A beautiful way to end a beautiful day at the beach.
Textures from the ground
Here are some textures I have come across while walking or standing.
Some ideas come from . . .
I got the inspiration for this one from the movie "Attack of the 50 Foot Woman”
Although it appeared to be, it wasn't really an attack of the 50-ft. cow.
Wood, acrylic paint, laser cut MDF, bottle cap
Walkways No. 06
I just started this one a couple of days ago but I don't know just how it's going to turn out so stay tuned. I even have a subtitle for it already.
Street Map?
This one reminds me of a street map and that may be where I got the idea from. Created with Infinite Painter on a. Galaxy tablet. It is different than most of my other digital work and is one of my favorites.
Untitled | 1500 x 2000 px
Walkways No. 05: Progress
Someone's gloves discarded or accidentally dropped and left on a sidewalk near where we live.
Usually Painter doesn't crash. However I experienced more times when Painter crashed while working on this one than any other project I have worked or am currently working on. It crashed dozens of times. Most of the crashes occurred when I was using the Fill tool on areas of the purple gray sidewalk. Fortunately I didn't loose the project and have to start over.
Point Buchon Trail No. 03 Progress
Here is another Point Buchon Trail painting. It is actually the first in the series with this title.
This progress sequence shows how I start a painting by drawing thin black outlines to define shapes. Sometimes I draw the shapes freehand without stabilizing tools with the Castell brush. This time I used the Lines & Lazy tools with the Castell brush.
After I fill the shapes with preliminary colors I trace over the black outlines of each shape with its own color without being too neat using the Old Inker brush and no stabilizing tools. I then begin to change colors and add more detail. I like to use a low tolerance setting of any where between 5--2 and sometimes as low as 1 on the fill tool.
Recycled floating apparitions of doubt.
This is one of my favorite pieces and I had a lot of fun coming up with the idea for it and working on it. This is one of those where the idea and title for it came quickly and I didn’t over think it.
Wood, acrylic paint, laminated paper, string
11.75 x 11.5 x 3.5 inches
(30 x 29 x 9 cm)
June 2018
Cayucos Coastal No. 09 Progress
This is the first painting I have attempted of under the Cayucos Pier.
The making of "They spent the whole time kyoodling over leftovers."
Wood, acrylic paint, cloth, nails, laminated paper, graphite
17 x 12 x 2.5 inches (43 x 30 x 6 cm)
September 2018
I used paint transfer for the text textures on the cactus and tiny house. I heavy brown paper cutouts of the dog hand shadows glued together with wood glue to make stiff shapes about 1mm thick for the cactus hands.
Making a hardwood floor
Here is a progression of pictures showing how I created a hard wood floor for a work with a tall chair and a tall stack of cakes.
To create the floor I used craft sticks with the rounded ends trimmed which were then glued to a piece of MDF board. I also use these same craft sticks to stir and mix paint.
I then painted the surface with black paint making sure to work paint into the crevasses between the planks.
After the paint was dry I sanded the surface leaving a little bit of paint for visual texture.
The final image shows the finished work with the floor in place.
Some Small Studies Project Favorites
There are a few of many favorites from the Small Studies Project. Water-soluble crayons and graphite were used on 5 x 7-inch sheets of Bristol paper back in 2012-13.
Experiment on paper
There’s no wood in this one. Just playing around. I don’t even know what happened to this.
Untitled | Acrylic paint, pasted paper on paper, graphite
Walkways No. 04: Progress
This is the walk in front of condo building 3 where we live on a winter's day, 2022. I’m posting this one before I finish it and will add more pictures of it’s progress.
Behind the yellow line concept
I was standing on the platform—behind the yellow line—looking at the wall across the tracks waiting for the train to come when the idea for a piece about standing behind the yellow line near the edge of the platform. This is the first concept. I have since created several stand behind the yellow line acrylic paintings on panels. I can’t remember whether I used Sketchbook Pro or Infinite Painter to render this.
Walkways No. 03 Progress
Here is another Walkways painting. I wanted to do somthing with the steps to make them not so real. I decided to exaggerate the otherwise brown cardboard box by giving it a yellow color.
Not a real storm. It just might look like it.
I based a small painting on one of the drawings in the Small Studies Project. Here is how it turned out.
From the Small Studies Project drawing 92 | Graphite and Lyra Water-soluble crayon on 5 x 7-inch Bristol Paper | 2012
Small Studies Painting 92 | Acrylic and paper on wood panel | 4.5 x 4.5 x 1.75 inches (11 x 11 x 4.5 cm) | 2020
One for October
I did this abstract Jack-o-lantern a few years ago just for fun. And I don't like Halloween.
Walkways No. 02 Progress
Another in the Walkways series of digital paintings shown here in progression. This one is based on a photo I took down the street from where we live. Winter was attempting to make way for Spring when the picture was taken.
Devices: Galaxy S22 Ultra mobile phone, Galaxy Tab S7 tablet | Apps: Infinite Painter 7, LitPhoto for resizing images
Some ideas come from . . .
I got the idea for this one from a book about Jackson Pollock in my personal library.
She walked as if in a dream grazing for pasture land treats on her way to visit JP. | Wood, acrylic paint, paper, sandpaper, nails, fingernail polish | 9 x 17 x 2.5 inches (23 x 43 x 6.35 cm) | June 2022
Detail with nail heads coated with nail polish.
This photo by Cecil Beaton for Vogue 1951 gave me the idea.