Thursday, June 7, 2012

oil study for Wanderlust

As a pastel artist, I'm not used to mixing color so this summer's exploration into oil paint has been fun and challenging. I made these oil color charts 6 years ago and recently rediscovered them during my studio cleanup.  I am using them for many color decisions - mixing colors I wouldn't ordinarily use to create subtly varied hues.

After lots of green in Oil Study #4, I was ready to try a different color palette. Once again, the scene is the off-leash dog park but this time in late summer. Love those grasses! This is the 10 x 8 inch oil color study for a larger painting tentatively titled "Wanderlust."

I painted the same scene in pastel, much larger, 25 x 25 inches, earlier this year. See "Heartbreak Morning" below.
 Oil Study # 5 is sold

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Oil study 4

Another 10 x 8 inch oil color study. I finished this one before I found my Richard Schmid color charts which would have been really helpful with all the greens I had to mix.

This is another scene from Golden Gardens park in Seattle. I returned there several weeks ago and took new reference photos which are very different from the winter photos I had been working from. Trees have leaves, grass is tall and everything is GREEN. Below are a couple paintings from the winter photos.

 Oil Study #4 is sold

Monday, May 28, 2012

my Schmid color charts

This post is especially for my friend Kay who is falling in love with oil. Six years ago I purchased Richard Schmid's book, Alla Prima. Pages 132 and 133 show color charts. He describes making the charts as 'an astonishing experience' and I agree. I loved making them and am glad I found them again recently during my big studio cleanup. Now will be a good time to reread the book and put what I learned then into practice on this summer's little oil color studies.

Sunday, May 27, 2012



The real purpose of this blog post is to celebrate the clean counter-top in the background. That is where my pastel painting alleyway used to be (shown the the small photo below). When I begin working in pastel again, I'll have big changes and improvements to a new working area.

I'm painting in oil for the summer with my oil painting station set up at the end of my big worktable. My good, old Soltek easel works well for table top work. I love my Soltek except for the problem that sand can get into the telescoping legs. My little Paint Saver covers are in use and working well.

Wishing everyone a happy Memorial Day.


Monday, May 21, 2012

oil color study number three

Rainy days so no need to water the garden; more time for painting and rearranging the studio. I think I'm done with this oil color study of the subtly hued grasses of Oregon in August (it was hot!).

Looks like a good candidate for a larger work in pastel next winter in the studio. This little study is 8 x 10 and will go to the Daily Paintworks Auction when it is dry.

 Oil Study #3 is sold

Sunday, May 20, 2012

 I found a jar of rosy hued gesso in my studio; primed an 8 x 10 panel and began a little oil using a limited palette.
At about 90% complete, I photographed the work, opened the image in PhotoShop and adjusted areas using the clone stamp tool and printed the image. Now, I'll go back to the easel and make the adjustments per my notes as well as the little visual reference.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

empty shelves

For the past two days, I've been cleaning my studio - throwing old stuff out and rearranging what is left. It made me sort of crazy to use my daily painting time to clean, but now my oil painting corner actually has empty shelves (for the moment) and I had the chance to paint again today so now I feel more "normal."

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Oil Color Study #2

My husband took the reference photo for Color Study in Oil #2. Completed this morning, it is 10 x 7-7/8 inches, oil on panel. This one makes me want to get my pastels out right now and start on a larger painting of this scene but I am committed to working in oil for a few months and to even paint plein air! I'll post this painting on my Daily Paintworks Gallery and it will go to the auction, unframed, probably Saturday starting at $30.

 Oil Study #2 is sold

Saturday, May 5, 2012

I usually paint in pastel with an oil-wash underpainting but I have put my pastels away and am having a great time (and much anguish) painting in oil for the summer months.

I recently purchased Paint Savers on the recommendation of Carol Marine in her April 28 blog post. I inserted a piece of white matboard under my glass palette. While I was marking the matboard for the Paint Saver placement, I set them aside, on top of my glossy reference photo. Mistake! I did manage to separate them from the photo paper but it wasn't easy. Do not set Paint Savers on glossy photo paper! I look forward to loving this product. Will keep you posted.

And, GREAT NEWS! I received Best of Show at the Northwest Pastel Society 26th International Open Exhibition at The American Art Company, Tacoma, WA for "Heartbreak Morning." Juror was Elizabeth Mowry.  I am especially honored because the entire show is very strong; see it if you can!





Friday, May 4, 2012

A great reception tonight at Scott Milo Gallery for the Women Painters of Washington show and I was happy to see that it really is FIRST PLACE!

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

award news...yay!

I just received word that my pastel painting, "Sanctuary," received the First Place Award at the Women Painters of Washington Annual Members' Show at Scott Milo Gallery, Anacortes, WA. The judge was Jennifer Bowman. Yay!

Whoops! Just found out WPW have combined Best of Show/First Place so this is actually Second Place but I am happy! Later...a communication problem. It really is First Place!

Friday, April 27, 2012

color study in oil

I've been painting exclusively in pastel since January so it was fun to work in oil again. This is a color study for a larger work. By the time I get ready to do the larger work from this study, I'll probably be back to pastel. This painting is 7.87 x 10 inches on panel. It will be for sale in the auction at Daily Paintworks tomorrow with a starting price of $30.

 Oil Study #1 is sold

Monday, April 23, 2012

Friday, April 20, 2012

life on the edge

The working title for this piece was "Rivulet" but it ended up titled "Life on the Edge" for the stream bank and for my sanity in painting it. A difficult subject with so many elements that could be attention focal points. I had to pick and choose what to play up, what to subdue.

This painting may be my last for a while because a huge pile of garden soil was delivered today and I have a new greenhouse, big empty pots for the deck and a vegetable and flower garden waiting.

The color study for this painting is on the Daily Paintworks Auction until April 24th. I always appreciate hearing from followers and subscribers to this blog and thanks to all who comment and "like" my work on my Facebook page.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

90% there

This painting has been full of challenges. I want the focus to be on the stream or rivulet but the bank is actually more interesting than the water. I want to include the blue wildflowers but they can't be so detailed that they compete or distract from the bank and the water. Back and forth, back and forth.

To complicate matters, the little study is a vertical scene (5.75 x 4.5 inches) and the finished painting is square because I washed off an old painting to use the surface and frame again. I'm getting there but there are still many decisions to make. You can see the color study using a cool magnifier here.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

I'm working on the focal point of this painting first, tentatively titled "Rivulet," with the small color study as my guide. As paintings are completed, they are framed and entered into exhibitions or go to one of the galleries that represent me. The small color studies are much more affordable and are available matted to 10 x 8, ready to frame, on Daily Paintworks.

Monday, April 16, 2012

 For the first time, I was sad to wash off an old painting because the majority of this painting "worked". It is my eleventh rework of 2012; my quest to rid  the studio of mediocre work. Sitting atop the old painting is the little color study for the new painting.
 This is the ghost of the original painting on Wallis paper, after the hose-off. The black lines are the charcoal sketch for the new painting.
 The oil palette for the new underpainting.
The oil-wash underpainting is complete and is drying overnight, awaiting pastel.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

It was interesting painting an October scene and the last golden sunlight of a year when in reality, it is April and we are just coming into spring with a totally different kind of light. This is "Last Light," 12.5 x 12.5 inches, pastel on paper.

Friday, April 13, 2012

I'm putting the finishing touches on "Last Light." This image shows a slice of the color study on the left (5.75" high) and the same area of the finished painting on the right (12.5" high). As mentioned in my previous post, the finished painting has much more detail and though I'm happy with it, the little color study has areas I prefer when comparing the two. For example, I love the blue green at the base of the fir tree in the study and for some reason I chose to play that down in the finished painting. I also like the bluer purple by the flowers in the study but I notice the finished painting is warmer there but cooler above the yellow tree. Oh, oh, I'm rambing...

I'll finish the larger painting this weekend and will post it then.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

to detail or not?

I love doing a little color study for each new painting because it helps me narrow down the color palette to create the mood of the painting-story I'm telling. These little studies are fresh and loose.

Because the larger painting is just that...larger...it also ends up more detailed, probably because there is just more physical space for me to finesse the scene. I love the detail but it results in a lack of the spontaneity of the little study and I'll have to decide if that is OK with me. See the two examples above: the top one is the little color study and the bottom slice is the finished painting. You can see (and buy) the study on Daily Paintworks until Saturday, April 14.


Saturday, April 7, 2012

This is the color study for my next painting, "Last Light."  The scene is Leavenworth, Washington in October. My "painting-story" is about the last light of the day and the last sunlight of the season as it spills across a woodland meadow. Through the color study, I've narrowed my palette down to these pastel colors for the finished painting. The little study is on Daily Paintworks Auction starting at $20.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

in the nick of time

I finished "Stony Path" today, just in the nick of time because the little color study I've been using as reference sold on the Daily Paintworks Auction today. I may paint this path again in summer when there is sun but I love the muted colors and wet, shiny foliage of this scene in the darker days of fall and winter.

Monday, April 2, 2012

working on it


Time for a value check so I photographed my painting-in-progress and turned the image into a grayscale (shown here half and half).  I continue to consult my little color study as I paint (shown at bottom right).

We spent the weekend preparing for our little greenhouse delivery and weeding the vegetable and flower gardens. We're working in mud because of all the rain we've had. Shortly my thoughts will turn to gardening and though I will paint for a couple hours each morning, posting to this blog and paintings for sale on Daily Paintworks may slow down.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

the exciting part

Ooooh, the exciting part is painting an oil wash foundation over the old, mediocre painting. This image shows the oil wash foundation for a new painting, "Stony Path." In the lower left corner is the little color study for sale at auction on DPW. Auction will end Tuesday, April 3.

Creating a small (5.75 x 4.5 inches) color study has really helped me to stay focused regarding color choices. When I am "lost" I keep pulling out additional colors. Once I counted over 50 pastels to clean and put back after finishing a painting. Maybe some people work this way and love it but it feels to me as if I am out of control as I grab another color thinking that one might "do the trick."  I would rather have 50 pastels out during the small color study process. When I am working on the larger painting, with most color decisions made previously, I can concentrate on finesse.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

boiled eggs


Let me start today's post by saying I successfully boiled eggs today with the help of two timers! Thanks to all of you who emailed or posted to let me know I'm not alone re my distraction problem.

Another painting to rework; I started with a graphite sketch on Wallis that had a watercolor splash already on it (same piece as in my March 16th post) for the little color study for a larger work. Watch for this 5.75 x 4.5 study on the Daily Paintworks Auction for $20. The larger painting will be 14.25 x 11.5 inches and is tentatively titled "Stony Path."

Monday, March 26, 2012

zoned

I am done! Painting a scene with lots of green while in the season of disappointment (known elsewhere as spring) seemed to be a challenge for me. I kept the little color study beside me to stay on track. Good thing I finished this painting last night because the color study will ship to the Daily Paintworks winning bidder today!

Warning! Do not put a dozen eggs on the stove to boil thinking you can just duck into the studio for a minute to evaluate what needs to be resolved in a painting. I  thought I would just touch up an area or two and was totally in my painting zone until the dry eggs started exploding in the kitchen. Saddest part is that they were beautiful brown organic eggs. Boo hoo.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

#21 in progress

For my project, "mediocre paintings reworked into excellence" (20 to go after this one), once the little color study is complete I start on the larger work.

1. I unframed the painting and hosed off the mediocre work (on Wallis paper so it can take water). I pat it dry with a cloth towel.
2. I squeezed out white and raw umber oil paint onto my glass palette. With a 1" wide brush and odorless mineral spirits, I applied an oil wash foundation (see photo below).
 3. I let it dry overnight. This morning, with the little color study beside me, I applied white, warm dk gray and dk blue NuPastels. Any other color you see is the "ghost" from the mediocre work I washed off.

Monday, March 19, 2012

rain dance

Here is the larger work, 19 x 14.5 inches, titled "Rain Dance" because when I took the reference photo a few years ago, there was a light pattern of rain on the water. Maybe you can see my indication of it in the darkest water area on the left side if you click on the image to enlarge it. The hardest part was the bright, pale lichen. I took clues from the little study I did. It needed to be light and airy as in the little study but more detailed for this larger work. I think I did it.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

goodbye itsy bitsy


Tomorrow I will mail this study for a larger work to the winning bidder!

reducing glass

I'm working on the 4.5 x 5.75 inch color/composition study for my next painting. Even though it is small, it helps to do occasional checks with a reducing glass to tighten it up and see it as a thumbnail. Watch for this little study on Daily Paintworks.

Friday, March 16, 2012

color study for #21

Those of you who follow this blog know that I am reworking 23 mediocre paintings. I just finished #22 and will post it soon. Now, on to #21.  I'll start with a 4.5 x 6 inch color study. In my flat file, I found a sheet of Wallis paper with a splashy watercolor foundation. The Wallis is mounted onto 4-ply archival mat. I penciled in the boundaries for the little study and indicated the composition. Starting a new painting is always an exciting, hopeful time!

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

the last 20%

Several times during the painting of a new scene, I put a mat around my work to cut out all the marks that will not show when it is framed. I'm about 80% done with this one. The shape of the foreground water needs correcting, the lichens are only indicated....basically the right side needs resolution. The little color study I did prior to starting this larger work is a big help in deciding not only color but also keeps me on track from getting too immersed in detail.

Monday, March 12, 2012

#23 step1 pastel

I've received emails appreciating the step x steps I post on this journal so I'll try to do that with this painting. I'm working from the top down and using the little color study as my example -  applying pastel on top of the oil-wash foundation shown in my last post. Each time I introduce a new color into the painting, I apply it in several places. Example: The light blue of the distant hills is repeated in the background trees and in the brightest area of the water. I feel this adds continuity in a painting. It is very distracting to me to view art that has a spot of color in one place without being able to find that color in a least one other area.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

#23 foundation

After completing the itsy-bitsy color study (see my previous post) for this painting, I unframed Mediocre Painting #23, brushed the pastel off and applied an oil-wash foundation to the Wallis paper. The size on the finished painting will be 19 x 14.5 even though I have extra paper around the edges and could make it larger. One of the goals of these 23 reworks is to pop the new work right back into the existing mat and frame. If I took advantage of the larger surface, I'd have to purchase a new frame and add the empty frame and mat to my inventory of frames which is more than adequate already.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

itsy bitsy


This is an itsy-bitsy study to work out the colors for a larger painting. It is 5.75 x 4.125 inches and is on Daily Paintworks Auction starting at $20.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

23 to go

I don't know how I got into this branch thing. Well, yes I do, it started with my painting "Winter" a few weeks ago. Suddenly, as never before, I wanted to paint trees without leaves. This is another view of the  Golden Gardens Park pond in Seattle. And, it is painted over an old painting.

From my art database, I separated out the paintings that I considered mediocre. That gave me a new database with 24 images to be reworked. Now I have 23 to go.

Monday, March 5, 2012

blackberry vines

Four years ago I named a painting Edge of Winter. After a couple group shows it went to one of my galleries and stayed there until I picked it up a couple weeks ago. You know what happened next...I washed it off and repainted this winter scene from a photo taken on a dog-walk with Annie and my two grandsons. This summer, a good crop of blackberries will be where last year's vines are now. This painting is titled Edge of Winter II.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

step 1

To begin applying pastel over the oil-wash foundation, I selected two "white" pastels - one cool and one warm. The cool white was applied for the sky everywhere except the upper left quarter where the light source (sun) was shining down upon this woodland scene. For that area, I applied the warm white. I also used the warm white for glow on the edge of the tree at right and lightest foliage areas. Click on the image to enlarge. These are Terry Ludwig whites - love them!

On another subject, blog subscriber Karen asked if I could explain the Kodak Color Separation Guide and Gray Scale sometimes included in my work-in-progress shots. When I photograph my work, I always include this for color reference. If the color bar doesn't look right, I know the color of the art is off. Here's the blurb from Kodak: "... Separation Guides are used as the set up guide to calibrate several digital color print systems. In addition, helps photographers compare the color of the subject with known printing colors. Also helps Graphic Arts camera operators identify separation negatives and positives for color reproduction processes. "

Thursday, March 1, 2012

foundation

This is the oil-wash foundation on Wallis sanded paper for my next Pacific Northwest woodland scene.