  So, I patiently watched Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory with my beautiful young bride and Girl2 while the paint dried.

wctreesii5I quickly found that the sheer flood of water coming from the sponge didn’t allow for any control what so ever, at least not in the application I had chosen.  Again, this would have been fine for wet on wet, or even just to create the wash of sky, ground, and shadow.  But, as a paint applicator I found it severely lacking. As I stared at it, though, I wondered what I could do to control the flow of water.  My waterbrush, for instance, has a bit of sponge inside the tip before the bristles are attached.  I wonder what would happen if I stuffed this area with cotton or silk to allow water through, but not a straight flow.  I also wondered what would happen if I filled them with paint and used them on a much larger application?  Let me play with it for a week and let’s see what all we can come up with.  If you have any comments or suggestions, I would love to hear about them!  Leave a comment below, or email me.

Tune in for next week’s Monday Discovery for part II.