Taking Time to Watch the Geese…and Draw Them!

No Gravatar

Goose and Goslings by Kimberly Eddy

Sometimes I wonder what someone from the 19th century (or earlier) would think of our modern day claims of ” too busy” or “not enough time”. I am guilty of it too. I never seem to have enough time, despite having so many time saving conveniences available to me today.

One cure for feeling overly busy is to just take the time to stop, smell the roses, look at the geese…and then draw them.

The other day, we were super busy with a few errands, but my daughter was lamenting that we hadn’t been to a certain park in a while, where wild roses grow, and where beautiful geese are everywhere. I realized that part of why I have no time is because I need to make the time for some things, like going to the park. We got out of the car, a light rain was just starting (not enough to get us soaked, but enough to be refreshing on a hot day). The geese were out and walking around.

“Why are the geese out even when it’s raining?” my daughter asked.

“Hmmm. Why do you think? What are they doing?” I answered with a question. I wanted to see if she could figure it out.

“They’re eating. Oh! I know! The worms come out when it’s raining like this!”

“Right! Exactly.”

We watched them for a while, enjoying all of it. Then we went in the car once the rain picked up, and sketched them for a little bit.

Time well spent!

Gesture Drawing: Birds

No Gravatar

Welcome to the Weekly Art Action for the week of May 24th!

These art actions are designed to give you something specific to do, related to drawing or nature journalling, to help you build and practice your skills, or maybe learn a new skill along the way.

This week’s art action assignment is to do some gesture drawings of birds you see. These can be birds flying, or birds on an electrical wire, or at the feeder. You can use whatever media you want to use to do this. Birds have a fairly simple shape, and don’t sit still too long, so they are great for practicing our gesture sketching techniques.

Supplies

Any kind of paper will work, like a sketchbook or notepad.

A pencil, or some kind crayon or some kind of woodless pencil, such as what I used: Prismacolor Art Stix . The idea is to draw loosely and to draw large, and a pencil may make it too tempting to draw tightly and to erase.

How do I do it?

Follow the instructions in the gesture drawing lesson I did several months ago here.

Try to draw as quickly as you can, getting as much of the shape, basic shading, and other basic information down on paper as quickly as possible. The idea behind a gesture drawing is so that you can go back and use it to make a more complete drawing later. You are only getting as much down as quickly as possible before the subject flies away! Gesture drawings are important when sketching in nature because nature often doesn’t sit still for long.

Keep it loose, work fast, and have fun!

Going Forward

This is a fun activity to do any time. For example, a few weeks ago, I had to wait in the parking lot for someone, and saw tons of sea gulls flying around overhead. All I had with me was one prismacolor black art stix, because I had used it in the first grade art class I taught earlier that day (I like how dark and bold the lines are, when teaching first graders how to draw simple contours). I sketched these black colored sea gulls as they sat on the lines overhead and flew around, hoping someone would throw them some food, no doubt.

A page of sketches I did in my car of birds in a parking lot, mostly sea gulls

A detail of sea gulls flying overhead, in prismacolor art stix (black)

A detail of the smaller birds (nuthatches, I believe) on the wire overhead

Share

If you’ve done this lesson, and you’d like to share your results, just post a link to your photo in the comments section. (This is family friendly, so please keep it PG, or it will be deleted! Thanks!) If you don’t have a website or blog of your own, you could upload it to a site like Flickr.com and share with us that way.

The Bird’s Nest

No Gravatar

The other day, my 11 year old daughter came to me, very excited. She said there was a bird’s nest right outside the window. My first thought was that this was not a good thing, because of our cats. Why would a bird build a nest on our porch near a window when we have cats that sit in the window and on the porch all the time? Then I looked where she pointed and discovered that the nest was actually sitting on top of a flower pot I have hanging on the wall. For this sketch I drew the flower pot sitting on the deck, because otherwise it looked like it was floating in the air, and looked a little odd! :-)

The nest was so high up, we couldn’t see into it, so I took a picture with a digital video camera, to see what was going on. Inside I could see one light blue speckled egg. Later, the momma bird came back.

After a little bit of investigation, we discovered our little friends are a family of House Sparrows. You can find out more about House Sparrows here.

Stay Tuned for updates as “our” egg hatches. We’re looking forward to it.

Bird Nest

Bird Nest sketched with Conte Pencils

The First Robin

No Gravatar

The First Robin of Spring

This time of year is a time of “firsts”…it seems as we start getting tired of winter, and longing for spring, every sign of spring showing up around me is something we celebrate. Last week, we saw the very first Robin of the year, which I sketched here (in marker and conte crayon).

Turkey Studies

No Gravatar

A friend raises turkeys and chickens for meat, and we paid her a visit while picking out our Christmas Turkey. This one tom was standing off on his own, looking proud and determined. I snapped a quick photo of the beautiful bird, and later created this sketch with my trusted Sharpie marker and water color pencils.

Christmas Turkey

Sketched with pencil, Sharpie Marker, and Water Color Pencils

I further broke this bird down, sketching him over and over again, until I came up with an ultra-simplified version to teach to my first grade art class, which I teach once a week. The simplified version looks more cartoonish, as I broke down the individual characteristics of the turkey.

Simplified Turkey Sketches

Breaking down the Turkey for 1st Graders, using Sharpie, Water Color markers, and Pencil

I wound up changing the drawing at the last minute for the class, using our hands to trace the simple form, and adding details from there. Here’s some pictures of actual student work:

One student drawing, with water color pencils

Another student drawing, with water color pencils. You have to love neon pink turkeys :-)

These drawings are from one boy student and one girl student. I’ll let you guess which one drew which! I showed them how to get the basic form of a turkey down on paper, but after that, they added their own embellishments.

Bell Ringers and Bald Eagles: Sketching at the Mall

No Gravatar

Last weekend, I went out shopping one last time for the holidays (I hope), and as usual, I ran into at least a dozen people I know, including a friend and her daughter. The daughter liked to draw and they were shopping for art stuff to buy her for Christmas. She picked up a drawing studio set that had Conte crayons and pencils in it, and asked me what I thought. I liked using those in college, but really hadn’t used them in a while. I suddenly really wanted some Conte Crayons.

Conte crayons (or drawing sticks) are a really compressed chalk. They don’t disintegrate like pastels do, and they aren’t really waxy like oil pastels. They do make a mess on your hands, but not as messy as regular chalks. You usually blend them with something called a tortillian, which is a pencil-shaped piece of compressed cardboard material. Her set had a couple of these included.

While her mom did a little bit more secret shopping, I had a fun time sitting with her at the little cafeteria at a store. We broke open her set of Conte, and I gave her some quick lessons in it’s usage. We both did some fabulous drawings in a short amount of time. In her sketchbook, she already had a very light, simple pencil sketch of an eagle. We used that to add some color with the Conte, as you see below.

A bald eagle flying overhead near dusk

A Bald Eagle at Dusk using Conte Crayons and Pencil by Elizabeth

Eagles are really incredible to see first hand. Once, as I was walking in a field with my children, an enormous bald eagle swooped down and grabbed a rabbit about 20 feet in front of us. We were both awestruck and terrified at the sight of this magnificent creature. Until you’ve had one swoop near you, it’s hard to even describe how large they are, and how powerful they feel at such a close range.

Elizabeth originally snapped a photo as it flew overhead near her house, then did the light pencil contour (edges only) sketch of the magnificent bird. We did some quick web surfing on my cell phone to see what colors a bald eagle is supposed to be, because her photo only gave us a silhouette view of the eagle. The lighting and angle at the time of the photograph really didn’t allow us much detail beyond the outline. That’s an issue with nature drawing. Nature doesn’t always stay still for you or pose for your photographs in ideal light. Thankfully, the internet can help us find additional pictures of the same subject in case we can’t see well enough from our photo or our memory to complete a drawing.

When you to color in a subject like a bald eagle, it’s important to study what your subject looks like carefully. Too many of us “know” in our minds that the bald eagle has a white head, and a dark brown-to-black body, but giving it a good color job is more complex than that. We only did a simple sketch, about 20 minutes tops, which was only enough to get the basics down, but we still wanted the basic colors of our bird to be fairly accurate. An eagle is not usually pure white on the head. I found with a subject like an eagle, you can get a more accurate color by putting down the shading first, then covering it with the white Conte pencil, and blending it with the tortillian. All we did for the shading is add some Pierre Noir Conte to the right edge of the eagle’s neck and head, and after we played around blending it until we got the effect we wanted. Sometimes we added a little more white to lighten it in some areas, and sometimes we added more black.

The eagle appeared to have something in it’s mouth but we didn’t have enough detail in her photograph to see what it was, and as a result the beak just seems off to me in hindsight, but I still like the way this drawing conveys the majesty of a Bald Eagle flying overhead.

I broke into sketching too, using the Conte in my sketchbook to draw one of my favorite sights and sounds at Christmas: the Salvation Army Bell Ringer. I always empty my pocket change into their kettle.

A Salvation Army Bell Ringer in Conte Crayon and Pencil by Kimberly

A Salvation Army Bell Ringer in Conte Crayon and Pencil by Kimberly

As I’ve said before, nature notebooking doesn’t have to be exclusively nature unless you want it to be. I tend to draw all things around me in my environment, including the Salvation Army Bell Ringer in front of the store we were in.

I started to draw this after she was asking how to draw something like brass. I showed Elizabeth how color from one object often reflects off of other objects, especially shiny ones. We may think in our minds, from our experiences, “Bells are Brass — grab the yellow or orange”, but it’s much more complex than that. For example, the bell ringer’s gloves were a leathery pink color, her scarf was red with some black threads, her coat was green, the kettle is red, the stand was a yellow enamel. All of these colors were bouncing off of that brass bell, in addition to the regular highlights from the light and the shadows too. Because the bell is round, and because I was only doing a semi-quick sketch (about 10-15 minutes), I wanted to emphasize the roundness of the bell by using lines that went in the direction of those curves. So, even when I added some black to the inside of the bell to give some shadows, I shaded in a curved line. After I added these colors, I blended it all together using a tortillian, using round strokes again to emphasize that the bell was round. I blended out a lot of the green, as it looked a little odd and out of place on the bell.

I think the fact that I cartoon came through in this picture, as it has a somewhat cartoonish feel to it. The bell ringer’s hand looks more like the hand of one of my cartoon characters, but again, we only were sitting there, sketching, for about 20 minutes at the most. I was still excited enough with our results to take some photos, and to put Conte Crayons on my Christmas list.

Nuthatch on the Maple Tree

No Gravatar

Today, a cute little nuthatch was walking up and down the maple tree, and I snapped a quick photo on my cell phone to sketch later.

Nuthatch

Nuthatch on our Maple Tree, in graphite pencil with water color pencil

You may be thinking I’m pretty smart to know what kind of bird I had on my tree. The fact is: I looked it up. We have amassed a selection of Peterson’s Field Guides over the years, including one for Eastern American birds. I looked up the features of the bird to discover what kind of bird I had. I not that together.