Last sketch of 2025

After a really fun and very restful week with my family, I was happily back in my studio today, reunited with my palette and brushes. My subject was my Schlumbergera, commonly known as the Christmas cactus. I’ve been watching these flowers develop and burst open for many days, and it’s been on my mind to sketch them all week.

The painting that I am posting is the second version from today. The first one began with a pencil drawing, but a tight drawing could not properly express the explosion of pink that I had in front of me, and I never even made it to the paint stage. I set that sheet aside, picked up a sword liner brush and a new sheet of paper and drew directly with my brush. I started by painting the outlines of the blooms and then filled the spaces between them with outlines of the stem segments. When the outlines were mostly dry, I filled in the flowers and stems. For the flowers I used the pinkest pigments I have on my palette: Quinacridone Rose and Quinacridone Coral with a bit of Carmine for the darks.

I hope you are working on your last sketch of the year today too. For some of you it may already be 2026! Whatever page of the calendar you are on, I wish you a very creative and very joyful new year!


Happy holidays!

During this holiday season, I just wanted to thank you for following along here, for having a look at the sketches and especially for dropping me a line when you have the time. This all means so much to me.

I hope we get to sketch together online or somewhere in the world in 2026, and I hope the coming year will be filled with even more creativity, health, love and laughter. Happy holidays to you and yours.

Shari


Hyacinth in a jar

Last week a friend brought over an unusual and thoughtful gift — a hyacinth bulb in an hourglass-shaped jar. The instructions from the shop were to add water to just below the bulb, but not touching it. I did that, placed it on my kitchen window sill, and then waited and waited. I was watching for the tiny green leaf tip to grow taller out of the purple bulb.

But it turns out that I was looking for growth in the wrong place. I went away for a few days and when I returned the jar was full of long roots. Duh. Of course the roots would establish themselves first.

I’ve never grown a hyacinth in water before. Have you? Did it bloom? I am curious about this, and of course I’m waiting to draw it again when the leaves emerge.

I started this drawing way too late in the day, as the winter sun was descending. I drew quickly in the fading light, using the “Lofty” pencil in Procreate on my iPad.


The space between two buildings

What fun to go back to one of my favourite winter sketching spots: Église St. Joachim in Pointe Claire. In this -15C weather, of course I sketched from my car. It’s always a little difficult to balance the mechanics of it all. If I wear my warmest coat, it’s hard to keep the puffy sleeves from grazing the wet palette. And even with heavy boots on, I know I only have a limited time before I start to get too cold. But I guess I was well prepared because I was able to stay long enough to get the sketch done.

I don’t remember how often I’ve painted from this same vantage point but I’m always attracted to the patch of sky between the church and the presbytery. If you were to walk through that bit of snow-covered lawn, you would see a frozen Lac St. Louis just beyond it. The vast open space behind the buildings, as well as the brightness of the snow-covered lake creates a wonderfully lit backdrop for the buildings. Sketched in my Hahnemuhle 100% cotton sketchbook.


A bag with four buckles

This bag has been hanging around our house forever, but as with many things, sometimes you see it differently when it gets moved. In the course of some recent closet reorganization, it came out of a dark corner into the light and I was reminded of how beautiful it is. It was purchased in Crete many years ago, and has followed us around from home to home. I tried first to paint it in watercolour but I couldn’t capture patina or the worn curves of the thick leather so I drew it in ink instead. I think this version has more solidity.


Plants and Flowers workshops update

This week’s bone-chilling cold weather has given me some time to finish up stuff in my studio. Here are the final versions of two pages that were started in November when I was teaching one-day workshops very close to my home in Hudson, Quebec.

I was so thrilled to be able to welcome students to Le Collectif’s bright studio space. I’ve been searching for a workshop venue close to home, and this studio is so inviting and warm, even on a dreary November day. I love the way we were able to group all the tables together so that everyone could share plants and flowers that they had brought in.

By the end of the day, most of us hadn’t quite finished our pages, but I took photos anyway. I was thrilled with the varied and beautiful results.

Now that I’ve found this great venue, I hope to host more workshops close to home. If you want to get on my notification list for upcoming events, just sign up here.


Get me out of this thing

Alice had surgery yesterday, but don’t worry, all is well. It was a small thing that had to be removed from her knee but we were happy to hear that it was benign. Last night when we brought her home she was still confused from the anaesthetic, but today she is very alert and wondering why this thing is around her neck.

In the instructions from the vet, they call this an Elizabethan collar. Sounds very fancy. But for her it’s a nuisance that she must wear for 10 days. She keeps bumping into things with it, and looking at me pleadingly to remove it. I try to compensate her, and assuage my own guilt, by giving her treats. Tonight she had some chicken liver with her dinner.