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| 3/4/26 photo reference |
I’ve lately had less need for my doomscrolling prevention program. It helps that we’ve flipped the clocks forward, and the Big Dark
is over. Gloom and doom in the news is somehow easier to bear when there’s still
light left after dinner. In a few weeks, I’ll be able to take short golden hour
walks again – the best time to simply enjoy walking without a fitness goal or
destination.
After being inspired initially by Orla Stevens’ mixed media and other approaches (even imaginative), I seem to have settled into monochrome sketches using Derwent Drawing pencils. It’s the most relaxing and therefore the most direct in taking my mind off whatever unpleasantness it might be occupied with.
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| 3/18/26 photo reference |
The prompt for portraiture came from the sketchbook I used for these three sketches: a very old Moleskine that contains that weird, heavy, manila-folder-like paper. The first half of the book is filled mainly with portraits I made with ballpoint pen or marker – the ideal media for use on this smooth, strangely water-repellent paper. Since the surface feels similar to Stillman & Birn Zeta, I thought I’d give it a try with Derwent Drawing pencils – and I like it! Those soft pencils seem to glide effortlessly. (My mission to complete partially filled sketchbooks continues!)
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| 3/18/26 Earthsworld reference photo |



I appreciate your exploration with Urban sketching and showing us how you accomplish what you do, but I really appreciate your ideas on how to incorporate sketching into daily life, esp during times of stress.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the feedback, Cathy! Well, as it says at the top of my blog, "it's not a hobby; it's a lifestyle." ;-) Everything I do supports urban sketching in some way, and urban sketching (and drawing in general) supports everything I do.
DeleteYour Derwent pencils look like they work really well on that paper in the Moleskine book. It always amazes me how calming sketching can be for the stress in our lives. I was sitting in the hospital with a good friend today who is nearing the end of her long cancer journey. I was thinking about how I often sketched when Jerry was hospitalized and how it kept me sane.
ReplyDelete