Monday, April 7, 2025

Trunk Appreciation Day at Sunset Hill

 

4/4/25 Sunset Hill neighborhood

Peg & Awl Petra palette in action

For Day 2 of USk Seattle’s pink marathon, we headed west to Sunset Hill and my favorite street of cherries. Since I had already sketched them earlier in the week, I used this second opportunity to try – ta-da! – gouache again. (I even brought along my Peg & Awl Petra palette, still full of the gouache and watercolors I had filled it with last spring.) I was disappointed when I tried it last year, but this time I limited the paint to the blossom areas only (with a bit of Caran d'Ache Neocolor II for texture), and stayed with my tried-and-true Pentel Pocket Brush Pen for the trunks and shadows. I like this approach better.

That one done, I declared it Trunk Appreciation Day and spent the rest of the outing making small vignettes of some of the most amazing trunks. Many trees on this block are nearly a century old, and I always feel the need to honor and revere their beauty, whether or not they are in blossom.

As I sketched, I chatted with a resident who told me a bit of the trees history: About a hundred years ago, one of the blocks residents went around to her neighbors and encouraged all of them to plant cherries in front of their homes. They did, and thats why we have these trees to enjoy now, a century later. Thank you, forward-thinking home owners!


It’s a good thing we went when we did, as the leaves were starting to sprout, and I could tell that the blossoms were past their prime. Although I had started out in my down parka and gloves, by the time we left at noon, I was ready to take the top down for the drive home!

Sunny sketching!

Sunday, April 6, 2025

Blossom-Sketching Marathon on Capitol Hill

 

4/3/25 Capitol Hill neighborhood

Time’s a wastin’! With so many pink blossoms and so little time, USk Seattle offered a marathon of cherry tree-sketching opportunities on Thursday. First, in the morning, we met on a quiet residential block near Holy Names Academy. Petal peepers and sketchers alike could walk slowly down the middle of the street, where trees arched over from both sides. Although not as mature, these trees are of the pink (not near-white) variety similar to my favorites on Sunset Hill (above and below).

Near Holy Names Academy

Immediately following the throwdown outside Holy Names, some of us continued on to nearby Volunteer Park, where more sketchers met for the afternoon session. A few of us opted to walk just outside the park boundary to Lake View Cemetery (below), where we had heard about a large grove of cherry trees. None of us had sketched these gorgeous, mature trees before! Actually, I think I did when I sketched there years ago, but it was fall then, so I didn’t know they were cherries. You can bet I put this location on my perennial petal-peeping list!

4/3/25 Lake View Cemetery

It was a long, beautiful day of pink!

Just before the throwdown, I made a quick sketch of one of the two
dromedaries outside the Seattle Asian Art Museum.

4/3/25 A few more bits from my fun day on Capitol Hill!

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Bring on the Pink

 

4/1/25 Green Lake neighborhood

I’m in full-on blossom-sketching mode these days, and for good reason: While dodging rain, I’m also trying not to miss the best of the pink. I’m not sure this tree near Green Lake was a cherry, but I’m not discriminating. It was already starting to shed petals – none too soon to sketch it.

Friday, April 4, 2025

Sunset Hill Before it Rains

3/31/25 Sunset Hill neighborhood

Pink pompoms!

I had heard that
my favorite cherry trees on Sunset Hill were nearing peak, but several days of rain were in the forecast. Right after I got home from a play date with Roy and Mary Jean, it was still dry, so I dashed out to the west side.

Indeed, the blossoms were at 99 percent, I’d say – just a few visible buds within the huge, pompom clusters of pink blossoms! In addition to those huge, old, gnarly trunks, what I love about this block of cherries is that the blossoms are truly pink, not white, as many cherry blossoms are, including the ones at the UW Quad. I adore walking slowly through this fairyland, admiring each tree one at a time, then choosing one to sketch.

This is the tree whose trunk I sketched in my March 22 post when it was still in tight buds.




Thursday, April 3, 2025

Exquisite, Confused Corpses

 

3/31/25 Exquisite corpses by Mary Jean, Roy and Tina


Exquisite corpses live again! Mary Jean, Roy and I got together to work on more exquisite corpses, which we had so much fun with last time. This time we chose an ocean theme. Somehow, though, we got the rotation mixed up, so we each ended up making both the head and the “feet” on the same piece! It was still a ton of fun, and we’re going to continue with more.

Afterwards, we had lunch at nearby Geraldine’s Counter, where our friend Allan Carandang has a show of intriguing paintings.

Some of Allan Carandang's paintings at Geraldine's Counter

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

A Joyous Celebration of Pink

 

3/30/25 UW Quad



Although USk Seattle meets at the University of Washington Quad every spring to sketch the glorious cherry trees, this year felt very different to me. Even the heavy crowds on a dry Sunday morning didn’t bother me as much as they sometimes do. With so much disgusting “leadership” going on in our country, and tragedy, horror and devastation elsewhere in the world, it was truly uplifting to be part of this joyous celebration of nature. Everyone seemed so happy! It was impossible to walk among those trees, even bumping into each other, without feeling a bond with humanity: All of us brought together by tiny pink blossoms.

Thank you, brilliant cherry trees, for giving us such joy.




At upper left, I tried to show some cosplay characters being photographed, but my sketch doesn't show them well. See photo below for what they actually looked like.

Technical notes: The past several years, I have used the Quad cherry trees outing to try various media, hoping to find the one that might help me successfully convey the billowing clouds of very pale pink (nearly white, actually) blossoms. As if the subject matter weren’t challenging enough, I wanted to add to the torture with uncertain media. Watercolor, gouache, dry colored pencils, acrylic markers, water-soluble crayons and blocks – you name it, I’ve tried it, usually with frustration and disappointment.

This year I decided to end the masochism and went back to basics: My favorite Pentel Pocket Brush Pen with a Derwent Inktense pencil (and a gray Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Big Brush Pen for contextual elements that I want to fade into the background). Familiar, reliable, satisfying in their simplicity.

These are the characters I saw being photographed. In addition, several groups of choreographed teenagers were being video'd, probably for their TikTok channels.


So much exuberance everywhere!

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Wide Awake!

 

3/29/25 Maple Leaf neighborhood

Two days after I sketched the sleepy cherry tree that was still in buds, it woke up! Seemingly overnight, cherry blossoms are popping open all over town. Sadly, the weather forecast for the next few days is not looking good – so many blossoms, so few dry days ahead!

3/29/25 Wide awake!
3/27/25 Still sleepy


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