We have returned from our 10 day trip to Grand Teton and Yellowstone, but I am still painting from my photos and memories, and look forward to sharing them with you over the coming couple of weeks. This sketch was done sitting on the rocks overlooking “Artist’s Point” at Yellowstone’s Grand Canyon. Click here for a quick video that Bruce took of the actual scene. You can see I’ve taken some artistic license.
Month: July 2019
Bison Greeter
Just as we entered Grand Teton National Park, we were greeted by this furry fellow. We stayed inside our car, as everyone has been warned to do, and as he got closer he lowered his head, not to charge us, but to rub it in a clump of sagebrush. Click here to see my 30 second video of our encounter.
Jackson Lake, Wyoming
I did this sketch while we were eating lunch on the porch of a restaurant overlooking the panorama of the Grand Tetons and Jackson Lake. This Moleskine sketchbook is 5” by 8”, and when folded open it’s perfect for a view like this.
Grand Teton National Park
We have come to the Rockies for ten days to visit family in Provo, Utah, and then Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks. The Grand Teton range is awe-inspiring, especially for us New Englanders for whom 5,000 feet is a big mountain. We are staying at Jackson Lake Lodge, elevation 6,400, with this view of Grand Teton, elevation 13,700 feet. The conspicuous patches of snow are small glaciers.
Homegrown Tomatoes
We are entering what was, when she was alive, my mother’s favorite time of year. Ripe red homegrown tomatoes, perfect for a sandwich or salad. The hard pink store-bought kind never cut it with my mother. She found the best farmsteads around, and brought it tomatoes home a couple of times a week. Plus fresh corn with salt and butter. Salivating just remembering.
Full Moon on Snow
We have had a beautiful full moon the last few nights, though no snow since before Christmas.
Opposites Attract
Orange and blue are opposites on the color wheel. They make each other sing. This watercolor is wet-on-wet, wet paint on wet paper so the colors bleed into each other. If you want a precise and controlled painting, you work on dry paper and don’t let wet colors touch.
Chicken Exercises
Not sure what to expect with that title?
Painters often do exercises like this, and the chickens are a fun twist. In watercolor, when an area of wet paint touches another wet area, the colors naturally mix together (which isn’t true with oil or acrylics). Keeping a chart like this helps to know how colors will look when they blend.
Happy Fourth!
Hope you are having a good 4th of July weekend!