Everyday Sketching 2025 Week 14

This week I finished Volume 19 of my sketchbook, and started Volume 20. I wrote a bit on these pages in the past few entries.

A lot of color explorations in these pages this week. I did not have much time to sketch, what with the leaking pipes in the kitchen (now repaired!) I find that color charts are great for soothing a stressed out brain!

Sketching ruins, and foreshortening, and an exploration into creating abstracts, which I’ve already written about, was very fun.

I am going to be traveling with family later in April, so I wanted to test the two desert paint palettes I have to see if I should bring them with me. One is the Schmincke Supergranulating Desert set. The other is Daniel Smith’s Earth Desert to Mountain. Then I decided to test the Schmincke Supergranulating Forest set, as I’ll also be among the pine trees. I haven’t decided what I’ll bring, but I certainly am beginning to feel the vibes here!

Since I had out the Supergranulating box, I noticed I hadn’t filled in the swatch card they provided with it, so naturally I had to begin swatching the rest of the colors! So I did another Haze page, and then Shire.

I had some paint left over from the shire tests, so I filled a page with that. I also wanted to put the Alex Boon recommended set of 24 as a reference in this Delta book. I could also test the different paper, which does seem to be surprisingly different for the pencils over the Alpha/Gamma paper.

I may add text to these pages, or line sketches. Though I may not have the time, in which case, I’ll just opt to move on and leave the pages as is, capturing the busy-ness in slightly unfinished pages.

Tuzigoot

For the final livestream of class we were asked to submit a scene we thought was very challenging to sketch and she would select a couple to discuss for our final review. I was lucky enough that she chose my photo of Tuzigoot National Monument.

Tuzigoot National Monument

I took notes, and then attempted to sketch this view following her advice, and the techniques learned in class.

Not bad for my first attempts. I actually learned a lot by doing three versions in a row. One thing I certainly learned is I need more practice drawing these kinds of ruins, if I want them to make any sort of sense to understand what is going on. All that stone on stone on stone, yet to create the depth and shading to visually represent the many rooms, and layers. Plenty to practice!