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| 1/18/26 Green Lake |
Sunday was another day of weather we all crave in January: sunny
all day, every peak in two mountain ranges fully in view, no wind, no clouds,
and temps all the way up in the low 50s. Except for all the down jackets and
beanies in view, Green Lake looked like the height of summer – couples,
families and dogs all happily soaking in their much-needed vitamin D.
I walked partway around the lake to one of my favorite stands
of trees (top of post). Although it was only early afternoon, the low sun gave
them long, lean shadows. I hadn’t intended on making on-location comics, but I couldn’t
resist recording snippets of conversation I overheard on the path.
As I mentioned in my post a few days ago about Inktense Blocks, I don’t usually take these fragile sticks out with me on location,
but since they fit nicely in my tiny Sendak, I took them to Green Lake. I
know I’ve said it before, but these Blocks are what I always want Caran d’Ache Neocolor II wax pastels to be in terms of expedient coverage and intensity
of color. Now that I have a well-protected way to carry them, I am going to
give the Blocks more use in the field.
Instead of continuing to walk around the lake in the same
direction, I backtracked to the other side of the pier (at right). Those trees at far
right of the huge fir are the same ones I sketched above.
For this one, I used reliable, familiar Caran d’Ache Museum Aquarelles – but the palette was chosen by values, just like I’ve been
choosing Neocolor II crayons and Inktense Blocks.
Process analysis: I daresay my wacky palettes are not
feeling as wacky anymore! It’s getting easier and feeling natural to use unnatural
hues because I know they will serve me well as long as I get the values right.
I’m also seeing that I don’t have much use for the lightest value range because
I tend to fall back on paper white as the lightest value. The pink sky at Maple Leaf Park was fun, but the messy application detracted; I prefer paper
white to that.
Most important, I feel liberated using whatever colors I
want (as determined by values) and not being tied to designated triads,
complements or temperature. The key for me is to keep the palette limited – no more
than four or five hues at a time – so that I’m not tempted to toss in colors
randomly. I think a narrow, cohesive palette always serves my streamlined style
best.
That’s not a new insight; it’s more like confirmation of
something I’ve been doing all along, but with more traditional guidelines like
triads. Although I didn’t learn any of this directly from Germanier, I must give a nod to his odd selection of pencils and demo that sparked this
line of thinking. That’s worth every penny I paid for the set, even if I never
use it again.
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| Derwent Inktense Blocks tuck nicely into the Sendak slots. Friction and their size keep them from getting pushed down too deeply to retrieve easily, which can be a nuisance with short tools. |