While visiting my grandmother earlier this month, I took a bike ride to the Los Osos Oaks State Natural Reserve. I'm already a fan of oak trees, but this particular spot simply knocked my socks off--gorgeous grizzled coast live oaks that are estimated to be around 800 years old, and have a ton of character and expression in their branches.
There were so many amazing shapes to explore that I quickly realized it would be good to fill my sketchbook with little thumbnail sketches, to catch as many snippets as possible while I wandered around. In the margins around each mini-sketch, I've got notes on wildlife--lizard behavior, transcriptions of unfamiliar birdsong, etc. (Click on the image to get a zoomed-in version.)
Showing posts with label lupine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lupine. Show all posts
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Wildflower Season
Mount Pisgah Arboretum invited me to do the poster art for their Wildflower Festival again this year. The event, which is scheduled for May 20, 2012, is always a delightful one--great music, great food, great people, and hundreds and hundreds of local wildflowers with botanists galore to tell you all about them.
The featured flower on the poster this year is the riverine lupine, Lupinus rivularis. Since I am such a fan of talking about sketching as a process, here are some of hidden, early layers in the Photoshop file that show me doodling rough shapes and colors before settling in on the final arrangement.
Similarly, the yellow-rumped warbler went through a lot of different poses and refinements before it ended up in its final state.
Keep your eyes open; volunteers will be putting posters up all over the Eugene/Springfield area soon!
More posts about creating posters for festivals at Mount Pisgah Arboretum:
The featured flower on the poster this year is the riverine lupine, Lupinus rivularis. Since I am such a fan of talking about sketching as a process, here are some of hidden, early layers in the Photoshop file that show me doodling rough shapes and colors before settling in on the final arrangement.
Similarly, the yellow-rumped warbler went through a lot of different poses and refinements before it ended up in its final state.
Keep your eyes open; volunteers will be putting posters up all over the Eugene/Springfield area soon!
More posts about creating posters for festivals at Mount Pisgah Arboretum:
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