Sketchbook ~ crow

.watercolour (from photo reference)

I bought a hollow handled water brush (which I read about here on James Gurney’s blog – where there’s a goldmine of all sorts of art related information) and haven’t had too much opportunity to try it out yet. This is one of the first sketches with it. It’ll be pretty handy for painting on location when my watercolour kit has to be compact and portable.

Over the past year or so I’ve started amassing a variety of materials for on location painting – stuff that’s light weight, can be brought onto an airplane as carry on, takes up very little space and is functional. I’m new to working on location. I’m pretty (very) clumsy at it still. I also haven’t quite found the ultimate materials, and have been a little disappointed with what I’ve found in the local artist supply store as far as portable watercolour boxes go. I’m not very fond of plastic for a variety of reasons, and find many of the travel sized watercolour boxes to be flimsy and they often lack the right kind of configuration of paint pans to mixing area. I’ve realised that I’m probably going to have to put something together myself from other items and individual pans that I can attach in place in a re-purposed box, or upgrade one of those cheap children’s watercolour boxes that come with those awful chalky round watercolours and useless brushes. And then I came across this post on Drawing the Motmot (a blog full of beautiful bird paintings, and lovely on location drawings and studies. I have infinite admiration for anyone who can paint birds as they bounce around on a branch.) This kit seems to be the ultimate balance between lilliputian and functional as far as travel sized watercolour boxes go. And I love the diy-ness about it. I knew there was a reason why I’d been keeping all those random mint tins around. I figure something like this would be a perfect addition to a travel kit – something I could take out with me when my prime purpose is not to paint but when I’d still like the option if the scene or mood strikes me.

I love the internet.

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A Different Kind of Painting


I’ve been on a bit of a break from my home studio, having relocated for one week to my grandmother’s island studio where I have a corner of my own to work on larger paintings. I’ve been recharging my creative batteries by chipping away at a sizable oil painting that I’m hoping will be the beginning of a series. It’s nice to just paint and let the painting be what it wants to be rather than beating it into submission to fit the parameters of a project.

At the beginning of the week, a friend came over and we took advantage of the sizable studio space to do some light painting photography one evening. However, the long exposures didn’t play nice with my camera (or card?), prompting a repeated error 99 so everything was shot on her Canon Digital Rebel XT. After a bit of fussy experimentation with too many lights, we figured out that less is definitely more. My photos lean a little heavy on the ‘spitting’ side as I kept getting the trajectory of the light spit wrong and had to keep redoing them (it’s hard to see your target in the dark). As it is, the spit still seems to be emanating from the chin area.

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New Site Design for Resolve Design

The newly realised website for the Vancouver motion design studio Resolve Design Inc. is now up and running. Resolve Design specialises in film and motion design for marketing, interpretive and exhibitry applications.

The website design was a collaboration between myself and principal, Darren Carcary. My personal portfolio site is next in line for development, based on the same structure as resolvedesign.ca, it should be launching within the month.

Resolve Design also launched a companion blog which will be home to, among other things, behind-the-scenes looks at productions.

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Sketchbook ~ Negative/Positive Experiment

.scratched positive film with overlaid scan

I really want to get going on some experimenting with other mediums. The problem with work is it doesn’t leave enough room for play. And without play, I find my artwork getting tighter and tighter. I need to get sloppy with some great big sheets of paper and whatever medium happens to be around. Unfortunately, my studio is a little too cramped at the moment to start throwing paint around, so I thought I’d try something a little smaller for now. I’ve always wanted to try etching but have been uninterested in having to deal with the acids involved in the process. I love the subtle blurred line of the medium and the fact that it’s drawing, which I really enjoy. The alternative is dry point, but not having any metal plates or a press lying around, I thought I’d put some of my ruined 120 negatives and slides to good use and scratch on them – scratchboard style. Here’s a quick experiment to see how it would work. I scanned the drawn-on slide with an underexposed frame on top. The drawn layer was then scanned directly on the flatbed and other I combined the two files together, a little off-register.

One the subject of drypoint, I saw a lovely book in Duthie Books the other day: The Raven, illustrated by Ryan Price. I think I’ll have to go back there and buy it. It’s a really beautifully designed and illustrated book, published by Kids Can Press.

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Spark Girl in the Georgia Straight

Spark Girl in the Georgia Straight

Spark GirlMy good friend Megan, creator of the Spark Girl products was interviewed for the fashion plate in the Georgia Straight. The article is here. I may be a bit biased, but I think her stuff is pretty cool. Her heart pendant is my favourite – I wear it quite often which is saying something since I really don’t go in much for jewelry – especially sparkly stuff. But it’s got enough of a macabre twist to appeal to me.

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Both a Dummy and a Bad Blogger

I started reading a book co-authored by a friend, Blogging for Dummies (2nd edition). And it makes me realise what a rotten blogger I am. I mean, I already knew I was… but now I have proof. I’m crap because I just don’t blog enough. Mostly it’s because I don’t have time and lately I’ve been working on stuff that really isn’t bloggable in detail yet. This particular thing is just occupying way too much time right now and not leaving much room for bloggable items. or laundry. or sketching. or that lovely pile of books that’s growing, unread on the bedside table. or the garden which is sloughing off winter at an alarming pace. I’m stuck on the project that just won’t die. And by die, I mean, be finished, completed, come to fruition. Not die as in, “we’re very sorry but we’ve decided to call the whole thing off, pity you spent 10 months of your life on it, you fool” (which does happen time to time in the industry that this particular project is associated with and wouldn’t surprise me). So let’s not get confused about that, project gods, I would like a nice satisfying end to this thing so I can move on to the stuff that I need and desperately want to be doing. I will happily sacrifice my bestest, strongest, softest and most supple 6B to you if it will help.

On the subject of blogging, this weekend is Northern Voice – the blogging unconference, or whatever. I was going to pass it by – “I’m not a real blogger, why would I got to a conference about something I don’t really do?” – except that I know some of the organisers and they’ve piqued my curiosity about the whole thing. As well, the pre-party is held in a tiki lounge – sorry Polynesian room at the Waldorf Hotel which is reason enough. I admit, I’ve never really got the whole tiki lounge thing. I’ve actually had dinner in one that has periodic thunder showers and I didn’t fully appreciate it at the time, apparently, because I’d forgotten about it until now. Or perhaps it was because the food was mediocre and overpriced – I don’t remember greasy spring rolls being a typical Polynesian fare. But I digress. I’m interested in seeing the artwork at the Waldorf- the murals and the velvet paintings. I’m kind of interested to see a velvet painting that may actually be art and will not remind me of 1970’s rec room decor or the basement of an spca thrift store. As for the conference itself, a few fellow CWILL BC authors are part of a panel about authors who blog. The conference will either make me blog more and better or, well… or nothing one way or the other.

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5 Random Things

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The other day, I was tagged by Fiona with the 5 Random Things About Me list. After rereading my list I realise it is weighted heavily toward the ‘weird injuries I’ve sustained’ subject which creates a more thematic sort of list rather than a purely random one. However, weird injuries or accidents are really the only interesting things about me – random or not – so they’re going to stay.

1. I fell out of a second story window when I was little and came away from it without a bump, bruise or scratch. Babies are bouncy, I guess. I am less bouncible and more bruisible these days.

2. I have been bitten by the following mammals: squirrel, rabbit, cat, seal, dog, pig, horse. The most damage, measured in blood spilled, was inflicted by the squirrel.

3. At age four I had to have stitches in my tongue following an ice skating accident. Keep your tongue in your mouth while skating and you’ll keep your tongue.

4. While visiting a Central American country, I wore a small scorpion on my back, inside my shirt, for the better part of a morning before I noticed it and it was removed without incident. After that, I was careful to check all my clothing before getting dressed.

5. These days I worry often about the state of the planet and my impact on it. Seeing newly designed disposable (plastic) consumer items advertised on TV is enough to simultaneously annoy me and throw me into a funk. And there is absolutely no reason for grocery stores to wrap bananas or coconuts in plastic packaging. phew! end of plastic rant.

note: the seal pictured above is not the culprit from item number 2. But it looks a bit like the culprit – big eyes, flippers, whiskers, cute… and this is a better photo than the one I have of the seal in question.

I know the whole idea is to tag 5 more people… but I’m just not very good at doing what I’m supposed to. Take this as an invitation to post your own list on your blog if you so wish. Why wait to be tagged?

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