8/30/24 Maple Leaf neighborhood (The Dutch Colonial at upper right was especially challenging to draw! The owners have uprgraded with solar panels.) |
9/5/24 What's up with the skinny windows on the upper floor? |
Urban sketching: It's not a hobby; it's a lifestyle.
8/30/24 Maple Leaf neighborhood (The Dutch Colonial at upper right was especially challenging to draw! The owners have uprgraded with solar panels.) |
9/5/24 What's up with the skinny windows on the upper floor? |
8/3/24 Westfälischer Totleger hen |
On our walk the other day, we took a street that we hadn’t been
on in a long time. We followed the clucking and buck-buck-bucking until we spotted
some fine-looking hens pecking and strutting around behind a fence. The owner was
working in her yard. Raising chickens, she said, became her pandemic project, and
her brood has since grown. When I asked how many she has, she said with a wink,
“Officially, eight.” Apparently that’s the maximum for urban chickens.
Although she has several breeds, the one I sketched is a Westfälischer Totleger, a German breed known for its prolific eggs. During some times of year, her hens lay one per day, producing way more eggs than her family can eat. She said if I was interested in having some, I could leave a carton by her gate with my phone number on it, and she would text when she had some to offer.
I thanked her, but I had already gotten what I wanted: This sketch, and the others I plan to make whenever I walk that way again.
A prolific layer |
Late on Sunday afternoon, Natalie and I met at Green Lake to sketch under the shade trees near the kids’ wading pool. As often as I sketch at the lake, I rarely hang out at this part of the park, so it felt fresh to me. Mostly sunny and warm, the day brought out lots of families enjoying Labor Day weekend before school begins. (And Monday turned out to be cool and gloomy, so Sunday really felt like the last blast of summer.) The most entertaining conversation I eavesdropped on was a party of young men sharing bachelor’s party stories about the friend whom they had recently married off.
Afterwards, we had dinner and libations at Retreat, which has a nice outdoor seating area with a lake view. Lingering over our sketches and good conversation, we saw the sun dip behind the lake (or actually behind the trees along the lake path). What a lovely, bittersweet farewell to summer!
9/1/24 Retreat |
8/31/24 Japanese maples, Capitol Hill neighborhood |
The remaining trees documented in Taha Ebrahimi’s
book, Street Trees of Seattle, are out of reach
unless I get in my car to drive to their neighborhoods. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed
my walking tours of all the street trees in Maple Leaf and Green Lake and many in
Ravenna, Wedgwood and Bryant. The trees gave my fitness walking a purpose (and motivation). It was an ideal summer walk-sketch project!
My sketch documentation of the trees continues, though now with a different strategy. Whenever I have an errand or appointment anyway, I try to plan a tree or two to fit into the trip. Taha’s hand-drawn maps in the book make that task easy. If I see more than one tree in the same general area, I use Google maps to see how far apart they are on foot, and often I can park the car once and turn two or three trees into a mini walking tour. As the weather gets colder, I might even start sketching some from my car (although the best angles are usually from the sidewalk).
8/31/24 silver maples, Capitol Hill neighborhood |
A couple of blocks away, I found the widest-diameter silver maple street tree in the city (at right). Based on the foliage, I think the two trees on either side of it are also silver maples (but a bit smaller).
The other trees sketched here are from the Bryant, Wedgwood and Crown Hill neighborhoods. Most of these trees do not look special; in fact, sometimes I wonder why they are documented in the book, since they don’t look particularly large (though many have other notable aspects as described in the book). Regardless of their size or how they look, drawing the trees always makes me appreciate them more. Trees are literally as individual as humans, and I’m honored to observe and appreciate each one’s uniqueness.
8/8/24 monkey puzzle tree (possibly the first I've ever sketched!), Bryant neighborhood |
8/12/24 Holm and English oaks, Wedgwood neighborhood |
8/17/24 grand fir and valley oak, Wedgwood neighborhood |
8/28/24 dogwood and bristlecone pine, Crown Hill neighborhood |
8/28/24 Ben & Jerry's, Green Lake neighborhood |
With much of August cooler and wetter than usual (record-breaking
cold, in fact, on some days to counterbalance record-breaking heat in July), we
were all feeling shortchanged by summer. Although the rain was a relief, waking
up to 48 degrees last week and feeling the furnace come on for several mornings
made me feel cheated. Thankfully, we got a little summer back toward the end of
the week and over Labor Day weekend which, ironically, is usually seen as the
unofficial end of the season.
After a busy morning of talking to contractors and making another Goodwill run, I took a break with a walk to Green Lake and a stop at Ben & Jerry’s as my dejunking reward. Truth be told, I’m not a huge B & J fan (too many ingredients stuffed into average ice cream), but I’m not one to sniff at hand-dipped ice cream within walking distance.
These last-of-summer days are always bittersweet and never more so this year. I’m keeping my fingers crossed, though, that September may make up for it.
8/31/24 Capitol Hill neighborhood |
Despite choosing the location myself, I had a bit of
difficulty settling down to a sketch or three on Capitol Hill with USk Seattle.
After much wandering and dithering, I looked down the hill from an intersection
and spotted downtown. Then I moved just a few feet, and the Space Needle rose
into view!
Wanting one more sketch to fill the vertical space on the page, I looked up at an apartment building and saw intriguing shadows cast by the railing around a small lanai.
I’m not sure the page I made says “Capitol Hill,” but some outings just end up that way – a bit storyless. Regardless, the weather was fabulous, and after our mostly cold August, it was wonderful to get summer back again for Labor Day weekend. While most of the city was frantically trying to cram in the last of the summer fun, it was relaxing to spend the morning with USk doing what I enjoy most.
My group selfie was just as aimless as my sketches! Apologies to those I cut off! |
Caran d'Ache Supracolor Special Edition set of 18 watercolor pencils |
After the mildly disappointing release of the latest Caran d’Ache Bicolors, I was more than excited to find this set, which was
announced at around the same time by my favorite colored pencil manufacturer: Caran d’Ache Supracolor Special Edition with Exclusive Colours.
The Supracolor full standard edition has long had 120 colors. You may recall that in 2018, the Swiss company commemorated Supracolor’s 30th anniversary with a limited-edition set of 30 colors not included in the standard line. I kept wondering if Cd’A might eventually incorporate the 30 into the standard edition or at least offer them open stock, but that never happened. That doesn’t surprise me, as Cd’A enjoys offering “special” items for a short time only, increasing their perceived value and raising the pulse rate of collectors like me. It’s all good; I’m always prepared to grab as needed. And since it’s been six years, I’m thrilled to see a palette refresh, if a small one.
Back of sleeve |
The sleeve removed reveals the iconic Caran d'Ache red tin. |
When I opened the tin, every pencil was lying logo-side up, just like this! Be still, my heart-eyes! |
Inside the sleeve is information about the podcast interview with Eric Vitus. The other side of the sleeve interior includes a blank swatching area. |
From top: older Supracolor from before the current branding change; 30th anniversary Limited Edition; latest Special Edition |
The back side reveals . . . no French! |
Special Edition Supracolor swatches made in Hahnemuhle Akademie Aquarell sketchbook |
Despite the claim that the 18 colors are entirely new to the collection, at least seven are similar enough, to my eye, to existing Supracolors to make me look askance. Four of the seven lookalikes (indicated below with LE) are from the 30th anniversary Limited Edition set. Perhaps this is Caran d’Ache’s way of keeping some “limited” colors in circulation, sort of?
Special Edition colors (right) that look close to existing Supracolors (left) |
Three colors in particular caught my eye – Ice Blue (185), Anthraquinoid Pink (571) and Dark Phthalocyanine Green (719) – because they are all part of the Museum Aquarelle line. The muted peachy pink is one I’ve used occasionally for spring blossoms, and the dark green is ideal for both the shady side of most deciduous trees and the sunny side of Pacific Northwest conifers. Judging by the number of 719 stubs I have, it is probably my single-most-used Museum Aquarelle color.
Three Special Edition Supracolors (S) and their Museum Aquarelle (M) counterparts. Lightfast ratings given in parentheses (the higher the number, the greater the lightfastness). |
Since 18 is a nice quantity for a colored pencil starter set, I wondered how well the 2024 Special Edition would hold up as a standalone set? Just for kicks, I mixed a primary triad and a secondary triad to see how they would do. Without a magenta, a CYM triad wasn’t possible, and it’s tough to get a decent mixed violet without something closer to cyan or ultramarine. But since the set includes that beautiful Quinacridone Purple, mixing isn’t necessary. I love the secondary triad that’s possible here (of course, I love almost all secondary triads). If that Buff Titanium or French Grey 10% could be swapped out for another blue, this set would be quite usable without any additional colors.
Secondary triad (left) and primary triad made from the set |
I bought my set from Cult Pens because I couldn’t wait for a US release, but not too long after I ordered, I found it at Blick – for quite a bit more. If you have enough in your Blick shopping cart to get free shipping, it will be approximately a wash with shipping from the UK. As with the recent bicolors, I am very pleased to see the set so easily available at Blick, Jerry’s Artarama and probably other US vendors. That hasn’t always been the case with Caran d’Ache’s “special” or “limited” editions.