Tiny New Life
I am working to get Bend, Oregon on the map!
Laying eggs on my new butterfly weed starts |
Taking a break just long enough for me to get a good photo! |
Amazingly beautiful eggs. They look like little space pods. |
These amazing creatures travel up from Mexico flying several thousands of miles each year! Their host plant is milk weed. Unfortunately the milkweed has been disappearing. The problem is so bad that the Monarch is being considered for the endangered list.
My butterfly weed in bloom. Gorgeous! Asclepias Speciosa – Showy Milkweed |
Closeup of an egg – just laid! |
What can you do to help? Plant butterfly weed in your garden!
Bend, Oregon does have a small population of Monarch flying through on their way north.
I go into detail on how to use your pencil as a drawing tool to get the proportions correct.
Here is my list of DRAWING TIPS:
1. Start drawing and keep drawing – you will get better!
2. Observe instead of imagine, at least in the beginning. Buy a sketchbook that you can devote to drawing. No one has to ever see it but you.
3. Use your pencil as a measuring tool. You can use it to compare, multiply, divide and create angles.
4. The closer objects are to you, the lower they will be on your paper.
5. For a watercolor painting, draw just the contour or outline of the objects. Don’t put in a lot of detail. It just gets more lead on your paper that can muddy your painting.
6. Try to break up complicated objects into simple shapes: squares, circles, rectangles… A pear can be made by drawing a triangle for the top and a circle on the bottom.
7. Overlap shapes to create the illusion of distance.
Watercolor Toolbox Two is the perfect way to help you improve your beginning watercolor painting skills. You will learn how to do a contour drawing, make a color mixing chart, and how to get volume and depth in your paintings. I will share my easy drawing techniques that will make drawing fun and easy. This online class is the perfect complement to Watercolor Toolbox, now available as a DVD!
The day brought dappled sunlight and warmth.
It was fun to slow down and take it all in while savoring some of Oregon’s best wines. I even learned how to blend my own Pinot Noir and came home with a bottle with my name on it!