I will be there in my cozy art tent showcasing my work for purchase. Many of my birds will be for sale, in addition to a few more recent ballpoint pen pieces. Not only will be I offering prints, but I will have stickers, magnets and few of my books on hand for sale.
So, if you are in the area or willing to take a day trip to a beautiful part of the region, be sure to stop by and say hello!
As always, your support of my art journey means the world!
Congratulations. You have reached the last day of the 31-day Sketchbook Challenge.
For today’s prompt, sketch how you like to celebrate!
Do you like an energetic, loud, and colorful celebration, or a quiet one? It certainly is time to celebrate your time spent sketching. Celebrate you! Maybe it will be with a cup of tea and a sweet treat. Or maybe, it comes in the form of a new sketchbook and ink pens. Regardless of how you like to celebrate or what you are celebrating, find a way to capture an aspect of it.
Keeping a habit for at least 31 days is a huge task. Your brain naturally wants to resist. It is my hope that you gained something from these past 31 days–growth, confidence, inspiration, or motivation to keep on sketching.
You don’t have to stop sketching tomorrow. In fact, my goal now is the fill a sketchbook for each day of the entire year. I am going to keep going. Perhaps some of you will join me.
Do you collect anything? Maybe silver spoons. Figurines. Cookbooks or recipes.
Most people I know collect something.
Or, maybe you have a collection that you didn’t intentionally start but you just seem to have a bunch of that one thing. It could even be a collection of paper clips.
Regardless, today’s prompt asks you to draw that collection. Now, you don’t have to draw the entire collection. Maybe just a handful of that item.
Feel free to fill the page or just a part. But, take your time with each object and see them individually. Once you have sketch each one, now see how they work together to make a composition!
It can be anything with wheels, even if it only has one. Your subject can be a car, a big old bus, or a child’s toy.
You could even look up images to gain inspiration or, once again, use your imagination to create a new contraption. Maybe your object with wheels is in motion, or parked and waiting for the go!
Day 27 – Draw a view from one of your rooms inside your dwelling.
Maybe you are sitting in bed early in the morning. What do you see off in front of you?
Or, maybe you are sitting at the kitchen table. What do you see when you look straight ahead?
Perhaps you have a comfy chair in your living room. You can probably turn your head a variety of ways to find a view you would like to capture in your sketchbook!
It can be a wide perspective or a small one. Be brave. Try to capture the angle of where you are viewing that particular part of the room. Maybe set up a vanishing point to help guide your lines. No need to get too technical. It can be wonky and scribbly. And, it can be as detailed as you have time and patience for.
You choose whether it is a houseplant or a plant found outside.
Take the time to really see the plant. See its overall shape. See the values that join together to make a whole composition. And, don’t be afraid to make that shadow the darkest part of your drawing. Lights need the darks to pop. If you are looking at your sketch and thinking that it seems a bit dull, try pushing those darks a bit.
It’s OK to make a mistake or overwork a piece. That’s how you learn, right?
Day 25- Draw something you have found on the ground outside.
Maybe you are in a position to take a walk somewhere, maybe even around your neighborhood. When and if you do, notice what’s on the ground, underneath your feet.
Find an interesting object–It can be natural or it can be man-made. Maybe you will be lucky enough to find an object that clearly doesn’t belong out in the wild, but somehow landed in that exact spot, and at that exact time you were walking.
Study its shape and values. Try to capture its essence in your sketchbook.
If you are not in a position to walk outside, see if there is something that can be found on the floor wherever you are. Feel free to get creative!
Welcome to Day 24. Can you believe this month is almost over? And, can you believe you have been sketching every day? Yay!
Even if you haven’t, not to worry! Just pick up a pencil and start again.
OK! Here we go…Today’s prompt is to draw an animal.
It can be any animal of your choice–real or imagined. Use a real model or a photograph. If a photograph, try to pick one with strong contrast.
Remember, try to see the animal as shapes and values, rather than see it as the finished animal. Drawing is a matter of seeing, and the more sketchbook practice you do of learning to see, the easier it will get. I do solemnly swear!