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| 6/17/26 Maple Leaf neighborhood |
A woman came out of the house next to where I was standing.
After admiring my sketch in progress, she looked up at the scene I was sketching.
“Don’t put in all those ugly wires!” she warned me sternly. “I counted – there are 26 wires at this intersection!”
You can see how far that suggestion went. 😉
Technical notes: I’m pretty pleased with my proactive thinking and planning (a rare occurrence) on this one. Almost always, I paint the sky after I’ve drawn all the trees and other elements against the sky, which requires fussy cutting around those elements with the paint. I do this because: 1. I usually don’t remember to paint the sky first. 2. When I do (rarely) remember, I have to wait for the sky to dry completely before I can draw over it, which annoys me.
This time, I had drawn all the trees first as usual. Then I used a dark purple non-soluble Derwent Drawing pencil to draw the fence and street shadows. It occurred to me that I could draw the utility poles and all those wires first – before the sky. Then I painted right over the non-soluble lines. No smearing and no waiting for the sky to dry! That sequence was an ideal use of mixed media for strategic purposes.

It is funny how we embrace the wires as just part of the scene. Every once in a while I forget to put in the poles and the wires and it really looks like something is missing.
ReplyDeleteAround here, poles and wires are such a part of the landscape that I can't imagine what it would look like without them! A fantasy land! LOL!
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