To join me on a virtual sketching trip, download a travel sketch-journal here.
I add tutorials to them so you can learn the techniques and details you see in the sketchbooks.

My former workshop students asked me to upload my workshop workbooks to make them available to everyone. So you can also download a workbook and give yourself a workshop! Enjoy!


Showing posts with label macaw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label macaw. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Sketching on the beach

April 21 – Earthday!

11:35am, 88 degrees and humid – but comfortable in the breeze off the ocean and, believe it or not, no mosquitoes!

Dan and I are down on the beach near the pothole tidepools. Actually, Dan is in one, slowly broiling to a lovely lobster red but can’t bring himself to come out. I’m sitting directly under three scarlet macaws who are chowing down on beach almonds, grooming and squawking. The beach almond tree which (I’m sketching under it) has large green leaves, some turning red with age. Somehow, these huge red birds blend in with the foliage, looking just like the red leaves from a distance! A dark brown hawk with orange beak and legs, barred tail and a white rump has made a couple of sorties at them, but they’re not impressed. [Later: it was a Common Black Hawk.]

I’ve been sketching the gorgeous leaf clusters of the beach almond. I usually sketch with pencil, but because of the humidity and the fact that I prefer to write in the journal with ball-point pen, I’m also sketching with the pen. It makes me really observe carefully because I can’t erase mistakes. Good practice!

I forgot to wear my swimsuit (or suitable undies) for swimming, so between sketching session drawing the beach almond leaves, a little shell I found, and a macaw-harvested almond, I discreetly skinny-dipped between passers-by. But even though there are many people at the lodge, the beach is still uncrowded and it is easy to feel a fine solitude. It was lovely in the rock pools (some are 5’ across, others are even larger) with the thundering surf dumping occasional tubs of warm bubblebath from seaward heated pools over the edge and onto us. Heaven!

On the walk down to the tidepools I had some small adventures – a pizote digging in the sand let me come within 15’ before it slipped into a tangle of palm fronds. A reddish-brown squirrel holding an almond husk the size of its head allowed me to gawk from barely 4’ away as it gnawed at its prize. And then the macaws!

(Later: I’ve been adding color to my beach almond sketches with my watercolor pencils and I’m very pleased with the results. On the drawing, the large clump was penciled, then the color was spread around and intensified by painting with water (I’m using a brush that holds water in the barrel – you squeeze it and it moistens the tip, then you paint. It really beats carrying a water bottle and a brush).

Since I’m sketching and coloring these partially to set an example for my students-to-be, I’ve left the small leaf clump on the right un-moistened to show what it looks like before wetting. On the main group of leaves, after the first “painting” of water, I added more color with the pencils, then wet that, too.

I didn’t wet the final penciling of the almond husk because I wanted to leave some texture, which the pencils provided perfectly. [Click on the drawing for a really close close-up!]

Although I am teaching the watercolor pencil sessions to students, I haven’t done a lot of watercolor pencil painting myself. This is highly advantageous in one way – I have enough general painting and color experience to be able to keep well ahead of beginning-to-intermediate students, but it also gives me a fresh perspective of what they are learning and problems they might encounter. Anyway, I am glad to be playing with this – it sure gives the sketchbook more presence than just the uncolored drawings. By the time class starts tomorrow, I’ll have some sketches to share. This has been a fine celebration of Earth Day!

Sunday, May 6, 2007

We Arrive in Costa Rica


April 19

7:02pm on the international flight from Atlanta to San José, Costa Rica.

We are on our way to the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica! After months of preparation and anticipation, I am flying with Daniel to the rainforest wildlife lodge, El Remanso, to teach a nature sketching workshop. I’m carrying the most important parts of the workshop – the workbooks, pencils and erasers, watercolor pencils and paintbrushes – in my carry-on bag so that if my luggage gets lost I can still give the workshop.

We’re going a couple of days early, before the class starts, to get settled in – I need to collect some jungle-y things for the students to draw, and check out possibilities for landscape sketching, then sort out location, tables and chairs for the best light and comfort of the students. Daniel is going to just enjoy himself – there’s the beach, a maze of hiking trails, waterfalls to explore (some visitors rappel down them!), plus swimming in the pool and just hanging in the hammock. Sounds good to me!

April 19 ~ 4:50pm

What a change from the chilly spring temperatures of home! After an overnight stay in San José we made a short flight to the Osa Peninsula over pineapple plantations, coffee farms, a huge mangrove delta just north of Corcovado National Park, and miles and miles of rainforest. After about an hour we landed at the little gravel airstrip at Puerto Jimenez

The air was soft and moist, about eighty degrees, and we rode in the “taxi” – a 4-seat pickup truck with an open back sporting seats on each side (the taxi in the photo is prepared for rain). We opted for the open-air seats for the nearly 1-hour trip through lush lowland pastures with humped white cattle, then through wild forest with hanging vines, overarching canopy, and flowering trees. Those are smooth-billed anis in the photo.

After a warm welcome to the lodge, we have settled into our cabina, a lovely open room which overlooks the pool. There are other cabinas secluded in the trees for those who want more privacy, and all of them are perfectly matched to the serenity of this quiet (well, except for the hoarse cries of the brilliant red macaws, bursts of birdsong from all around, and the occasional rolling roar of howler monkeys) paradise.

And now to the beach! I’ll prepare for the workshop later!



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