Showing posts with label central texas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label central texas. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

April Flowers

Last week I went for a walk after work, and on a whim I decided to take a picture of every flower I could find. Unsurprisingly, I ran out of daylight before I ran out of flowers. But then again I like the tiny, barely noticed flowers too, and there are tons of those. So here are some of the flowers I found that evening,  mostly identified.
Something Labiatae
Straggler Daisy. All over the place, once you start looking for it, but not very pretty.
Pink Evening Primrose
Prairie Verbena

Celestials... I walked by these first, and on the way back they were already wilting away.
Fluttermill
teeny, tiny flowers, less than 1 mm each.
Crow Poison
Huisache, my favorite tree.
Still not sure what this is, I had never seen it before.
Might be Greenthread.
Maybe Yellow Flax, not really sure.
Some kind of Guara, ridiculously fragile flowers
... totally ugly, but actually a flower.
Vetch
Vervain
Prickly Poppy, with one deformed petal.
Maybe a Lazy Daisy.
Maybe a Lazy Daisy... and a nice grass flower.
itty bitty flower
Blue-Eyed Grass
Snapdragon Vine, looks like the Joker smiling to me.
Bluebonnet. A rather wimpy example of the state flower, but it is growing in a pretty terrible spot.
I'm guessing "Slender Stem Bitterweed".

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Working on This Weekend-3/16/15

I got a lot of painting done this weekend, and started a few new pieces too. Mostly I was trying to avoid working on the deer skull, it's at a tedious place, working on the background. So I started a few new things on Saturday and worked mostly on the deer skull on Sunday.
Horse drawing with Copic pen, 5x7 on Bristol paper, unfinished.
Little drawing of a horse I started a while ago and worked on a bit this week.
AZ Aspen, 9x12, oil on canvas panel, unfinished.
This will be a painting of an aspen with yellow leaves, from northern Arizona last fall.  The sky was such a deep blue that day, and I think I got pretty close to the right color. I tried a few colors from Williamsburg oil paints, and their Sevres Blue has been very useful, especially for skies, because it lightens dark blues without looking washed out.
Kinishba Ruins, 11x14 in, oil on canvas panel, not quite started yet.
Another picture I took on my last trip to Arizona, at the Fort Apache Indian Reservation. These are the Kinishba Ruins, a Mogollon and Anasazi great house site from the 1200s, that are sadly in pretty bad shape. The ruins have been partially restored a few times, some walls propped up and such, but still need a lot of work. I just picked the colors here, and tok some notes. I need to lay out a drawing on the panel before I start painting, since there's a few things that will look wrong if I'm not careful about drawing them.
Texas Spring Flowers, oil on panel, 8x10 inches, unfinished.
This will be a little spring wildflower painting, from a picture my mom took a few years ago. I used a panel by a brand I'd never tried before and the surface was very slippery. So I just tried to get a first layer down to add some tooth, hopefully adding the next paint layer will be easier.
Winter Deer Skull, oil on panel, unfinished.
The deer skull picture slowly continues, I'm working on the background right now. About the bottom two-thirds have a dark layer done, and I'll finish the top third, then add the highlight and bright grasses on top. I think there will be a lot of adjusting lights vs. darks once the background is closer to done, to keep it from competing with the skull too much.

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Three Pink Roses

Here's the finished painting of pink roses from the San Antonio Botanical Gardens, in front of the Auld House. The Auld house is a historic farm house built in the 1880's that was donated to the San Antonio Botanical Garden, it was moved from the original location and rebuilt in the garden. 
Three Pink Roses, oil on panel, 8x10 inches, finished,
Three Pink Roses, detail, oil on panel, 8x10 inches, finished,
Three Pink Roses, detail, oil on panel, 8x10 inches, finished,
Three Pink Roses, progression, oil on panel, 8x10 inches, finished,
For sale here: https://www.etsy.com/listing/224530506/three-pink-roses-original-oil-painting?

Monday, September 1, 2014

Working on This Weekend-9/1/2014

Finally done with the big Hill Country painting I've been working on for months now, you can see it here on it's own blog: http://hillcountrypainting.blogspot.com/. So now I have a ton of other paintings and drawings to get back into.
Little 5x7 paintings, all unfinished, one is a picture my mom took in Arizona, one is of some tiny seashells from Port Aransas, and blue bonnets from a family reunion a few springs ago. 
Color sketch, practice before I start the bigger painting.
Some pretty pink roses from the San Antonio Botanical Garden, this is the pencil drawing I'll paint over.
My very messy desk.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Little White Flower

 I found this little flower at a family reunion during March in central Texas, a few years ago. For the longest time I couldn't easily identify it, because it wasn't in the few books I have for Texas wildflowers. But after giving up on books and after poking around on the internet for a bit I realized that was because I was looking for a white flower, and Anemones are usually purple. This is a windflower, an Anemone berlandieri, and they can be white, blue, purple, pink, or greenish. And those parts that look like petals are actually sepals. And its poisonous. Tricky little flowers. Almost as tricky as this painting turned out to be.

This is an oil painting on a 5x7 inch Claybord. I came across two issues with this painting:
 1. Dull, sunken areas in the background
2. Places where the paint flat out wouldn't stick to the board. It never really dried, and just wiped right off. 
Anemone, unfinished, first layer.
Normally the first layer painted on a Claybord is a mess, you can't blend it because the board just sucks it right up as soon as it touches the board. I put up with that because you can scrape back to bright white without scraping through the gesso and ruining the painting, and that's pretty useful for some pictures.
Even after the first few layers of this one though the paint was dull and dry looking=Problem #1. But this wasn't too hard to deal with, it just needed an "oiling out". That means brushing on a good covering of Linseed oil (or whatever medium you're using), let it sit a minute or two, and then wipe off with a lint-free cloth. All the paint has to be totally dry before this, or else it will smear and make a mess. But after an oiling out the paint will be evenly shiny all over and your layers will adhere to each other better. And if an area of paint has enough oil, the stuff you brush on will just bead up on top, not soak in, and wipe right off. You can paint right after that if you want, or let it dry a few days.
Anemone, unfinished, second layer on background, flower untouched. 
The second problem was one that I hadn't run into before. I covered the flower petals in Titanium white and left it to dry a few days (or weeks, who knows, I wander off sometimes...) When I went to check if the paint was dry, it came off on my finger tip like powder.
Anemone, shiny white areas are where paint peeled off the panel.
You can see the shiny areas where the paint rubbed right off and the panel shows through. It seems like the panel pulled all of the oil right out of the paint and the pigment was left sitting on top with no binder to hold it together. The Titanium White I use has walnut oil as the binder, because it yellows less than linseed oil. Maybe that combo reacted badly with the board, who knows. The solution to Problem #2 was the same as the solution to Problem #1= Oiling out. I saturated the flower area with linseed oil twice, then tried another layer of paint. (Probably should have used an oil that will yellow less, but I didn't feel like going to buy anything) That layer stuck, dried out, and seemed to work fine.
Anemone, finished, oil painting on a 5x7 Claybord. 
Anemone, finished,  with the paint from the last session on the palette.
Definitely an annoying learning experience, but a nice painting at the end. I probably won't sell it for a few years, just to make sure the paint doesn't decide to fall off again. 

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Enchanted Rock

I was lucky to spend the last weekend camping at Enchanted Rock. E rock is a huge, pink, granite mountain in central Texas. The outer layers of the rock slowly exfoliate and slide off, leaving giant boulders everywhere, and they're really fun to climb on. The environment is pretty brutal for most of the year, scorching heat and drought every summer, especially last year. Wildflowers here only have a few weeks of the year to get their business done, and this was the middle of the wet season, so the flowers were incredible.
Blue Bonnets on the Loop Trail. Enchanted Rock, Texas, March 2012.


 Exfoliation on Enchanted Rock, with people on top.

 Enchanted Rock, Texas, March 2012.

 Green as it ever gets. Enchanted Rock, Texas, March 2012.

False day flower, Commelineaceae family.

 Strawberry cactus flowers.

Lupinus texensis, Blue Bonnet, State flower of Texas.

Mystery flower.

Argemone mexicana, Prickly Poppy. 
Argemone mexicana, Prickly Poppy.