My Day So Far in Pictures

I got up early this AM, partially because I woke at 5am and couldn't fall back to sleep and partially because I knew it was going to be a nice day and partially because I felt like going for a walk.

First I came upon this:

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Then I noticed the sun glinting off this building:

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I wandered past the bottega:

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Then I saw this:

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Then I wandered through here:

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and I ended up here:

P8132000 I wandered up the street and saw this cement donkey pulling a cart, and was reminded of my Grandmother, not because of the donkey but because she had one of these things in her garden:

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I found this:

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Outside of here:

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Then I went to Atomic and got myself a nice iced chai, and it was good.

Flickr Find Friday: VicandWilliam

The title of this one is Austin Borders. I am pretty sad to see Borders go bankrupt. It was one of the first mega bookstores in the area where I went to college. I've met up with friends and dates in the cafe. I've spent hours studing and drinking coffee at the Bangor, Maine location.

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Anyway, Borders closing makes me sad, Vicandwilliam serves up a poignant journal page.

For what it's worth, I also frequented the local book shops in Bangor, ME. Lippencott and Bett's Books were 2 favorites of mine, I would frequently find great deals on used books in their shelves, I think I paid about $10 (in 1997 money) for a used copy of the Apocrypha. Does anyone remember the name of that place in the basement on a backstreet in Bangor, where the guy had every issue of PlayBoy in his used magazine sales rack? 

Camera Lunch

I've been getting up every morning this week 15 minutes early with the intention of going out with my camera to Cabot street to catch a few early AM empty street shots of a couple of buildings. Every AM this week I have woke to haze, fog and rain.  Plans thwarted! I do get in a good cup of coffee and then head to work. The sad part is that as I drive into the DayJob the skies part and I'm greated by some of the most epic and amazing sky scenes I've seen. I told a friend that the skies I saw on my way into work looked like an oil painting and damn it, I didn't have my camera and I was stuck in my car on I95. ARGH.

Today for lunch I took my camera out to the swamp and hoped to see the Great Blue Heron that snacks on frogs but he wasn't around so I got a few pictures of the swamp itself.

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I did see a very striking cardinal and wished I was close enough for a decent picture of him.

Traveling Around with a Camera in Tow

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I'm not used to carrying a camera with me, a journal and sketching tools, yes but the bulk of a camera is something new. Camera bags are… Ugly. I plan on adapting one of my bags to something a little less conspicuous. A camera is weighty, though I was shocked when I hefted my brother's girl friend's DSLR and found it weighed a LOT more than my little micro 4/3rds camera. It's lens alone weighs in at what my camera weighs.

Getting accustomed to carrying it everywhere is one thing, getting used to people looking at the camera with warriness, and on other occasions ignoring it entirely.

After using a point and shoot camera and adjusting minimal settings I'm not yet used to how I need to set things to get a decent shot. In some cases, like the night shot above, luck and taking 10 or so shots gets me one that works, mostly. Add to the mix the difference in macro and telephoto add ons and then filters, holy crap a whole new world has opened up to me.

A month ago if someone had said to me, put a polorizing filter on it and open it up half a stop, I'd have looked at them with a blank stare, now I'd kinda fidle with my camera and nod and pretend I totally get it when I only half get it.

The good thing with all this is I'm getting a ton of really really great reference photos for this winter, so you can hope to see some great acrylics on my blog. Also I'm art journaling about this whole process.

Technique Tuesday: Pause, Look, and Reflect

I’ve been a crappy blogger the last few weeks. I decided I wanted to slow down a bit over the last few weeks. I’ve been wandering about my city with my camera snapping some pictures. I should be back into art making mode this coming weekend as Jane and I find a place to do a little en plein air painting. Our last trip out was in 100+ degree heat and it left us both feeling like we were fighting the paint and thus our painting. Jane went back to her studio and worked on a little image and I delved further into my camera.

I was an artist who poo-poo’d on photography thinking it a gear head type of endeavor. This summer I decided to invest in a micro 4/3rds camera and really start to take more photos as starting points for my winter paintings. I’ve found myself really enjoying the basics of photography. In no way am I embracing the gear headedness of photography. Instead I’m focusing on getting the most out of my camera and taking pictures of places I really like around my city.

The point of this post is to push myself to really push the limits of myself and to try and capture some spots I know, and love with the lens, with no pressure to create art right now, but to look and see, frame an image and snap a picture.

So I leave you with a few shots.

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Flickr Find Friday: FakeGlue

Another journal page that resonates with my style of journaling: Collage, sketch then add a dash of color. LOVE IT. When I add the ephemera from my daily life to myjournal I'm recording my events not the events of some big company churning out what they THINK I may want to record. Nah, that ticket fromt he raffle I didn't win records the dissapointment of loosing.

Anyway FakeGlue does a great job of that with this spread.

 

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Technique Tuesday: Grunge Glaze

Last week I mentioned distressing and grunging a journal color wiht my grunge glaze,  so this week I’m going to tell you about my mix for what I call “Grunge Glaze.” It’s a special blend of colors to give me a perfectly abused and dirty look to any page. Here’s the  recipe:

  • 1 part Carbon Black
  • 1 part Burnt Sienna (Red Oxide would work too)
  • 1 dash Burnt Umber (this can be skipped or another color added to warm or cool the mix)
  • 2 parts gloss gel medium (add more if you want more transparency.) Use glaze medium if you want a fluid grunge glaze. I like my glazes thick so that I can have brush strokes show up as thicker layers of color.
  • 1 dash retarder (skip if you want it to dry fast, add more if you want it to dry more slowly.)
  • Put all of this in a jar with a lid and mix well. Adjust as needed.

I spread this on with a rag and rub it in and off as I want a heavier or lighter coat. It dries pretty quickly so I can layer it easily. A spritz of water before fully dried allows you to lift more off than with a dry rag.

Go forth and make glaze mixes and call them fun things.

I know I've harped on this time and time again (as far back as my participation in 21 Secrets) but you don't need to buy those premixed glazes. You can mix your own. This is just one example of a glaze you can mix with gel medium or glaze medium. Share recipes in the comments!

Supplies for travel

Often times when I take a weekend trip I take all kinds of supplies, telling myself, “I’ll use this, this, and oh I should add that to my pack.” In the end I use little of what I brought. I’m taking a weekend trip pretty soon and while I pack my things I’m being a little more deliberate about what I pack. I’m packing my new gum tin watercolor set, along with one of my mini mint tin sets full of intense colors for a little added punch when absolutely needed.  I’m taking 1 regular brush (#6 round,) a couple of water brushes, a small assortment of drawing tools, my sketchbook, a watercolor sketchbook and a 40 ounce water bottle. To round this out I’m taking my fancy pants camera and my point and shoot.

Added to my travel bag will be my journal, laptop and my pogo printer.

In the past I strayed toward over packing art supplies. I’d leave my house with a pack full of acrylics, pastels, pencils, watercolors, and everything else; only to find that I was never able to find the time to use any of it. My choices were so overwhelming I’d not make any art.

In the end the most important thing is capturing those moments that are of interest. I suppose I should take what can capture things quickly and easily and forget the rest.