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| 1/23/26 Maple Leaf Park (Museum Aquarelle pencils, Inktense Blocks) |
While much of the country is buried under snow with
frigid temps, we continue to enjoy miraculously beautiful weather. Cold, yes,
but clear skies that just won’t quit. I am soaking in as much as I can before
the more typical rain returns (which I see in the long-range forecast). On a
walk around Maple Leaf Park, I stopped briefly on one of those lovely
afternoons.
Process notes: One of few things I value about Facebook (which
I’m otherwise skeptical about) is the daily Memories section that shows me
everything I posted on that date in prior years. An interesting pattern I see
every winter is the experimenting I do from reference photos, usually related
to color. I went through a period of exploring the Zorn palette,
especially with portraits, and using an “underpainting” with various
media. I’ve explored primary and secondary triads year-round, and I’ve made concerted
efforts to study color temperature both formally (in Sarah Bixler’s classes)
and informally.
Practicing at home with reference photos is one thing, but
the true test of anything I study is whether I can apply it in the field. Some
things “stick,” while others don’t. Or maybe it’s more a matter of how well using
certain color principles fits with all the additional constraints of sketching
on location. It’s easy to study color and concepts in the comfort of home! On
the sidewalk with wind, rain, heat, cold, traffic, pedestrians or other distractions?
Not so much.
My current use of a limited palette guided by values seems
to be a good balance between a principle I understand (values) and something I
want to push myself to explore (not being matchy-matchy with hues).