![]() |
| My beloved Carl Angel-5 Royal sharpener is shown for scale (sadly, I'll have to leave that at home). |
Regular readers of this blog are familiar with my occasional
references to Gilligan’s Island. When trying to pare down my burgeoning sketch kit, I like to imagine what I would take for a “three-hour tour” that stretches
into three TV seasons. That means the supplies can’t just be compact; they must
be versatile enough to last for an indefinite period on a desert island. The requirement
I have never given myself, though, is physical restrictions for such a kit. I
figured if I could carry it myself without a wheeled cart, the Skipper could
hardly object, right?
The recent Artemis II moon mission has given me a new model for a compact sketch kit: the Personal Preference Kit. Apparently the Artemis II astronauts were allowed to take only personal items that would fit into an 8-by-5-by-2-inch rectangular box. I first heard about the PPK from Ana at the Well-Appointed Desk. She had to make some hard choices to pack her PPK, and that got me thinking about what I’d put into mine.
I’m not very skilled at visualizing volumes or spaces (remember that part of the high school aptitude test that determined we should all find careers in nursing? I didn’t do so well), so I had to build myself an actual box of the required dimensions. The closest size I could find was still a bit larger than I could have, so I had to cut it down.
![]() |
| Most of my daily-carry fits easily! See below for the spread. |
I was fairly confident that my usual daily-carry would fit, and it does! I left out my water spritzer (since that obviously wouldn’t work in space) and brush pens (which seemed doubtful). Also staying home is the Gelly Roll, which hardly works even with gravity. I kept the waterbrush and Pitt Artist Pen, though sometime before liftoff, I’ll have to do research on whether they would work in zero gravity. Actually, I’m pretty sure the waterbrush wouldn’t work, so I’d have to rethink all those water-soluble materials I’m taking. (Maybe a water-saturated sponge would work? I could probably tuck one into a corner.)
Not shown is a small spool of string that I’d need to tether each implement to my wrist as I used it. I learned this necessity from Nina Khaschina last summer when she gave a presentation at Sketcher Fest about how she sketches underwater. Her implements are tethered so they won’t float away if she inadvertently lets go. Sketching underwater must be as close to sketching in space as anyone here on Earth can get!
As with my Earth travels, I hardly have to make adjustments to my regular daily-carry to sketch in space! Yay! And we already know it’s been done before, and with colored pencils, no less!




































