Third Time’s the Charm: Travel Sketching is Back

A watercolor pencil sketch of a back yard garden bed, showing a row of tall weeds and trees against a grey wall, with orange-red flowering plants at the left, golden weeds in the centre, and two decomposing barrel planters rendered as dark rounded shapes on the rocky ground. A shepherd's hook curves up between the plantings.

Liz Steel’s Sketching Now Travel Sketching live run, begins later this month and I am jumping back in for my third attempt. I did finish the first run. The second run, I started but let’s just say life had other plans. I have tagged the whole archive of my posts if you want to see the full saga. The official start date is May 13th, but I’m getting a head start on the Introduction lessons.

The “Before” Sketch

The Introduction includes a “current sketch” exercise. Your sketching where you are right now, before the course begins. Since I’ve done this before, I decided to sketch my back yard again. This is the same view I did as my first before sketch. Not only has the yard changed, but so has my sketching.

Naturally, I also had to document the fact that after seven months of delays in the landscaping (It’s been a whole drama!) the yard has finally been weeded. Those prickly lettuce plants had grown over six feet tall. Six feet! They were taller than me. I have photographic evidence. I think they were starting to develop permanent occupation plans. So the timing of this sketch gets to commemorate both that drama and its blissful conclusion on the day I did these. A dramatic before and after set of sketches for the yard.

The before sketch, with weeds, is in the Albrecht Dürer watercolor pencils, The after sketch is GoldFaber Aqua Markers. You can see the difference in the mediums, since I used the same color palette for both sketches. The marker version is noticeably brighter and more saturated; it’s the same scene, same composition, same palette, but a different medium. I really want to see how different mediums behave, and comparing the same color palette is a great way to do that.

A watercolor pencil sketch of a back yard garden bed, showing a row of tall weeds and trees against a grey wall, with orange-red flowering plants at the left, golden weeds in the centre, and two decomposing barrel planters rendered as dark rounded shapes on the rocky ground. A shepherd's hook curves up between the plantings.
Backyard, full of weeds in in Albrecht Dürer watercolor pencils.
A watercolor marker sketch of the back yard, with a large orange-topped shrub at the left rendered in bright saturated colour, a grey wall wash behind, and two decomposing barrel planters in deep burgundy and purple tones at centre and right. I bold and saturated color.
Back yard, freshly weeded, in GoldFaber Aqua Markers.

The yard features some very photogenic old barrel planters that are in the process of dramatically decomposing. They show up in both sketches as dark, slightly melancholy blobs surrounded by splaying lines. Less moody than the photographs of them!

full sketchbook spread dated Thursday 30 April 2026, showing two watercolour sketches of the same back yard garden bed side by side — the left in softer watercolour pencil tones, the right in brighter, more saturated marker colours. Handwritten weather notes show 92°F and 67°F. A note in the upper right reads that the yard has finally been weeded after seven months, and that the before sketch was done in Albrecht Dürer watercolour pencils and the after in GoldFaber Aqua Markers. Decorative illustrated borders from a Coloring Book of Shadows frame both sides of the spread with Beltane-themed botanical imagery.
Back yard sketches, before and after weeding. 30 April 2026.

The Kit

Part of the Introduction is also assembling materials for the travel sketching kit and doing a color/material chart. I wrote about my obsession with testing multiple media in this limited palette.

A two-page spread showing a travel sketching kit chart. The left page tests various pens and pencils with line and swatch samples, labelled with tool names including Isograph, TWSBI Urban Gray, Tombow Fudenosuke Hard, Copic BS, Pentel Brush Sepia, and Derwent Inktense pencils in Charcoal, Neutral, and Sepia Ink. The right page shows rows of colour swatches for multiple media including Albrecht Dürer watercolour pencils, Derwent Inktense, GoldFaber Aqua Dual Markers, Albrecht Dürer Pitt WC Markers, Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Brush, and Neocolor II, with a bottom row of watercolour paint swatches. A teal banner at the bottom reads "Travel Sketching Kit."
Travel Sketching Kit, April/May 2026.

Here’s what I’ll be working with for this run:

For line work, I have an Isograph 005 and 0.30, a TWSBI Urban Gray (F nib), a Copic BS, a Pentel Brush Sepia, and a Tombow WB-HB Fudenosuke Hard.

The course calls for graphite, but I’m skipping it since I find graphite too smudgy. I do have the one 3H pencil. For pencil sketches, however, I’m substituting three Derwent Inktense pencils: Charcoal (2100), Neutral (2120), and Sepia Ink (2010). I also have the class palette in Albrecht Dürer watercolor pencils, Derwent Inktense pencils, plus GoldFaber Aqua Dual Markers, Albrecht Dürer Pitt WC Markers, Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Brush pens, and Neocolor II water-soluble crayons.

For watercolor, my palette is: Hansa Yellow Light, Hansa Yellow Medium, Monte Amiata Natural Sienna, Quinacridone Gold, Transparent Pyrrol Orange, Quinacridone Rose, Potter’s Pink, Sap Green, Cobalt Turquoise Light, Cobalt Blue, French Ultramarine, Transparent Red Oxide, Van Dyke Brown, and Shadow Violet. There are also two Caput Mortuum swatches at the side, because I’m currently infatuated with that color.

The Sketchbook

I’ll be starting in my current 6×9 inch Stillman & Birn Alpha, even though I only have a few pages left in it. Shortly I’ll be moving to a 7.5×7.5 inch softcover Alpha. Both are Stillman & Birn, both are the Alpha series, just slightly different proportions. It’ll be interesting to see how the square format feels for travel sketching.

The weeds are gone, the kit is ready, and the barrel planters have been immortalized in watercolor. What more could I need? I’m ready!

1 Comment

  1. melsi's avatar melsi says:

    As always an awesome class. May the third time be the charm. Seriously I love seeing these early assignments with all the COLORS!!!

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