Under the tree (autumn)

It seems that all the hostas in my garden turned bright yellow, probably due to a hit by the first frost earlier in the week. In the springtime I did this very same scene and you can see it here.

Under The Tree Autumn


My favourite tree

Perfect maple trees are difficult to find in my neighbourhood because many of them have had branches hacked off in a seemingly indiscriminate way by the power company. Some have gaping holes in the middle or huge limbs missing but this one must be far enough away from the wires to have been left intact. I’ve been wanting to paint this tree for a long time but couldn’t figure out how to fit it all on the page. I didn’t manage to get the full dome of the foliage but the part that I really wanted to paint was the contrast between the electric yellow of the autumn leaves against the dark of the trunk.

MyFavouriteTree


On the shelf

A few weeks ago someone asked me for a recommendation for a good watercolour book because she was finding her sketches “flat and overworked”. I thought I might share some suggestions in the form of a post instead of answering in the comments area, in case others are interested as well.

Before I recommend any books I have a few other suggestions.

1. Look at the paper in your sketchbook. Is it watercolour paper or all-purpose sketch paper? If it is the latter, then you will really have a hard time obtaining vibrant colour or a nice, even wash. And the colour may look really flat because the paint gets sucked into the paper. I use both a Moleskine watercolour sketchbook and small, cut sheets of 140 lb. watercolour paper for my work. Most 100% cotton rag watercolour paper has a sizing on it which makes the paper less absorbent. Remember, the paper in a sketch book is for SKETCHING and it is not meant to take a heavy wash. That is why many people also make their own sketchbooks with a good quality rag paper that can handle the paint. This is far too time-consuming for me!

2. Are you using tube paint or dry pans? If you are using dry pans, it takes a lot of water to dilute the paint. That means that your colours will be really washed out. If you use fresh tube paint then it takes much less water to get a dilute the paint and your colours will be much more saturated. That may also solve the overworking problem. Usually that happens when you can’t get your colours dark enough on the first try and you go over areas again and again.If you use fresh paint you can obtain those really gorgeous darks because you don’t have to water down the dry pigment in the pans. And even though tube paint may seem expensive, you just need little dabs of it to get great colour.

Books:
I learned most of what I know about watercolour by taking workshops with some of the greats whom I often name in my posts. Among them are Ed Whitney, Frank Webb, Milford Zornes, Barbara Nechis and Skip Laurence. I love watercolour and I have been collecting books for years but mostly I buy monographs because I like to read about the artist and look at the paintings, especially anything by Winslow Homer, Edward Hopper, John Singer Sargent or Andrew Wyeth. I also have lots of books on technique, often by painters I have taken workshops with like Ed Whitney or Frank Webb, or by painters whose work I love like Charles Reid. Other good ones on my shelf are by  Zsoltan Szabo, John Pike, Judi Betts and Rex Brandt, but if I had to recommend one book it would be “Making Color Sing” by Jeanne Dobie. She covers composition as well as colour and there are lots of practical exercises. But if you try them, make sure to use good quality paper and fresh paint because you’ll never be able to obtain results without the right tools.

 

OnTheShelf


Le Franco-Américain

Le Franco-Américain is situated on rue St. Denis, south of Ste. Catherine. I was curious to find out more about this beautiful facade  and how the building got its name but my research turned up nothing. Well almost nothing. Someone who photographed it and posted on Flickr said that it may have at one time housed a faculty of dentistry but I am still curious to know where the name came from.

LeFrancoAmericain


Autumn trees

Following a comment that someone made on one of my posts about the variety of subjects that I choose, I got to thinking about why I pick not only different subjects but also different materials. When you sketch every day it is possible to lose interest in what you are doing. To get bored, even. Some days my time is limited, I can’t get out for long or go far from home so I end up circling in the same area, looking for new things to paint. Changing the paper I work on gives me a challenge.

I have painted around St. Joachim Church in Pointe Claire countless times and I keep thinking that there is nothing new to see. But since I have been experimenting with this new Moleskine sketchbook, things that I would normally not tackle on another paper are suddenly interesting. Like these bare trees by the lake that would be too detailed to do by brush alone now become a possibility with this very smooth paper.

Autumn Tree

 


QWERTY

The Moleskine sketchbook seems to lend itself well to objects that have a certain patina to them — like the bag I painted yesterday or this old Royal that lives in my house. Of course the ivory paper helps too. It’s like painting in a sketchbook that has been hanging around for years and years in my basement (a bit like the typewriter!).

QWERTY


Old bag

This really is an old bag because I did my first watercolour of it many, many years ago. It was on a full sheet of watercolour paper (22″ x 30″) and this little sketch in my Moleskine is about 5″ x 8″. I’m still trying to work out how to apply paint on this paper but one thing is for certain — working in small areas is more successful than big washes. And this paper takes the darks really well. I’m still not giving up on it.

Old bag


Fences

There are hundreds of Canadian geese in the corn fields at Macdonald farm in Ste. Anne de Bellevue but the rain prevented me from standing out there to sketch them. Instead I painted the fence from my car.

Fences


The last apples

It’s feeling pretty frosty at my favorite Jean Talon Market apple stand. The sellers are huddled under their awning, the buyers are bundled in scarves and gloves, and even the apples are trying to warm themselves in the sun.

Selling Apples

 


Vieux Montréal

One of the things I love best about Urban Sketchers is that there is a network of people in many cities around the world who you can invite to sketch with you when you travel to their area. They become, in essence, ambassadors of their city. Today Marc Holmes and I were ambassadors for Montreal. Our visitors were Lee from Florida, who is here giving a sketching workshop at a conference for university and college graphic designers; Nicky who is attending the conference; and Marie-Odile, arriving from Paris after spending two weeks crossing the Atlantic by cargo ship. We sketched on St. Paul St. in the heart of Old Montreal. It was pretty cold to be outside but we toughed it out for a time until we realized that snowflakes were landing on our sketchbooks and then we headed for a café with an outdoor heater and warm drinks.

Vieux Montreal

photo