Palouse Fields and Belated Christmas

I’m continuing to enjoy painting with gouache. It allows me to do things that watercolors do not and creates a different mood. I’ve been keeping an eye out for inspiration-mostly pictures taken by local photographers as I’m not leaving the house much. I’m so looking forward to warmer weather and getting to paint outside!

This gouache painting of the Palouse was inspired by a photo taken by John Clement photography. We have so many talented and adventurous photographers in here in the Inland Northwest. It was featured in the Spokane Coeur D’Alene Living Magazine.

This gouache painting of the Palouse was inspired by a photo taken by John Clement photography. We have so many talented and adventurous photographers in here in the Inland Northwest. It was featured in the Spokane Coeur D’Alene Living Magazine.

Having seen John (and other’s) inspiration, I decided to do a couple small gouache paintings of Palouse landscapes-focusing the the ability of snow to highlight the rows of wheat stubble.

Having seen John (and other’s) inspiration, I decided to do a couple small gouache paintings of Palouse landscapes-focusing the the ability of snow to highlight the rows of wheat stubble.

Moonrise.

Moonrise.

More gouache, this time to capture the Duncan Gardens in the snow, which I feel makes this formal garden magical even without the abundance of flowers for which it is famous. This was also featured in my Artist’s Eye on Spokane column with Spokane C…

More gouache, this time to capture the Duncan Gardens in the snow, which I feel makes this formal garden magical even without the abundance of flowers for which it is famous. This was also featured in my Artist’s Eye on Spokane column with Spokane Coeur D’Alene Living Magazine.

This time of year, I like to work on Christmas related projects. It is still cold and there’s frequently snow (though not much this year) so that helps me get in the mood. I find it really hard to work on Christmas stuff when the weather is warm but…

This time of year, I like to work on Christmas related projects. It is still cold and there’s frequently snow (though not much this year) so that helps me get in the mood. I find it really hard to work on Christmas stuff when the weather is warm but when the weather cools in fall and things start ramping up toward the holiday season it gets so crazy for me it is hard to find the time to be in the Christmas spirit, never mind paint Christmas scenes, so doing it now works really well for my schedule and simultaneously helps me feel a bit festive about the weather when I might otherwise be frustrated that it is still cold and dark.

Final version of this painting, sketch in the photo above. This image is based on a photo taken by Paige Gullickson. I love how she caught the Pavilion in the background and the snow was so much fun to paint. This will be a Christmas card for next y…

Final version of this painting, sketch in the photo above. This image is based on a photo taken by Paige Gullickson. I love how she caught the Pavilion in the background and the snow was so much fun to paint. This will be a Christmas card for next year.

Every year I buy an amaryllis bulb so I have the flowers to watch in the dead of winter. They are dramatic as they unfurl and stay in bloom for quite some time, bringing cheer to my studio.

Every year I buy an amaryllis bulb so I have the flowers to watch in the dead of winter. They are dramatic as they unfurl and stay in bloom for quite some time, bringing cheer to my studio.

They are even quite pretty when they are fading!

They are even quite pretty when they are fading!

How are you all coping these days? Buying flowers? Reading good books or going for walks? I’m doing all of those things (Plus painting the living room wall and selling the couch and other home improvement flurries!) and looking forward to the slowly returning light!

View From Someone Else's Window

I’ve been really feeling the limits on travel and frankly even the ability to be somewhere other than my house now that has been too cold and snowy for outdoor painting for a couple months. So, I have been diving into WindowSwap, a website where people submit short videos of the view from their window. It has been an absolute delight! Not only because there are some really awesome views, but also because I am nosy and I love to see how other people live. There’s a great mix of mundane (view of blocky highrisers) and dramatic (snowy mountain, Brooklyn Bridge, etc). Another thing I love is that because these are videos rather than photos, you get the extra fun of sometimes hearing the environment elements, such as when a tropical rainstorm started during the video of a window in South East Asia or the surprise of birds sweeping into and around the frame of the picture. An absolute delight!

I do wish that there was a back button so I could return to previous views, but alas that doesn’t seem possible, so I just have to take what I can get. Oh well.

Pontassieve, Italy on what looks like a gorgeous fall day.

Pontassieve, Italy on what looks like a gorgeous fall day.

Vizag, India

Vizag, India

Cambridge, UK

Cambridge, UK

Glasgow, Scotland

Glasgow, Scotland

Mineralnyvody, Russia

Mineralnyvody, Russia

San Francisco, CA

San Francisco, CA

Happy Holidays!

Hello again everyone! I hope you are doing well. I write this on the shortest day of the year as a constant rain slowly washes the snow off our lawn, but by the time you receive this, we’ll be on the other side, heading toward lengthening daylight. I wanted to wish you all well and thank you for coming along with me on my adventures. While it has been a wild ride out in the world, in my little sphere, I’ve gotten along quite well with lots of time spent in the garden and out painting on location and learning to use gouache. Loss of income due to the cancellation of art festivals and store and school closures was offset by people reaching out for private commissions so I feel very fortunate. My studio-to-be arrived in its raw state in late April and is still a mess inside, but I have hopes of getting in there before its 1 year anniversary-ah, home improvement projects. I’ve been talking with the Northwest Museum of Art and Culture and the Spokane Art School and we have plans to teach online via Zoom starting around March and I hope to also do Zoom classes out of my studio once it is finished. I’d love to hear your thoughts on what kind of classes you’d like to take from me on Zoom-a Paint & Sip class? Painting skies? Color theory?

Here’s a painting of the Gaiser Conservatory from two years ago, all aglow. This year there is a drive through holiday display that seems to be very popular.

Here’s a painting of the Gaiser Conservatory from two years ago, all aglow. This year there is a drive through holiday display that seems to be very popular.

Last year I visited the display and then walked the Duncan gardens in the dark so I could look back and really feel the impact of the light in the dark (a lesson in contrasts and perhaps a metaphor?).

Last year I visited the display and then walked the Duncan gardens in the dark so I could look back and really feel the impact of the light in the dark (a lesson in contrasts and perhaps a metaphor?).

A gouache painting of the Duncan Gardens in the daylight with a light coating of snow. The garden is most popular in the summer but I think winter is an underrated time to visit!

A gouache painting of the Duncan Gardens in the daylight with a light coating of snow. The garden is most popular in the summer but I think winter is an underrated time to visit!

A gouache painting of a light dusting of snow on wheat fields.

A gouache painting of a light dusting of snow on wheat fields.

This painting is from 2 years ago when I took a ride on the Wheatland Bank Carriage Rides. You can tell because the sky walk across main is still the vintage yellow one in this painting rather than the modern glass one that is there today. I think I…

This painting is from 2 years ago when I took a ride on the Wheatland Bank Carriage Rides. You can tell because the sky walk across main is still the vintage yellow one in this painting rather than the modern glass one that is there today. I think I need to retackle this subject. Maybe my Christmas card for next year?

Wishing you well in 2021. I hope I’ll be able to invite you all to visit my new studio in the coming year. Fingers Crossed!

Fall's End & Zoom Class!

Still clinging to Fall over here, though it is looking more like…

THIS…

THIS…

than THIS.Oh well. Maybe next year? It looks like I’ll get plenty of practice painting snow this winter.

than THIS.

Oh well. Maybe next year? It looks like I’ll get plenty of practice painting snow this winter.

I bought a pumpkin and some decorative gourds at Green Bluff back in October and they are still hanging out on my studio table. I decided to tackle them in gouache on tan toned paper.

I bought a pumpkin and some decorative gourds at Green Bluff back in October and they are still hanging out on my studio table. I decided to tackle them in gouache on tan toned paper.

Swan gourd! And now for the Big Announcement-I’m going on ZOOM! Read more below.

Swan gourd! And now for the Big Announcement-I’m going on ZOOM! Read more below.

ZOOM CLASS! I will be teaching a “Paint and Sip” class with the Northwest Museum of Art and Culture on November 19th, 5:30-8. Sadly, we aren’t able to do it in person so the Sip part will be BYOB, but it will be a live class where you paint along wi…

ZOOM CLASS! I will be teaching a “Paint and Sip” class with the Northwest Museum of Art and Culture on November 19th, 5:30-8. Sadly, we aren’t able to do it in person so the Sip part will be BYOB, but it will be a live class where you paint along with me as we paint a scene of Riverfront park-the Clock tower and Pavilion.

House Portraits & Fall Dreams

Hi all! I’ve been making the best of our short fall, refusing to be rushed by the snow. I’ve bought apples and decorative gourds at Green Bluff, did some exploring on some family property up north, went to visit the Japanese Garden at Manito Park (sadly closed when I arrived) and did some fall baking. What have you been up to? Do you have a prized pumpkin bread recipe? I’m looking for a good one-and in my mind, that means chocolate, not nuts!

Painted at Siemer’s Farm up at Green Bluff a couple years ago on a warm October day. I love to visit them and Hansen’s Orchard and High Country Orchard for apples, apple cider, gourds and more.

Painted at Siemer’s Farm up at Green Bluff a couple years ago on a warm October day. I love to visit them and Hansen’s Orchard and High Country Orchard for apples, apple cider, gourds and more.

Sketching my old Ford Explorer on the overgrown dirt road where family goes to hunt deer. Lots of interesting plants, especially around the old homestead and near the creek. We picked elderberries!

Sketching my old Ford Explorer on the overgrown dirt road where family goes to hunt deer. Lots of interesting plants, especially around the old homestead and near the creek. We picked elderberries!

A small watercolor sketch of the brilliant colors in the Japanese Garden. It seems like they are closed for the season (or never opened?) which is a bummer because this is the best of the time of the year there, in  my opinion. These next two painti…

A small watercolor sketch of the brilliant colors in the Japanese Garden. It seems like they are closed for the season (or never opened?) which is a bummer because this is the best of the time of the year there, in my opinion. These next two paintings are recently completed house portraits.

This is the 2nd time I’ve painted this house and I’m still loving it. The commissioner has hired me to do a portrait of the house in each season. So far, we have done Spring and Summer and I’m looking forward to Fall and Winter.

This is the 2nd time I’ve painted this house and I’m still loving it. The commissioner has hired me to do a portrait of the house in each season. So far, we have done Spring and Summer and I’m looking forward to Fall and Winter.

A little brick house on the South Hill is going to be a wedding present. I love painting portraits of people’s homes. If you would like to commission me to do a painting as a Christmas present (whether it is of a house, a pet, a garden, etc), please…

A little brick house on the South Hill is going to be a wedding present.

I love painting portraits of people’s homes. If you would like to commission me to do a painting as a Christmas present (whether it is of a house, a pet, a garden, etc), please reach out to me before the 7th of November when I will have to start charging holiday prices.

Summer Dreaming

We’re hanging out just under 100 degrees right now here at my house and I’m planning on popsicles for dinner. Despite the discomfort, I’m glad that summer isn’t over yet. I’ll hold onto the warmth and daylight and plein air painting for as long as possible. I mean, my tomatoes are just starting to ripen!

Painted sitting under a pine tree on our 10 acre property, looking out over our neighbors’s fields toward the distant hills. Done EARLY in the morning.

Painted sitting under a pine tree on our 10 acre property, looking out over our neighbors’s fields toward the distant hills. Done EARLY in the morning.

It is sunflower season up here north of Spokane, which means that swarms of people are parked all along the roads and highways, trying to get selfies with the flowers. Sunflowers are one of my favorite flowers (They were my wedding flowers, in fact)…

It is sunflower season up here north of Spokane, which means that swarms of people are parked all along the roads and highways, trying to get selfies with the flowers. Sunflowers are one of my favorite flowers (They were my wedding flowers, in fact), but I find all this sunflower mania frustrating because people are not respecting private property and are trampling and damaging the flowers-even if they don’t break any flowers getting into the field, sunflowers have a very shallow root system and the repeated trampling is not good for them. If the fields get to be too much of a hassle to maintain or the farmers can’t make a profit with the damaged plants, then there won’t be any sunflower fields at all and that would make me SO SAD.

This particular field is not far from my in-laws so I was able to spot it pretty early on. It was easy to set up along the dirt road (outside the field) to paint.

This particular field is not far from my in-laws so I was able to spot it pretty early on. It was easy to set up along the dirt road (outside the field) to paint.

There is a saying the sunflower faces follow the movement of the sun across the sky and that is true to some extent in wild and garden varieties, but the commercial variety has a thick neck and frequently gets stuck simply pointing east, which means…

There is a saying the sunflower faces follow the movement of the sun across the sky and that is true to some extent in wild and garden varieties, but the commercial variety has a thick neck and frequently gets stuck simply pointing east, which means that in many of the fields I’ve been seeing, the sunflowers have their backs to you. Still, there’s always a couple that break the mold!

My Canna Lily is blooming its heart out and I’ve been spending time in the early morning admiring the way the light falls through the leaves.

My Canna Lily is blooming its heart out and I’ve been spending time in the early morning admiring the way the light falls through the leaves.

I’m working on a large painting of a wedding bouquet for a commission. The key flowers are red Gerberas so I bought myself a bouquet and did some studies-first a quick sketch in the case of this painting and a more involved painting, as in below.

I’m working on a large painting of a wedding bouquet for a commission. The key flowers are red Gerberas so I bought myself a bouquet and did some studies-first a quick sketch in the case of this painting and a more involved painting, as in below.

Couldn’t resist doing a purple shadow!

Couldn’t resist doing a purple shadow!

This is a painting of the Aer O Toaster, a large neon sculpture that hangs in the Spokane International Airport in Baggage Claim. After I did a quick sketch of it, early this year, the artist Ken Yuhasz commissioned me to do a painting for him. It w…

This is a painting of the Aer O Toaster, a large neon sculpture that hangs in the Spokane International Airport in Baggage Claim. After I did a quick sketch of it, early this year, the artist Ken Yuhasz commissioned me to do a painting for him. It was an utter delight.

Hope that you are all doing well and getting to enjoy the beautiful place we live in in whatever capacity you can.

#the100dayproject2020 DONE!

I made it guys! I completed #the100dayproject2020! 100 days of painting in gouache and watercolor since April 7th. I’m so pleased because this is the longest challenge I’ve ever done and I wasn’t sure I could manage it. Things got really tough around Day 75, but switching to working almost entirely from life either plein air (painting outside) or painting still life, rather than doing master copies really helped bring new life to the project.

I’ve wanted to go out and paint the fields near our house for years, but this time of year was always busy for me with classes and art festivals so it got put off. Well, this is finally the year for it!

This distinctive clump of trees is at the end of our road and looked stunning in the light of sunset.

This distinctive clump of trees is at the end of our road and looked stunning in the light of sunset.

View down the road with winnows of alfalfa drying, painted while listening to birds chirp and the breeze trying to rifle my sketchbook pages.

View down the road with winnows of alfalfa drying, painted while listening to birds chirp and the breeze trying to rifle my sketchbook pages.

A study of cut alfalfa in various stages of drying and another sketch of the view down the road. The sketch in the lower right hand corner is watercolor, the rest is gouache.

A study of cut alfalfa in various stages of drying and another sketch of the view down the road. The sketch in the lower right hand corner is watercolor, the rest is gouache.

A little less than a week after the first cutting, they started baling. The round bales are hay and the rectangles are alfalfa. The blue dots are cornflowers that grow in the ditches along around road. I love them. Each of these are done quickly so …

A little less than a week after the first cutting, they started baling. The round bales are hay and the rectangles are alfalfa. The blue dots are cornflowers that grow in the ditches along around road. I love them. Each of these are done quickly so I can get out and back home before it gets too hot that I risk sunburn or heat stress. There’s no shade out there, so early morning and evening sessions are the goal and the lighting at those times is the best anyway.

My bug house from Costco. Nobody has moved in yet, but I love the red roof in all the greens of the landscape.

My bug house from Costco. Nobody has moved in yet, but I love the red roof in all the greens of the landscape.

A single ripe plum.

A single ripe plum.

A strawberry picked from Siemer’s Farm.

A strawberry picked from Siemer’s Farm.

Probably the last pear until fall and they are in season again.

Probably the last pear until fall and they are in season again.

I went shopping at Art Salvage a week back (You can shop online and do curbside pick up!) and bought shells. I grew up next to the ocean and collecting shells is something I’ve done my whole life. It is something I miss a lot now that I’ve moved inl…

I went shopping at Art Salvage a week back (You can shop online and do curbside pick up!) and bought shells. I grew up next to the ocean and collecting shells is something I’ve done my whole life. It is something I miss a lot now that I’ve moved inland.

A whelk shell painting, already sold! By the way, almost all of my paintings from the 100 Day Project are available for sale and priced $35-70 and range in size from 3” x 5” to 5” x 7”. A great opportunity to grab a bit of original art!

A whelk shell painting, already sold! By the way, almost all of my paintings from the 100 Day Project are available for sale and priced $35-70 and range in size from 3” x 5” to 5” x 7”. A great opportunity to grab a bit of original art!

Fields, Gardens, Barns & Flights of Fancy

Hello there!

How are you?

I’m hot and bug bitten and slightly sunburned (I leave the sunscreen by the door, when will I learn to PUT IT ON?). I’ve been keeping myself occupied in the garden as the pace of growing has accelerated in the warm weather and out in the fields painting the shifting crops of our beautiful area.

I sowed Emiko cabbage for the first time this year and they are beautiful when the light glows through the leaves. They are tender looking, more like giant rosettes of lettuce than my usual cabbages. As the note on the sketch says, I heard a vole ni…

I sowed Emiko cabbage for the first time this year and they are beautiful when the light glows through the leaves. They are tender looking, more like giant rosettes of lettuce than my usual cabbages. As the note on the sketch says, I heard a vole nibbling a 2 ft tall sunflower he’d chewed down. I caught him eventually but not till after he ate about 10 lbs of potatoes. He was HUGE.

I am currently obsessed with strawberries. The ones I inherited from the people who lived here before us aren’t productive. They make beautiful blossoms in the spring and then nothing. Sigh. Instead I go picking at Green Bluff, but I need to buy som…

I am currently obsessed with strawberries. The ones I inherited from the people who lived here before us aren’t productive. They make beautiful blossoms in the spring and then nothing. Sigh. Instead I go picking at Green Bluff, but I need to buy some bare root plants next spring and make a patch of my own.

A fast color study of a barn in a canola field up north. They’ve all faded now in the heat, but as I drive around, I can see the sunflowers starting to grow. Perhaps this will be the year of yellow?

A fast color study of a barn in a canola field up north. They’ve all faded now in the heat, but as I drive around, I can see the sunflowers starting to grow. Perhaps this will be the year of yellow?

A more detailed painting in the same location as the above quick sketch.

A more detailed painting in the same location as the above quick sketch.

Painting done in the studio

Painting done in the studio

8” x 10” painted in the field

8” x 10” painted in the field

This field is a little further north. The Coors Beer billboard made me laugh. Man, I think we all need to chill. I could certainly use some.

This field is a little further north. The Coors Beer billboard made me laugh. Man, I think we all need to chill. I could certainly use some.

Very fast painting of the strawberry field up at Green Bluff after I’d picked about 20 lbs of strawberries. I made fruit leather and my  husband and I probably ate around 10 lbs ourselves!

Very fast painting of the strawberry field up at Green Bluff after I’d picked about 20 lbs of strawberries. I made fruit leather and my husband and I probably ate around 10 lbs ourselves!

Facing the opposite way, painting a stately barn and then I rabbited off to go make fruit leather. Strawberries don’t last in a hot car.

Facing the opposite way, painting a stately barn and then I rabbited off to go make fruit leather. Strawberries don’t last in a hot car.

Igor Shiplin is a Russian painter (now deceased) who I discovered recently and I love his bright, impressionistic color and interesting compositions so I added him to my 100 Day Project master copy list. We’re past 80 days. The first 50 days flew by…

Igor Shiplin is a Russian painter (now deceased) who I discovered recently and I love his bright, impressionistic color and interesting compositions so I added him to my 100 Day Project master copy list. We’re past 80 days. The first 50 days flew by and the 10-15 days after that weren’t too hard but from the 65th day onward, it has really gotten tough, but I won’t let this beat me. I’m going to get to 100 days!

Igor Shiplin, gorgeous sunshine on a lawn.

Igor Shiplin, gorgeous sunshine on a lawn.

David Dibble is a contemporary painter who has a great take on the trope of painting barns. He manages to make them his own.

David Dibble is a contemporary painter who has a great take on the trope of painting barns. He manages to make them his own.

David Dibble

David Dibble

David Dibble

David Dibble

Hope you are all doing well. Are you gardening or walking, reading or at the lake? What are you up to these days?

Springtime Explorations

Still sticking close to home and keeping myself occupied the way I always have, painting and drawing what is in front of me, but also thinking about how different this spring has been than previous ones. Especially, all the students graduating at this time of year and how different their experience has been from expectations. Almost a year ago, I visited Lewis & Clark with a friend of mine who teaches there and took pictures. Now seemed an appropriate time to do a painting of that school as I thought about all those graduating seniors heading off to college or the unknown.

Lewis and Clark High School

Lewis and Clark High School

Early spring Arrowleaf Balsamroot bloom in Hamblem park on the South Hill. I passed by on my way to deliver a print and had to stop!

Early spring Arrowleaf Balsamroot bloom in Hamblem park on the South Hill. I passed by on my way to deliver a print and had to stop!

Hamlen_Flowers_72dpi.jpg
I’ve been spending a lot of time in the garden (but thanks to all the rain, I’m still barely making a dent in the weeds!) This is a small study of strawberries in the garden. I can’t wait till the picking fields up at Green Bluff are open!

I’ve been spending a lot of time in the garden (but thanks to all the rain, I’m still barely making a dent in the weeds!) This is a small study of strawberries in the garden. I can’t wait till the picking fields up at Green Bluff are open!

Peonies in the bed by my house. I’m so pleased that I got out there and painted them before the petals all fell off. It seems like peony blossoms last a day before the wind or the rain or the heat makes them fall apart in a rain of petal confetti.

Peonies in the bed by my house. I’m so pleased that I got out there and painted them before the petals all fell off. It seems like peony blossoms last a day before the wind or the rain or the heat makes them fall apart in a rain of petal confetti.

Neighbor’s barn. I’ll definitely have to return throughout the year to study it.

Neighbor’s barn. I’ll definitely have to return throughout the year to study it.

Mt. Spokane, at the time of the sketch, it just barely had some snow left on its ski runs. Now it is just dirt.

Mt. Spokane, at the time of the sketch, it just barely had some snow left on its ski runs. Now it is just dirt.

Fast watercolor studies looking down my street as I test out a new plein air painting set up.

Fast watercolor studies looking down my street as I test out a new plein air painting set up.

Neighbor’s house before rain as seen from my studio.

Neighbor’s house before rain as seen from my studio.

Sunny late afternoon view.

Sunny late afternoon view.

Sunny morning. You can really tell the difference between the yellow house’s irrigated green lawn grass and the field grass of the closer neighbor.

Sunny morning. You can really tell the difference between the yellow house’s irrigated green lawn grass and the field grass of the closer neighbor.

Gazebo at Coeur D’Alene Park in Browne’s Addition painted for Artfest Online with the Northwest Museum of Art and Culture. I filmed myself painting this and you can see the video here, just scroll down.  I’ll be doing classes with the MAC this summe…

Gazebo at Coeur D’Alene Park in Browne’s Addition painted for Artfest Online with the Northwest Museum of Art and Culture. I filmed myself painting this and you can see the video here, just scroll down. I’ll be doing classes with the MAC this summer, in person if we can and via Zoom if not.

Truckin' Along with my Paints

I’m truckin’ along in my quarantine routine-a morning walk, a little bit of yard work (weeds wait for no one!), painting for my 100 day project (We’re coming up on 25 days, a quarter of the way there!), read (I just finished a book on Maynard Dixon, one of my favorite Western painters), some more painting or drawing and time with my husband. I’ve learned that without the interruptions and days that I need to spend out of the studio, I need to factor in more breaks for stretching after ending up with some intense neck pain from spending multiple days basically looking down all day (painting, reading, weeding, pretty much all the same angle!). I’ve got some house projects and we’re finally getting warm enough that I can start planting veggies and flowers which will help to break up my schedule so that’s good. There will be paintings of our lilac bushes and the neighborhood apple tree blossoms to come. Hold me to it!

This is a recently completed painting for a patron who got married at the Northwest Maritime Center in Port Townsend. I grew up on the West side of the state and the thing I miss the most is the ocean so this was a delight to do. I had to include on…

This is a recently completed painting for a patron who got married at the Northwest Maritime Center in Port Townsend. I grew up on the West side of the state and the thing I miss the most is the ocean so this was a delight to do. I had to include one of the ferries!

This is a house portrait with the patron’s beloved pets. She wanted to include both current and deceased pets so we worked out a plan-living pets are inside the house while those no longer with her are in the yard, keeping an eye on the place!

This is a house portrait with the patron’s beloved pets. She wanted to include both current and deceased pets so we worked out a plan-living pets are inside the house while those no longer with her are in the yard, keeping an eye on the place!

This painting and the one below are both gouache studies of Jeremy Lipking paintings for the 100 day project.

This painting and the one below are both gouache studies of Jeremy Lipking paintings for the 100 day project.

You can see the uneven deckled edge at the top of this photo.

You can see the uneven deckled edge at the top of this photo.

A quick morning sketch of the light hitting our neighbor’s yellow house while I was still half asleep.

A quick morning sketch of the light hitting our neighbor’s yellow house while I was still half asleep.

Saturday plans include the wild excitement of making our new favorite waffle recipe: Essential Raised Waffles from Smitten Kitchen. The recipe makes a bunch of delicious, rich waffles that have a crisp outside and soft inside. Sadly not for Belgian waffle irons, just the normal type. I like them for breakfast, then we freeze the rest of the batch. Waffles defrost easily in the toaster oven and I frequently have one topped with avocado and oven roasted tomatoes. Delish!

Wishing you all the best!

Sketching at Home

Hi everybody! We’re still doing well here. Friday was my first time leaving the house to go anywhere in two weeks (grocery store run). I’m grateful to be able to get out for a walk or poke around the garden even though the weather has been less than welcoming lately.

Since we’ve been getting snow in the morning pretty regularly I’ve been exploring around the house. This is my reading nook! The colorful throw on the armchair is a kantha quilt made from silk sari scraps that I bought when I was in Kolkata last yea…

Since we’ve been getting snow in the morning pretty regularly I’ve been exploring around the house. This is my reading nook! The colorful throw on the armchair is a kantha quilt made from silk sari scraps that I bought when I was in Kolkata last year.

This is a vignette of part of the house, looking back toward the front door from my spot at the kitchen table. I picked up the bust at an estate sale and she gets decorated pretty regularly. The rainbow colored fabric was purchased back in 2008 when…

This is a vignette of part of the house, looking back toward the front door from my spot at the kitchen table. I picked up the bust at an estate sale and she gets decorated pretty regularly. The rainbow colored fabric was purchased back in 2008 when I went to Ecuador.

I’m starting seeds inside for the garden and they are rapidly outgrowing their space in our living room so I’m very excited for the warmer weather predicted for this week!

I’m starting seeds inside for the garden and they are rapidly outgrowing their space in our living room so I’m very excited for the warmer weather predicted for this week!

This is a recently finished commission of Bozarth mansion, known to old school Zag alums as Waikiki. My cousin got married there two years ago and I was utterly obsessed with their walled garden.

This is a recently finished commission of Bozarth mansion, known to old school Zag alums as Waikiki. My cousin got married there two years ago and I was utterly obsessed with their walled garden.

This is a fun and silly self portrait of the artist in her studio, creative juices swirling. Yes, when it is cold, I put my bathrobe over all my other clothes. Blankets just fall off and I’m not willing to accept a snuggy yet. Have I mentioned that …

This is a fun and silly self portrait of the artist in her studio, creative juices swirling. Yes, when it is cold, I put my bathrobe over all my other clothes. Blankets just fall off and I’m not willing to accept a snuggy yet. Have I mentioned that I’m looking forward to warmer weather?

Best wishes and health to you all!

Staying Home, Making Art

Well, the Stay Home, Stay Healthy order is fully in effect here in Washington. I’ve been sticking to the studio seriously for over a week at this point and everything is well here. I’m taking pleasure in the little things-new seedlings coming up under my grow lights, making Smitten Kitchen’s Puddle Cakes (I love a molten lava style chocolate cake), going for walks weather permitting (I couldn’t feel my face when I got back from my walk today!) and painting. So here’s a bit of what I’ve been up to since the end of February…

A friend posted a photograph of the Monroe Street Bridge on a foggy night and I found it super inspiring. He kindly gave me permission to use it as a basis for painting. The painting below was my first try-4” x 6”, warmer in color with paint colors …

A friend posted a photograph of the Monroe Street Bridge on a foggy night and I found it super inspiring. He kindly gave me permission to use it as a basis for painting. The painting below was my first try-4” x 6”, warmer in color with paint colors with more granulation. The painting above is cooler and calmer and 9” x 12”. It is always tricky to keep the energy of a small painting in a large one!

Man, I love the way the paint pigment settles out on the paper. It’s the small things in life!

Man, I love the way the paint pigment settles out on the paper. It’s the small things in life!

My last plein air sketch in Spokane for 2020 (so far!). I met a friend at Rocket Bakery on 1st and Cedar at the end of February and drew the Old Public Library (now home to an architect firm) while drinking a strawberry Italian soda with shipped cre…

My last plein air sketch in Spokane for 2020 (so far!). I met a friend at Rocket Bakery on 1st and Cedar at the end of February and drew the Old Public Library (now home to an architect firm) while drinking a strawberry Italian soda with shipped cream.

Now that I’m serious self isolating, I’ve been looking around the house for inspiration as well. This is my kitchen. It is in the center of the house so it doesn’t get any direct sunlight so one winter I lost my mind about how dark the interior of t…

Now that I’m serious self isolating, I’ve been looking around the house for inspiration as well. This is my kitchen. It is in the center of the house so it doesn’t get any direct sunlight so one winter I lost my mind about how dark the interior of the house was and painted the whole room yellow (Color name: “Bonjour”!). The cabinets are terrible, old laminate things so I spent hours watching ice skating during the Sochi Olympics covering the doors with sunflower themed scrap book paper and sealing it. They’ve held up pretty well so far!

Having more time on my hands means that I’m trying to push myself to try new things that I’ve been putting off-this is a combination of watercolor and watercolor ink. I’m also playing around with acrylic ink and gouache, so more to come!I hope you a…

Having more time on my hands means that I’m trying to push myself to try new things that I’ve been putting off-this is a combination of watercolor and watercolor ink. I’m also playing around with acrylic ink and gouache, so more to come!

I hope you are all well during this wild time and that you and your family are healthy. Best wishes from me!

Snowed in and loving it

We’ve been snowed in to the point where the pantry is starting to get a bit bare, but I’ve been loving the excuse to hole up and paint in the studio. It’s pretty funny to me that I’m surrounded by white and the theme for this post is definitely GREEN, especially since I’m not sick of the snow yet. I still have a whole bunch of snow paintings to do!

This is a recently finished house portrait that will be a Valentine’s Day gift to a husband who loves fall.

This is a recently finished house portrait that will be a Valentine’s Day gift to a husband who loves fall.

This house portrait was commissioned by a loving daughter as a Christmas present to her parents!

This house portrait was commissioned by a loving daughter as a Christmas present to her parents!

My version of the Madonna and Child Stain Glass Christmas Display that used to hang on the Macy’s Building. I’m glad they managed to get it out of storage this year, but wish that it was a bit more centrally displayed. It ended up on an apartment bu…

My version of the Madonna and Child Stain Glass Christmas Display that used to hang on the Macy’s Building. I’m glad they managed to get it out of storage this year, but wish that it was a bit more centrally displayed. It ended up on an apartment building near our Lady of Lourdes. I initially tried to capture the color of the brick wall it is hung on, but I didn’t like how it came out (too dark and muddy for these brilliant colors!), so I cut out the stain glass design and I was so amused by the arch shape, I nearly left it like this.

But, a small arch shape is a bit odd and difficult to display (though perhaps I could think about mounting it on a custom wood panel!), so I glued it down onto a sheet that I painted lime green, drawn from the stain glass itself and to emphasis the …

But, a small arch shape is a bit odd and difficult to display (though perhaps I could think about mounting it on a custom wood panel!), so I glued it down onto a sheet that I painted lime green, drawn from the stain glass itself and to emphasis the brilliant and glowing colors of the stain glass.

This month my column in the Spokane Coeur D’Alene Living Magazine is focused on a painting of the Coeur D’Alene Resort on a beautiful summer day.

This month my column in the Spokane Coeur D’Alene Living Magazine is focused on a painting of the Coeur D’Alene Resort on a beautiful summer day.

How are you all doing? Enjoying the snow or bemoaning it? My goal this winter is to go snow shoeing in my yard (We’ve got about 10 acres.) and try painting plein air without freezing my fingers off. We’ll see if I manage to achieve it!

Happy Holidays, Best Wishes from Me!

Merry Christmas, Happy Hannukah, and all best wishes for you in this holiday season! Here are some of my favorite things to do this time of year.

Admire snow. Preferably in a warm jacket with a warm beverage. Or even better, from inside.

Admire snow. Preferably in a warm jacket with a warm beverage. Or even better, from inside.

Go to the Davenport and admire their Christmas decorations and hopefully catch some live Christmas music.

Go to the Davenport and admire their Christmas decorations and hopefully catch some live Christmas music.

Visit Manito Park to see the Gaiser Conservatory Lights. I recommend a week day if you don’t want to wait outside in the cold. Maybe a hot cocoa at Rockwood Bakery to go?

Visit Manito Park to see the Gaiser Conservatory Lights. I recommend a week day if you don’t want to wait outside in the cold. Maybe a hot cocoa at Rockwood Bakery to go?

Wheatland Bank does free carriage rides in downtown Spokane for some old fashioned fun. I love seeing horses on the streets of downtown Spokane and hearing the jingling bells as they clop-clop by!

Wheatland Bank does free carriage rides in downtown Spokane for some old fashioned fun. I love seeing horses on the streets of downtown Spokane and hearing the jingling bells as they clop-clop by!

Whatever you’re doing, I hope it is lovely and I’ll see you in the new year! Here’s to another year of adventures! Thanks for coming along with me and for all your kind comments and support. I really appreciate it!