Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Fuzzy Portraits

 

4/5/25 Ernest Theodore

A recent gathering of friends included Ernest Theodore (whom I have sketched a few times before), one of the gentlest giants I know. He probably weighs more than I do, yet he has never tried to knock me over as other large dogs have. Upon arrival at the brewery’s patio, he just laid down and chilled for the rest of the evening, making this little gesture portrait easy.

Speaking of pet portraits, I think I never got around to sharing the one I made last December of Adorable (below), the lovely cat of a friend. I love drawing animals, from life or from photos.

12/26/24 Adorable (reference photo by Carol Ivan)

A gentle nose kiss from Ernest
(photobomb by Ernest's dad, Ali!)


Monday, April 14, 2025

Opportunities for Observation

 

3/19/25 Brian

Like my fellow light rail commuters, Greg’s cohorts at Aegis Living make great human studies and opportunities for observation. When I first started making these sketches, I hesitated to share them because I wondered if they would be considered invasive. But the more I draw them, the more I think of these small portraits as a way to honor individuals in the last stage of their lives. I try to capture them as unique people, not caricatures or generic figures.

3/22/25 Linda

3/22/25 Val

3/28/25

4/7/25 The spouse guy waiting for lunch.
During group activities, I’m usually sitting right next to the spouse guy, so it’s difficult to sketch him. Every now and then I take him outside the memory care area to the general diningroom so that we can have lunch together. This sketch doesn’t capture a good likeness, but it’s a rare sketch of him that I’ve made from life.

Meanwhile, at a nearby table, one of the kitchen staff came to talk to Russ about the utensils he seemed to be collecting in his pockets. With much gentleness and compassion, the staff member asked Russ to relinquish the tableware – and discovered an entire drinking glass in his pocket, too. I was amused to see that entertaining co-residents are on the assisted living side, too.

Technical note: After my Pentel Pocket Brush Pen ran dry during a recent cherry tree sketch, I decided to grab a prefilled Kuretake Brush Writer instead of taking the time to refill the Pentel. I really like the Kuretake’s brush tip, especially for life drawing gestures (I used it on the portrait of Ernest Theodore). Unfortunately, it has the bad habit of blorping out ink unexpectedly and making a mess, which happened as I pulled it out to sketch Greg. (I initially learned that lesson the hard way nearly 13 years ago!) That’s why I decided to use a purple Derwent Inktense pencil instead. I don’t know why, but I rarely consider using pencil for a life portrait . . . it seems too time-consuming for a gesture, I suppose. But sometimes I like the more sensitive quality of a pencil line compared to the bold, unforgiving marks of a brush pen (which I also appreciate for different reasons).

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Reservoir Tavern and Other Walk-Sketches

4/2/25 Reservoir Tavern, Maple Leaf neighborhood

Although sporadic rainy days continue, it’s getting easier to take daily fitness walks as the temperature becomes more hospitable. On one of the sunnier days, I took a bit longer than I usually do to sketch a linden tree and the Reservoir Tavern (known colloquially by neighbors as “the Rez”), right next door to Macrina Bakery. Although I’ve never been inside this long-time Maple Leaf institution, I’ve been meaning to sketch it for a long time. Maybe on a warmer day this summer, I'll come back to make a more leisurely portrait.


3/19/25 Green Lake neighborhood

My barber is in the Wedgwood neighborhood, so as the weather improves, I’m looking forward to taking more fitness walks in that area after getting haircuts. Just like sketching, I am constantly looking for opportunities to combine fitness walking with anything else I already have to do. I guess that makes me a lifestyle fitness walker, just like I’m a lifestyle urban sketcher. 

4/6/25 Pink petals falling fast in the Wedgwood neighborhood

Thursday, April 10, 2025

Bills and Other Studies

3/12/25 Link light rail northbound

 “Victims” on public transportation make ideal studies. On my light rail rides a few weeks ago, I took advantage of the many fellow commuters who were wearing baseball caps, which I find very challenging to draw – specifically, the bills. The are both rounded and curved, and they are almost always seen from an angle that shows a shadowed sliver of the inside of the bill on one side.

3/12/25 light rail southbound

A couple of weeks later, I got more practice on Roy’s cap, and I caught that interior shadow sliver, but I made the bill a bit too long.

3/31/25

Of course, public transportation is always a great place for small character studies accompanied by my observations (or speculations).

3/31/25

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Daffies and Cherries on Dibble

 

4/4/25 Crown Hill neighborhood

Although the cherry trees on Dibble Avenue Northwest are on my regular petal-peeping route, it’s not a destination that I would consider for an Urban Sketchers outing. A narrow street full of parked cars, trash cans, basketball hoops, utility poles and other street stuff that I enjoy sketching, it’s probably not the kind of view most sketchers like. I did, however, encourage everyone who attended the Sunset Hill outing to at least peep the petals, if not sketch them, since Dibble in Crown Hill is only a mile or so east of Sunset Hill.

Dibble Ave. NW
With the top down, I cruised slowly down the block, looking straight up at the blossoms arching over the street from both sides. Then I turned around and came back to sketch from a spot I had sketched a few years ago that has become one of my favorite cherry blossom sketches: The pink blossoms as a backdrop to the daffodil-fringed traffic circle.

With bittersweetness, I must concede that our all-too-brief petal-peeping and -sketching season is coming to a close. But if this is its finale, I’m good with that. As a resident of the Sunset Hill street and I had just concurred, if we could have cherry blossoms all year round, they would no longer be precious and special.

Technical note: After all the trees I’d been sketching, my Pentel Pocket Brush Pen ran dry when I started this sketch, so I had to bring in a gray Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Pen for an assist. I like the way the gray ink made the cars and utility pole fade out more than compared to drawing and shading with the same Pentel ink. I’m going to try to remember that in the future.

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!

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