Sunday, October 25, 2015

Scuba James - Nearly finished


I worked on Scuba James today.  I refined the water some and fixed some things which bothered me about his face and some of the details.  I will leave the water alone but I may work the face a little more after a rest.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Kerri's Portrait

My daughter Kerri said she wanted a painting of a photo she had took a few years back.  She say the other paintings of her sister and brother and she said she wanted one.  I will do a more complicated one which is more than a silhouette.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Mountain Cherry Tree

This was a bit of an experiment.  This acrylic   painting is done with only four colors and the majority is white and black.  The foliage in the cherry tree is blue, red and white.  This is much like an oriental mountain "Sumi" ink painting.   It is always good to change things up and try something new and in a different medium.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Yosemite Sketch

I am back up and running after a little scanner computer problem.  This is a pencil sketch of a painting by Thomas Hill from about 100 years ago.  Going pencil studies of paintings and scenes is a way to learn and to understand the darks and lights of a painting without worrying about color.

Monday, October 19, 2015

Tree -Capades

I decided to play with the art markers for juniper trees in two greens, one blue and one dark blue almost black.  Sort of fun and different, which is the enjoyable part.

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Planning out and different mediums



There is a planning out of this painting.  I had done a few different thumb nail sketches and then I did a basic drawing to set up the perspective, a watercolor of it to consider colors and then started on the oil.

Friday, October 16, 2015

Quick Thumb Nail sketch

This is a quick Thumb Nail Sketch, i.e, it is small but is a way to quickly get the details of a scene and a way to experiment with the composition before committing to a larger piece.   I have trying to do more of these to quicken the drawing skills and to capture fleeting scenes.