

I always love doing shapes. I swear I’m better at it than at drawing! I’ve only made it to this exercise in Foundations once before, so I’m doing pretty good this year!


I always love doing shapes. I swear I’m better at it than at drawing! I’ve only made it to this exercise in Foundations once before, so I’m doing pretty good this year!




Blind contour continuous lines, and point to point continuous line sketches of bushes or trees against a building. This is a great exercise for learning to see and follow edges.



In learning how to draw edges, this exercise is to draw three kitchen objects with a blind contour line, and a point to point drawing. Blind contour, continuous line drawings are always so much fun! They are always wildly distorted, but are so great for building that hand eye coordination!
I got a little experimental this year, decided to do the exercise with white lines on a dark painted background. That grey is Daniel Smith Joseph Z’s Warm Grey, and the white lines are done with Neocolor II.




The outdoor assignment for the materials lesson is to go out to a cafe and sketch with a couple different materials something on the table. The outdoor assignments always trip me up, because I don’t go out very often. Out of the four times I’ve done this exercise, I did go to a restaurant twice, and twice I sketched an item on my table at home. The objective is to see how sketching with different tools feels different, and it certainly does that!
I note that once again, I’m rather behind in class. January is always so rough! I remain determined to complete all exercises this time, however! Only a couple more exercises where I actually did them in previous years, though. Perhaps February is even more rough than January? Not this year!






I do love to test out my materials. This exercise, for lesson one of Foundations, is always so much fun. But it is also crazy time consuming! However, I find that no matter what, it always cheers me greatly whenever I play with colors and test materials. It really is a great way to learn about how the various pens, pencils, and paints perform. Seeing all these side by side gives me joy!



The third intro exercise is to practice thumbnails that explore composing a scene with different stories. This year I did the exercise using my own location, as opposed to the images provided in class.



The second intro exercise is to do a similarly colored set of items, and sketch them three ways–with edges, in shapes, and with volumes. Apparently sketching my glass and water bottle is my go to for this exercise!




The first intro exercise is to sketch three everyday objects. I see that I have been a big fan of sketching my sketchbook and pen over the years!
This lesson always reminds me how much I enjoy looking back on sketches of objects. They seem so boring and mundane in the moment, but the sketch later always reveals so much about the moment in time. Like the pen, and how it’s a different one for each year!






I have started Sketching Now Foundations six times. I have never finished. I am determined to finish all the exercises this year. The sixth time is the charm, right?
Naturally, I’m immensely curious about what did I do previously? So let’s find out, shall we?
The first thing for every class is to post a “current sketch” and I always try to pick something I’ve done very close to that date, and that is also what I considered my best work at the time.
2019 – Elephant jade. 2020 – Wine bottle. 2021 – Fountain pen. 2022 – Christmas gnomes. 2023 – Tea cup. 2025 – Pumpkins and leaves.











July 2023. I believe this was a group run through, not a live run. It was after the Teacups class, which really energized me and I felt I had really leveled up in my skills. I hit some health issues in August, which is why I fell off with my exercises.
However, despite being done from a photo, that shapes painting of the ruins at Casa Grande is one of my all-time favorite sketches!