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4/27/25 University Village |
University Village is one of USk Seattle’s tried-and-true
for transitional seasons because the retail center has some sheltered areas to
keep us dry. Sketchers can make themselves comfy at all the public umbrella’d
tables without having to patronize venues. Except for stores and restaurants,
however, U Village is all outdoors, so a cold morning is still a cold morning –
made even colder because the chairs are made of metal. Yikes! Although I
typically stand to sketch anyway, I sat just for a moment to keep my lettering straight,
and yowza, was that chair chilly! Despite that common complaint, everyone’s
enthusiasm was high last Sunday.
Trying to study color temperature again, I was in the mood for a primary triad to capture the bright colors of red umbrellas and new, green leaves on the Japanese maple trees (plus a U Village icon, Leo Sewell’s “junk” penguin sculpture).
Colder than ever from standing longer than I expected (color temperature studies always take me longer than I think they will), I took a brisk walk around the Village. Finding a spot in the direct sun (if the sun were to appear from behind clouds), I looked around and found bronze sculptures of a calf and a turtle. To add to the menagerie, I caught a living, breathing pup waiting for his human to finish snacking.
Technical note: In the first sketch, I was so focused on the challenge of color temperature combined with using a primary triad (a decision I made before realizing that the scene had so much green) that I really let the composition get away from me. The penguin was so much fun that I started drawing it first, but later I felt that it weakened the composition. Below is how I would have cropped it if I had been thinking more about composition and not about color. As usual, my pea brain can’t handle more than one concept at a time!
Interesting note about composition. I have to say the Penguin looked like an afterthought, not really part of the scene, so it is surprising to hear you sketched it first.
ReplyDeleteI'm left handed, so I almost always start on the right side! I just didn't frame the composition well in my mind yet.
DeleteHmmm. Since watching Ian’s composition YouTubes I am thinking about composition. I see strong vertical lines in the penguin and the lamppost, and shared color between the two. They definitely draw the eye, but that makes them the story in the picture. I like it, but the simplified version looks more balanced. Anne HwH
ReplyDeleteI think your comments align with my original thinking... but I found my own eye darting back and forth without focus when I was done. Composition is always a challenge!
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