I Blog about an Artist's Life, journaling and sketching, creating Fine Art, using Colored Pencils and also Oil Paints. Working in the studio as well as "En Plein Air", (In the Open Air). Come in and join the fun! My colored pencil work requires 20-25 layers of artist quality pencils. Trying to foster respect for artists who choose a nonstandard media is challenging. I hope this blog will show Colored Pencil deserves the respect from collectors and galleries as a fine art medium.
Showing posts with label Travel Journaling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel Journaling. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
Travels, Art Journaling and Plein Air Colored Pencil Paintings
Saturday, June 6, 2015
A well deserved vacation! Travel Journaling For Memories.
My intent was to get back from a lovely vacation for my husband's birthday and our upcoming 40th wedding anniversary and get these pages in my Travel Journal posted onto the blog before now. But do to unseen delays I'm a bit late in accomplishing that. (More to come in my next post on why.)
On The flight to FL
A much needed trip after a grueling spring of Art show fundraiser organizing and teaching. My artistic juices were in desperate need of refueling, and it was time to celebrate as well as chill and relax. What better way than to spend a day and a half in Fort Lauderdale before setting sail on the Carnival Cruise ship "The Breeze", one of their newest and largest.
While in Ft. L, we noshed on some great crepes and then toured the historic Bonnet House, circa 1920, home of artist Frederick Clay Bartlett, a muralist from Chicago. This home's property became Ft. Lauderdale beach, and the home now sits in the midst of the urban growth of hotels and beaches. For more info see Bonnet House: here I had a ball touring this home and getting to see his working studio while in FL for the winters. His second wife Evelyn started painting in her 50's and became, in my opinion a better painter than her husband. It is a must see spot if your in the Ft. Lauderdale area.
Orchids attach to all the trees in the beautiful gardens.
Departing from Miami, Day One and Two of the cruise aboard ship, towel animals and open seas. Sleeping at night was good with the gentle sway of the Atlantic.
Day Three - "Jamaica Mon! No problem!" Excursion Day to Dunn's River Falls from Falmouth our first Port of call. A thoroughly wet and wild climb to the top of the falls, rapids body surfing and light rain in the rain forest that surrounds this beautiful spot. Then off to the Bamboo Beach Club for lunch and Jamaican rum drinks, champagne cocktails and surf! I sketched the cove and the turquoise water. Steps ascended up the cliff to a cave, I'm told by our tour guides, Heather and Damar. They loved my sketch and signed on the page! It's fun to get others involved in your journaling.
Day Four - Grand Cayman and a walking tour of town, shopping then a quick taxi to HELL and back. Met the devil, Tom bought a T-shirt to prove it.
He was actually a nice guy, ex-merchant marine from Norfolk, VA, a small world. Chickens and roosters ran loose here, after escaping during a long ago hurricane. We stored up energy for Thursday and went back to the ship early enough to sketch the shore from our balcony.
*
Day Five - #6 TO CHECK OFF THE BUCKET LIST DAY
(Also known as climb a Mayan pyramid day.)
COBA - the tallest Myan pyramid/temple, and only one still open to tourists to climb.
Thurs. was Cozumel - A three hour trip - Two ferry rides, a 1.5 hour bus ride and we were at Coba, the Mayan city's ruins. A Rickshaw ride through only a fraction of the restored ruins brought us to the tallest Mayan pyramid, and the only one you can still walk up - My goal. Walk is a relative term, 138 ft. with 112 steps, most a good two steps tall, it was 90% humidity and 89 deg., and we were given 30 minutes to go up and back down. The steps crumbled in areas, so I stayed in the center, looking up twice, it seemed like it could take forever, but I made it!!!! My son Chris was waiting to take my picture. Did I mention Chris is a fantastic travel planner :))
At the top was a great view of the rain forest, so I closed my eyes, centered my breathe and emptied my thoughts, as the Mayan guide suggested, to invite the power of the gods. Not sure if it worked but I didn't have a heart attack! Now for the more difficult trip down, with quivering leg muscles. All my on the ship training/stair climbing, proved no preparation for this climb. So I used my best ass-et in this case, which everyone else was doing. Young and old, we came down on our butts. Slow but efficient, and with the slippery steps, a sound decision.
In the picture below - that's me bent over climbing up!
Our Mayan rickshaw driver/peddler (Manuel) was a god send, he spoke little English but laughed when I told him I was 20 lbs. lighter after the climb from all the sweat, so the ride back should be easier. Our time was limited so this sketch was done after I recovered on the way back home. Tom and the boys were proud of me from my trek up Dunn's River but they were very proud that their newly celebrated 60 year old Dad and 57.5 yr old Mom went up when many younger people on our bus did not.
Shopping for some "Mayan bling" was accomplished right on the bus ride home, an obsidian necklace with my name spelled in Mayan characters to commemorate the Day. Apparently Mayan couples exchange these necklaces with each other's name on them instead of wedding rings.
Carnival held the ship for us as our three hour trip back was delayed by a late ferry. Even though this was my bucket list item the guys all were glad to tuck this climb into their "Life Experience memory list " And I was glad to add it to my journal.
Day Six back on the Breeze, and at sea heading home, I was quite sore, muscles joints and the hot tub felt great.
And Day Seven - 6:40 AM back into the port of Miami, and the trip back to the airport, and to Richmond. Ending with Chinese food back home.
I hope this summer you too will go out and sketch your travels, whether they are at the beach, in far away lands or right in your back yard. It's worth writing those memories into your subconscious. Looking back at my journal pages I can smell, taste and envision my experiences and you can train your memory muscles to do just that too.
The best part was coming home to my faithful Studio Assistant "Bacio" who enjoyed himself at the Countryside Bed and Biscuit here in VA. He's just not sure why he couldn't go, and promised to do better in puppy class if we promised to take him next time.
Friday, September 14, 2012
Provence Trip and a few Plein Airs finished
Lourmarin Plein Air Study 5 X 7
Roussillon Plein Air Study 5 X 7
Well finally I've scanned two of the Plein Air pieces done almost completely on site. Both are on
Ampersand Pastelboard this first one on white and the 2nd one on the green pastelboard. I prefer the white as the green or colors make bright whites a chore. The Lourmarin turret turned into a home was completed with a underpainting of Watercolor Colored Pencils (Caran D'Ache) with layered Premier Prismacolors completed on top. Before starting the piece I photographed the scene and did a quick graphite study for composition purposes in my sketch book. (I tried to scan it but the sketch doesn't want to show up well, sorry.) I used the wc cp's to quickly tone the background area leaving the sky untouched. When the wc cp was dry which happened quickly on site because of the dry warm day in July. I then worked the sky. Wanting to capture the atmosphere from morning haze still in the Luberon mountains behind. Working small in Plein Air cp has become a must for my getting near completion in one day, but the sanded surface helps work much more quickly.
The Roussillon piece was started on a very windy morning sitting in the parking lot across from this hillside town. Roussillon is where natural sienna pigments are found in the ground and the hues are amazing. I did not do a composition sketch before starting this, nor did I do a WC CP underpainting, just straight Prismas onto the board. Because this board was green to start with I mapped out a sketch with white cp lightly to build the drawing. The day was so windy I had to leave halfway done and finish back at the hotel. Building the colors due to the green Ampersand base coat, first with white. Final finishing came when I came back to the states, but mainly tweaks and small details. There was so much to get into this small 5 X 7, but the feeling of the village and it's colorful earth pigments is there.
So there you have it, a recap of 2 of the pieces I did while on my France Plein Air Trip. Colored pencil really is better thought of as a sketchbook media when on site. But when you use a sanded surface, work small and use an underpainting of WC pencils things can move faster. Perhaps not as fast as other media, but getting a saturated look is possible. When wanting to work bigger I still use pastels, but I do not love the mess I create nor are my pastel skills highly evolved. And taking pastels on this long France trip would have meant more weight for my luggage.
Soon to post my Central VA British Car Show piece, just have to get it photographed. Have a colorful Day!
Roussillon Plein Air Study 5 X 7
Well finally I've scanned two of the Plein Air pieces done almost completely on site. Both are on
Ampersand Pastelboard this first one on white and the 2nd one on the green pastelboard. I prefer the white as the green or colors make bright whites a chore. The Lourmarin turret turned into a home was completed with a underpainting of Watercolor Colored Pencils (Caran D'Ache) with layered Premier Prismacolors completed on top. Before starting the piece I photographed the scene and did a quick graphite study for composition purposes in my sketch book. (I tried to scan it but the sketch doesn't want to show up well, sorry.) I used the wc cp's to quickly tone the background area leaving the sky untouched. When the wc cp was dry which happened quickly on site because of the dry warm day in July. I then worked the sky. Wanting to capture the atmosphere from morning haze still in the Luberon mountains behind. Working small in Plein Air cp has become a must for my getting near completion in one day, but the sanded surface helps work much more quickly.
The Roussillon piece was started on a very windy morning sitting in the parking lot across from this hillside town. Roussillon is where natural sienna pigments are found in the ground and the hues are amazing. I did not do a composition sketch before starting this, nor did I do a WC CP underpainting, just straight Prismas onto the board. Because this board was green to start with I mapped out a sketch with white cp lightly to build the drawing. The day was so windy I had to leave halfway done and finish back at the hotel. Building the colors due to the green Ampersand base coat, first with white. Final finishing came when I came back to the states, but mainly tweaks and small details. There was so much to get into this small 5 X 7, but the feeling of the village and it's colorful earth pigments is there.
So there you have it, a recap of 2 of the pieces I did while on my France Plein Air Trip. Colored pencil really is better thought of as a sketchbook media when on site. But when you use a sanded surface, work small and use an underpainting of WC pencils things can move faster. Perhaps not as fast as other media, but getting a saturated look is possible. When wanting to work bigger I still use pastels, but I do not love the mess I create nor are my pastel skills highly evolved. And taking pastels on this long France trip would have meant more weight for my luggage.
Soon to post my Central VA British Car Show piece, just have to get it photographed. Have a colorful Day!
Labels:
Artist Life,
Colored Pencil Journaling,
Colored Pencil Landscape,
Colored Pencil Paintings,
Colored Pencil Sketching,
France - Plein Aire Trip 2012,
Gloria J Callahan Art,
Landscape painting,
Plein Air Colored Pencil,
Plein Air in Colored Pencil,
Provence,
Provence Art,
Sketchbook,
Travel Journaling,
traveling with CP's
Monday, July 2, 2012
Last day in Paris and Monet's Home and Garden
Claude Monet's garden is about 1 hour 15 min., from our hotel via our special tour bus, and was everything I had hoped it would be and then some. The artist's home is inviting with the rose arbors lining the garden side of the house. And the gardens it over looks are so filled with blossoms you hardy knew which direction to look. My only disappointment was it was so busy (we got there when it opened) there really was not a place to even do a quick sketch. And we only had 2 hours to see it all. Inside no photos are allowed but for those who have not seen it, it's decorated to the exact duplicate of the photos displayed inside. With replicas of his paintings hanging in his studio. My favorite part of the house was the blue and white kitchen. His bedroom was a cheery space that's windows opened up onto his magnificent garden.
The bridge view today is much the same as in some of his famous paintings but appeared to be lower than I expected. I suppose it's because he painted from his boat in the water, giving it a higher angle and view. But again many crowds to contend with thus no drawings ala Plein Aire.
We concluded our afternoon with a trip to the Musee de l'Orangerie on the grounds of the Louvre gardens. Containing a tribute to Monet's Water Nympheas series that took over 4 years for him to paint. They fill the walls of 2 long oval rooms. The link here will give you a teaser. www.musee-orangerie
So that was a good ending for our Monet day.
Au revior,
Gloria
The bridge view today is much the same as in some of his famous paintings but appeared to be lower than I expected. I suppose it's because he painted from his boat in the water, giving it a higher angle and view. But again many crowds to contend with thus no drawings ala Plein Aire.
We concluded our afternoon with a trip to the Musee de l'Orangerie on the grounds of the Louvre gardens. Containing a tribute to Monet's Water Nympheas series that took over 4 years for him to paint. They fill the walls of 2 long oval rooms. The link here will give you a teaser. www.musee-orangerie
So that was a good ending for our Monet day.
Au revior,
Gloria
Labels:
Colored Pencil Journaling,
Colored Pencil Landscape,
Colored Pencil Paintings,
Colored Pencil Sketching,
France,
France - Plein Aire Trip 2012,
Gloria J Callahan Art,
Landscape,
Plein Air in Colored Pencil,
Sketchbook,
Travel Journaling,
traveling with CP's
Sunday, July 1, 2012
The Louvre's Mona and the Eiffle Tower from my hotel room tonight.,
At the Louvre to see Mona, my Italian mother's favorite painting. Hectic and crazy today because Sunday's are free admittance to museums in Paris. Wilma and I had a great time on the Batobus (a river boat that transports you to many of the sites all day along the Seine River. Unfortunately we did not get to see the Museum D' Orsay due to extremely long lines. No drawing or painting today it was our free day and art appreciation day.
After a lovely dinner that cost way too, much we're back to the hotel and our rooms view of the Eiffel Tower at night. Now to get a good nights sleep before our painting day and tour of Giverney tomorrow. (our last day in Paris and France).
The one thing I've learned on this trip to France with other media Plein Aire painters is that the still life artist in me and the vignette lover in me has much to practice in my landscape cp work to feel comfortable. I did stick to my guns and worked small the whole time 5 X 7 or 4 X 6. A few I've shown here or will how in the next few weeks to come. So stay tuned for more.
Gloria
After a lovely dinner that cost way too, much we're back to the hotel and our rooms view of the Eiffel Tower at night. Now to get a good nights sleep before our painting day and tour of Giverney tomorrow. (our last day in Paris and France).
The one thing I've learned on this trip to France with other media Plein Aire painters is that the still life artist in me and the vignette lover in me has much to practice in my landscape cp work to feel comfortable. I did stick to my guns and worked small the whole time 5 X 7 or 4 X 6. A few I've shown here or will how in the next few weeks to come. So stay tuned for more.
Gloria
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Provence Plein Aire - Roussillion
View of Roussillion, France and it's Ocher pigment in the mountain. |
Yesterday was our trip to the perched town of Roussillion, where the ocher pigments
My beginning for the view of Roussillion. |
were mined, in all shades. Finding the
town which is only about 15 min. from Bonnieux was a little tedious as 2
of the roads were washed by mud slides. So the third option 25 minutes
later panned out. Climbing in switchbacks the whole way up "Bubba" our
new vehicle made the trip up smoothly. Such a change from the vehicle I
started out with. Thank you Hertz!
Lavender fields in many areas were out
(not as much as farther south) and proved good photo ops. As the driver
I had to stay in the vehicle so I'm waiting for the copies my car mates
ran out to get while I hung on to the edge of the road. Look for them
in follow up posts when I get back. Being the designated driver has
it's downfalls as I can't shoot so many of the quick shots of this
wonderful landscape while driving, like my car mates can.
As you can see my start for the view of
the town was slow to develop. The Mistral winds were at first a
thankful gift for this hot day but soon became.a force to be reckoned
with. As the ochre colored sand and dust blew across the parking lot
where I sat in the shade, I soon had more grit in my eyes and teeth than
I could stand. Here I'm working on a 5 X 7 piece of green ampersand
pastel-board. laid out initially with 10 % french grey. The drawing
needs corrected some but the various little buildings are at varied
angles which I observed first hand while in town. This is as far as I
got in about an hour and 15-20 minutes. It was difficult to not loose
your place while doing the sketch, while holding on to your supplies n
the wind. I hope to add some more to it from my photos. More to come.
Have a colorful day! Au revoir,
Gloria
Labels:
Colored Pencil Art,
Colored Pencil Journaling,
Colored Pencil Landscape,
Colored Pencil Paintings,
Colored Pencil Sketching,
France - Plein Aire Trip 2012,
Gloria J Callahan Art,
Landscape,
landscapes,
Provence,
Provence Art,
Sketchbook,
Travel Journaling,
traveling with CP's
Le Clos du Buis's garden by the pool inspired this drawing as the Luberon hills an Mount Ventu beyond the inner hedge roll out beyond the outskirts of Bonnieux. This very large glazed urn filled with their version of red geranium (has very tiny blossoms)looks out on the pool level before the grounds fall away into the lower garden. I worked o this two afternoons in my multimedia sketch book. No wc cp under-painting 100% cp.
The day before we went to Arles (a 1.5 hour trip) to see the Van Gogh Museum and had lunch at the Cafe name after the painting he did of it at night. I had the Van Gogh salad and it was as colorful as his paintings. The museum was closed and with the warning symbol written in French on the Peugeot I was driving (saying "Get your engine fixed now!") had us having a difficult day.. We located a Hertz office in Arles which had us driving to Neems airport (farther west) to exchange it for a brand spanking new Chevy Captiva. Ya!!!!!! American!. It drives so much better but is so much bigger that we named it Bubby. I'm the largest car in our hotel parking lot.. Scary to drive these perched towns with when you meet a bus/truck or fast driving car in your lane but it handles the mountainous country roads so well with our foursome. As the appointed driver I am the one who has to maneuver these roads but without Kathy our only French speaking artist navigating for us we might never get there.
Oh, and I am now along with my car mates working on finding the best sorbet in Provence. So far the best has been here in Bonnieux with the tea shop down the street and at the La Flambe restaurant.. The tea shop has Lavender sorbet which pared with raspberry is lovely., La Flambe has Cassis (Kir liquer) flavor and paired with lemon or citron sorbet is the best palate cleanser after a meal.
There you go one post to catch you up and another one yet to come with yesterday's trip and drawing. Have to charge both the battery on the notebook and by tummy. Have a colorful day!
Gloria
.
The day before we went to Arles (a 1.5 hour trip) to see the Van Gogh Museum and had lunch at the Cafe name after the painting he did of it at night. I had the Van Gogh salad and it was as colorful as his paintings. The museum was closed and with the warning symbol written in French on the Peugeot I was driving (saying "Get your engine fixed now!") had us having a difficult day.. We located a Hertz office in Arles which had us driving to Neems airport (farther west) to exchange it for a brand spanking new Chevy Captiva. Ya!!!!!! American!. It drives so much better but is so much bigger that we named it Bubby. I'm the largest car in our hotel parking lot.. Scary to drive these perched towns with when you meet a bus/truck or fast driving car in your lane but it handles the mountainous country roads so well with our foursome. As the appointed driver I am the one who has to maneuver these roads but without Kathy our only French speaking artist navigating for us we might never get there.
Oh, and I am now along with my car mates working on finding the best sorbet in Provence. So far the best has been here in Bonnieux with the tea shop down the street and at the La Flambe restaurant.. The tea shop has Lavender sorbet which pared with raspberry is lovely., La Flambe has Cassis (Kir liquer) flavor and paired with lemon or citron sorbet is the best palate cleanser after a meal.
There you go one post to catch you up and another one yet to come with yesterday's trip and drawing. Have to charge both the battery on the notebook and by tummy. Have a colorful day!
Gloria
.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Our Hotel/B&B "Le Clos du Buis" front view. Today we recovered from several sleepless nights, jet lag and scoped out Bonnieux our temporary home town. A hilltop village is so picturesque, friendly and so quintessentially French. As typical, the streets are narrow and busy, but the pedestrian streets may offer some good set up areas for Plein Air painting tomorrow. Or at least the quaint doorways along it were easy painting targets. Lunch at a terraced brasserie was a salad with small crispy tomato pizza on top, looking over the Luberon valley below.
We were invited into a home with a rental apartment in it which was 12th century and part of the original ramparts of the walled town. Most of the place was below street level (down 3 levels), the rooms were catacomb like and a cool earthen temperature. The woman/owner had the cutest little Jack Russel terrier was very interested in our group of painters. Her rear balcony overlooked the valley and the hill-town across named Lacoste. A view to savor with a cup of morning cafe'.
So there you have it my first full non travel day in Provence. Dinner tonight is at the Hotel, family style with all 20 of us and the kitchen is smelling wonderful. Garlicky yummy! Mmmmm. I think my all day walking up hill has made for a good appetite.
Au revoir my followers,
Gloria
We were invited into a home with a rental apartment in it which was 12th century and part of the original ramparts of the walled town. Most of the place was below street level (down 3 levels), the rooms were catacomb like and a cool earthen temperature. The woman/owner had the cutest little Jack Russel terrier was very interested in our group of painters. Her rear balcony overlooked the valley and the hill-town across named Lacoste. A view to savor with a cup of morning cafe'.
So there you have it my first full non travel day in Provence. Dinner tonight is at the Hotel, family style with all 20 of us and the kitchen is smelling wonderful. Garlicky yummy! Mmmmm. I think my all day walking up hill has made for a good appetite.
Au revoir my followers,
Gloria
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Pre-Plein Air trip to France Carry Ons for a Colored Pencil Artist
Here's what my large carry on bag looks like packed with my takings for the Plein Air Painters trip to Provence, France. And if you notice the time of this posting you'll realize I'm having one of those sleepless pre trip nights. So I got right to starting my trip Blog with a "Here's what I'm taking for colored pencil art".
Carry On Luggage to France has to be an exact measurement (which I won't boar you with here) but suffice it to say, my laptop/camera backpack meets that and bags also can weigh no more than 26 lbs. Fully loaded it is 18.8lbs. so far, but I will add my ziplock bag of liquids (via TSA requirements) and maybe an additional treat for the trip. The laptop part holds my notebook easily and the padding protects my Prismacolors. And since they can't be purchased in Europe I need them safe.
The camera is missing as I'm using it for the photo, but you'll see my hot pink camera bag with sd cards, extra battery with charger and a bigger lens next to it. This all fits in the camera location of the bottom of the bag along with some power bars, Garmin (loaded with Europe Maps) and it's cords, card reader, and French power converter.
My Prismacolor CP pencils are in a 120 count leather organizer, and working clockwise around the table top is:
A few scrap sheets of UART in very small sizes;
Several 5 X 7 ampersand pastelboards and (2) 6 X 12 ones;
My little notebook (for blogging to you all and sending much needed responses to home that I'm doing fine);
A 5 X 8 multimedia sketch journal, with envelope glued to the back inside cover for ephemera from the trip;
A few loose sheets of watercolor scraps to use as a palette for the watercolor cp's;
In the black organizer, a set of 40 Caran d'Ache Supracolor wc cps (I'm trying these out since they wet nicely and also layer dry nicely too!);
Some dry cloths for blending;
Michelin map of Provence, France;
Small bundle of brushes for blending;
Extra Prismas in my favorite colors;
Battery eraser;
Extra batteries for my last Panasonic battery sharpener;
Scotch purple tape for lifting color and watercolor tape for taping down drawing paper;
Small kit with stumps, eraser, mounting putty and 2 Caran d'Ache Neocolor water soluble crayons; Garmin;
Bug wipes and Wetwipes and more Power bars.
Oh and a nifty little hat behind the green kit that stuffs into itself and can clip onto my pack.
If your wondering I have an assortment of papers and a small drawing board in my large check in bag. I'll add sunscreen from my ziplock bag of liquids when we get there.
And for my personal items (see left hand upper corner) I'll carry my hip slung mini purse loaded with a watercolor cp mini set in the small pencil tin with water brush and larger travel brush for washes, mini journal book, sunglasses, passport, Intrn'l Driver's License, tissues and a few personal items.
In my Italian large bag (on the right) will fit my small mini purse, Paris travel book, hand sharpener so I don't wake sleeping passengers, ziplock bag for pencil shavings, vitamins, business cards ( you never want to miss a chance for a connection) purse size toothbrushes for a fresh mouth during the long 9 hour flight, mini hair clip and 4 X 6 multimedia journal for on plane journaling.
There you have it, no kitchen sink but enough to keep me busy, drawing, and manageable. I haven't shown you a few personal items in the big bag but then again a girl has to keep a few things to herself.
Until I sign on in France to tell you about our trips beginning, have a colorful day!
Gloria
x
Carry On Luggage to France has to be an exact measurement (which I won't boar you with here) but suffice it to say, my laptop/camera backpack meets that and bags also can weigh no more than 26 lbs. Fully loaded it is 18.8lbs. so far, but I will add my ziplock bag of liquids (via TSA requirements) and maybe an additional treat for the trip. The laptop part holds my notebook easily and the padding protects my Prismacolors. And since they can't be purchased in Europe I need them safe.
The camera is missing as I'm using it for the photo, but you'll see my hot pink camera bag with sd cards, extra battery with charger and a bigger lens next to it. This all fits in the camera location of the bottom of the bag along with some power bars, Garmin (loaded with Europe Maps) and it's cords, card reader, and French power converter.
My Prismacolor CP pencils are in a 120 count leather organizer, and working clockwise around the table top is:
A few scrap sheets of UART in very small sizes;
Several 5 X 7 ampersand pastelboards and (2) 6 X 12 ones;
My little notebook (for blogging to you all and sending much needed responses to home that I'm doing fine);
A 5 X 8 multimedia sketch journal, with envelope glued to the back inside cover for ephemera from the trip;
A few loose sheets of watercolor scraps to use as a palette for the watercolor cp's;
In the black organizer, a set of 40 Caran d'Ache Supracolor wc cps (I'm trying these out since they wet nicely and also layer dry nicely too!);
Some dry cloths for blending;
Michelin map of Provence, France;
Small bundle of brushes for blending;
Extra Prismas in my favorite colors;
Battery eraser;
Extra batteries for my last Panasonic battery sharpener;
Scotch purple tape for lifting color and watercolor tape for taping down drawing paper;
Small kit with stumps, eraser, mounting putty and 2 Caran d'Ache Neocolor water soluble crayons; Garmin;
Bug wipes and Wetwipes and more Power bars.
Oh and a nifty little hat behind the green kit that stuffs into itself and can clip onto my pack.
If your wondering I have an assortment of papers and a small drawing board in my large check in bag. I'll add sunscreen from my ziplock bag of liquids when we get there.
And for my personal items (see left hand upper corner) I'll carry my hip slung mini purse loaded with a watercolor cp mini set in the small pencil tin with water brush and larger travel brush for washes, mini journal book, sunglasses, passport, Intrn'l Driver's License, tissues and a few personal items.
In my Italian large bag (on the right) will fit my small mini purse, Paris travel book, hand sharpener so I don't wake sleeping passengers, ziplock bag for pencil shavings, vitamins, business cards ( you never want to miss a chance for a connection) purse size toothbrushes for a fresh mouth during the long 9 hour flight, mini hair clip and 4 X 6 multimedia journal for on plane journaling.
There you have it, no kitchen sink but enough to keep me busy, drawing, and manageable. I haven't shown you a few personal items in the big bag but then again a girl has to keep a few things to herself.
Until I sign on in France to tell you about our trips beginning, have a colorful day!
Gloria
x
Labels:
Colored Pencil Art,
Colored Pencil Journaling,
Colored Pencil painting,
Colored Pencil Paintings,
Colored Pencil Sketching,
France,
France - Plein Aire Trip 2012,
Gloria J Callahan Art,
Plein Air,
Provence Art,
Travel Journaling,
traveling with CP's
Monday, July 25, 2011
The Artist's Journal Workshop by Cathy Johnson- Great Book Review
I have to recommend a book I just received and hadn't been able to put down until I finished it. The Artists Journal Workshop - creating your life in words and pictures by Cathy Johnson. It is a real motivator for me an avid sketch book/journal collector. (Albeit a collector of many empty journals.) OK I'm not that lazy as many of you may think, it's a long and sorted traumatic story dating back to my childhood when my brother found and read my diary! Since then I always liked the ideas of journaling thoughts, sketches, and such but I was always afraid someone would read it and not understand my rantings. Writing has always afforded me a way to work thru feelings, list to do's or want to do's (I'm a crazed list maker, just ask my family) and of course being an artist there is the need to sketch. Whether to work out a new painting layout, practice my skills, doodle, document a trip or just plan recap my day.
With this book Cathy shows you how she and 27 other insightful artists do just that. No I'm not a paid North Light Books employee, but I wouldn't mind if they sent me free books to review. It is just a wonderfully done book, showing you how to get over the blank WHITE page, tips and techniques to get you to make this a habit, suggests materials to use, how to put together an efficient and small journal kit for travel and a more complete one for at home. No this is not an Art Journal, you know the unique pieces of art in and of themselves made from old books or all collage based. Although I think an artist's personal journal shows that art is their daily life, and thus a work of art for them.
This was just the book to get me moving again and start to fill some of the journals I have collected. Next on the to do list is to organize a sketch crawl. More on that at a later date.
I have been working on a colored pencil wave image, not large and more for practice than anything for a larger piece. Now back to the colored pencils, oh maybe I should get dinner started..........
What art have you created today?
With this book Cathy shows you how she and 27 other insightful artists do just that. No I'm not a paid North Light Books employee, but I wouldn't mind if they sent me free books to review. It is just a wonderfully done book, showing you how to get over the blank WHITE page, tips and techniques to get you to make this a habit, suggests materials to use, how to put together an efficient and small journal kit for travel and a more complete one for at home. No this is not an Art Journal, you know the unique pieces of art in and of themselves made from old books or all collage based. Although I think an artist's personal journal shows that art is their daily life, and thus a work of art for them.
This was just the book to get me moving again and start to fill some of the journals I have collected. Next on the to do list is to organize a sketch crawl. More on that at a later date.
I have been working on a colored pencil wave image, not large and more for practice than anything for a larger piece. Now back to the colored pencils, oh maybe I should get dinner started..........
What art have you created today?
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