Impulse buy
Posted: December 18, 2016 Filed under: Uncategorized 61 CommentsI went to the store to get an ice scraper and ended up with a Christmas cactus in my shopping cart. The plant was so tropical, so exuberant in its blooms and so very unlike the reality of the blustery day outside that I had to bring it home. I’m not that good with houseplants so I thought it might be a good idea to paint it immediately in case the flowers start dropping off. Painted in a Handbook watercolour journal, 10″ x 8″, using a lot of Quinacridone Rose for the blossoms.
You brighten my day with your posts.
Thank you Merry Christmas and the best for the New Year .
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Thanks so much Carol. All the best to you too!
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Lovly painting. My deceased wife always had two or three of these and she babbied them. Sometimes getting it to bloom around Easter too.
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HI Geri, I think your wife must have known something I don’t, but many people have written tips about taking care of these, so I think I will learn. All the best, Shari
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Lovely and such a nice vibrant pink! Well, whether or not your plant survives, you’ve now rendered it immortal! I wish you a Merry Christmas and continued joy of sketching in 2017!
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Thanks so much Gayle for always taking the time to write. All the best to you too!
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It so evokes the chaotic joy that a Christmas cactus means to me. Good work capturing it.
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Chaotic joy is a good way to describe it. Many thanks Christine.
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So well done Shari.
I did a painting of this type of plant too, and love to see how you simplified the watercolor, and still get such a rich and artistic result.
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Thanks Louise!
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Shari ch?rie,
Si tu ne veux pas n?cessairement la garder, Can I have it? Or a good reproduction?
Merci tant! Love
XoK
***Karimobile 514 9944433
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Hi Karim,
It’s in a sketchbook but I can make you a beautiful print. Sometime you can’t tell them from the originals.
xx
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very lovely Shari. They don,t like wet feet at all so water sparsely , a little more when flowering though Let them dry well between waterings and if you want flowers next Christmas dont water them at all in October ( or for easter or for birthdays etc just give them a dry month. Should a piece fall off leave it for a fewdays before inserting it into the soil then water it It will be huge for next year . and if youdon’t over water it now itwill flowerfor several months..
oh yes you can treat it to a nice bright spot (not direct sun) for the summer buon chance and happy holidays thanks for all your sharings Barb d
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Thanks so much for the good advice Barb. We like this one so much that we went out and bought two more, so your tips will come in very handy. I just have to remember what to do when October rolls around.
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It’s funny how things just jump into our shopping carts! Beautiful capture! Merry Christmas, and I hope you can stay warm this winter! I am staying aware of the weather since my sister lives in Montreal. And, of course, my memories are there as well!
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Hi Helen,
It’s always nice to hear from you. Hope you have a wonderful holiday season, and if you ever visit Montreal it would be nice to sketch together.
Shari
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Love it!
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Thanks Dee!
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And I was given a large poinsettia plant recently. I studied it and had thoughts of making a quick watercolor study. In my mind I painted but I did not pick up a brush.
I am not very good with plants so I better take action before it wilts. Your lovely watercolors always inspire me. Tomorrow, I will bring out the paints, paper and brushes. Thank you for sharing so much of your gift for spontaneous art making.
Bernadette
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Hi Bernadette, I hope you took the time to sketch your poinsettia. I have one too but the cactus is so much more frivolous and fun to draw.
Thanks for taking the time to comment all year long. It means a lot to me.
Shari
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It’s lovely, the vibrant colors are what we need in our homes to cheer us up to help us through the winter.
Thank you for sharing
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Many thanks Rita!
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Oh my goodness, the painting evokes the magic of Christmas.
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Thanks Dianne!
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I love love the cleanness of your paintings. Each one is fresh and delightful. Merry Christmas to you and those you love.
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Thanks for writing Daphne. Happy holidays and all the best for the new year.
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Gorgeous. i love the way you rendered the leaves. Follow Barb’s advice on culture and you could have it to paint for another year or many more.
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Hi Holly, I hope I don’t kill it but I have a lot of good advice from this post. I will try my best not to overwater which is what I think I do.
Happy holidays.
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Great painting and great background story. Love your painting and your writing.
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Thanks Garry. It was great to see you again last week. Hope all is well.
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What a lovely sketch. I’ll do anything, ish, for a chance to squeeze out some QRose…off to the store I go 😀
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Thanks Jess. Hope all is well with you!
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This is lovely…I love the bright colors to brighten up this dismal day. Good idea to paint it right away. I usually wait and then whatever flowers I planned to paint are so droopy. This has so much life to it!
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Thanks Joan!
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I’ll be brief this time. It’s just plain beautiful.
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Thanks Jeff. It is really beautiful in Montreal. It’s like a Vermont snowfall, perfect flakes coming down. Hope it’s beautiful there.
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LOVE the exuberance of the painting, AND the plant!! Here’s the key to these plants. . . DyouO NOT turn them, as the buds and blossoms are determined to orient themselves to sunlight “JUST SO.” The buds will drop off if you turn them because the connection is “determined.” Also, don’t over water. Also, admire and love them. My sister has one that is from three generations ago. . . no wait, four generations. They are lovely, and Shari, you have captured this beauty just exactly as I would want to, and your painting encourages me to try this. THANK YOU!
And Merry Christmas, Joyous and Successful New Year, and WARMEST wishes for all good things to come!
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Thanks so much for this good advice. I don’t know if you’ve read all the comments for this post but I have plenty of good advice. Don’t overwater! Don’t turn the plant! Let them go dry in October! Let’s see if I can manage to keep it alive.
And happy, happy holidays to you too!
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So pretty. Thank you for sharing your sketches and paintings, I so look forward to your posts. I too cannot pass up some of these sort of impulse buys but it is good to treat yourself too.
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Thanks you, Evelyn, for taking the time to write. Many thanks and happy holidays!
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Shari, thanks for sharing the beautiful painting and the inspiration. My cactus is actually blooming at Christmas for the first time in several years. Thanks to those who gave hints on how to care for it. For the lady with the poinsettia, it will soon drop its leaves, but keep it around. Eventually it will produce many new little green leaves. You can plant it outside and have a wonderful plant all summer. One year my outside plants actually produced more red flowers (leaves) in the spring. A blessed Christmas to all.
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More plant advice that I will use. I also have a poinsettia, and I will do the same for that. Having in the garden would be wonderful.
Happy holidays to you too.
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I smile when I see in your blog that you took the time to paint a part of your everyday life, and of course that you are always equipped and ready to paint. I want to cross that divide from, Oh maybe another time to I’m going to capture this memory now! You are a good example to me!
Joyeux Noël et bonne et heureuse année 2017 Shari!!
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Joyeux Noël et bonne année aussi Suzanne. Merci!
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Good idea to paint immediately, Shari, all my house plants drop their blossoms upon entering the house, I’m the opposite of a green thumb! Lovely sketch! Have a very happy holiday 🎁🎄🎉
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You have a great holiday too Marina!
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One of my favorite plants. Had one for years-don’t think it survived all of our moves . Seeing your painting, I need another. I am rather late in commenting and so I can only add how lovely this is, as always.
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One of my favourites too Judy. I had one for years and then I killed it. But I have lots of good advice on how to keep it alive, so we’ll see if I can succeed. Maybe you’ll have more luck too.
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I think I commented on IG:) It’s beautiful..Barb above summed them up well.
but they are much easier than you think..they do like light but don’t have to be in direct sunlight,,and they will get big and heavy..and some branches do break off..just like Barb said stick it back in..I do fertilize mine..when I think of it..so rarely..mine bloom twice..they start around Nov 1rst..still profusely blooming..the flowers dry and fall off..sometimes I pick them off..and yes not too much water..and again the bloom April-May.
You can tell when it needs water..the branches look sof..when hydrated enough they are crisp:)
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Thanks for the good advice Monique. I am going to try my best not to overwater them which is how I killed the last one.
Happy holidays to you and all your little ones.
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It is interesting to know that this plant is called a Christmas cactus. Here in Brazil, we call it the flower of May, because it blooms in the months of May to July. Beautiful Watercolor.
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Cristina, that’s very funny. I wondered what it was called in other places.
Thanks for writing!
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Hi Shari, this post cracked me up: “I’m not good with houseplants, so I’d better paint it before the flowers drop off…” I identified with this sentiment, as I struggle to keep my poinsettias alive for Christmas…thanks for the cheer 8-).
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Pam, I think my mistake of overwatering everything, so I will try to back off on that this year. We’ll see what happens.
All the best for the holidays,
Shari
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Three of this plants life in my office and every year around christmas they start to bloom. A little miracle for me:-) And every year I sketch them too… not as marvellous as yours but I do my very best:-)
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Birgit, getting them to bloom will be a little miracle for me too. All the best, Shari
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my Christmas cactus is 1 year old now and has only bloomed once. I’m glad to see this painted picture, as a reminder of what will come again some day ❤ i love my cactus.
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There’s lots of good advice in the comments section about how to get these to bloom. I will be following all of it myself, and if I sketch this again next year, you’ll know I was successful.
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Nice painting.
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Those are lovely creatures… hard to kill.
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Not for me. I seem to have no trouble killing them. This time I am trying to water them less.
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