Saturday, August 30, 2025

Gardening, Canning, and Self-Analyzing my Art.

Ad-Free Blog

Well, I'm on my 10th day of Covid, I'm negative now, but still YUGGY!

Poor Hubby is hacking away and still +...all our big plans have been cancelled for two weekends, and we are going to have the Fish Boil next week if everyone tests negative.

oldnewgreenredo

I have been in the garden this week. I did an 8 pint jars batch of Sauce; Hot peppers, garlic, onions, peppers and tomatoes...with lemon juice and salt. 

oldnewgreenredo

Tomatoes taste fabulous this year, but they are just small and dense...crazy hot weather made everything stop producing for weeks. I didn't skin them, but blended the sauce with my creamer/blender.

We've had tons of rain, so every plant, bush, and flower is huge, but the veggie blossoms were too wet to be pollinated. Pickles are now drying up with crazy shaped weird cucumbers still on the vine. I never even did any fresh pickles made.

 The Crookneck bumpy Squash has been prolific and tasty. Last night we had small ones hollowed out and loaded with chopped Zucchini and squash seasoned and tossed with oil and Balsamic and roasted in the toaster/airfryer. NUM! I use salt free seasoning mixes and just a splash of Balsamic vinegar.

oldnewgreenredo

Zucchinis of course are not there one day and then submarines the next. I don't think we will get any Beets, Chard or Carrots unless the large planters produce...it's so thick in there with squash leaves, who knows. Surprisingly the 'Broccoli has been good even with the heat. 

So much for vegetable gardening. 

Hubby has projects going (left for over a week) painting the back deck a dark forest green to give it a couple of more years of life. We will be doing paving stones professionally in the future, and repairing this and that. He has a new wire fence wall for the East side(for critter proofing----LOL), sitting and waiting for the mesh.

I managed to get the porch finally cleaned and cleared with the cooler weather, but I only seem to be able to do a couple of hours of anything.

In the studio....well...I'm taking an additional 10-day class with Louise Fletcher...in finding your style, finding what you like-through exercises and some serious analyzing of what you accomplish in class or don't. 

Do you paint/draw for yourself?---or others? 

Do you give a single bit about what others think?

What do you like about your work? 

What do you Dislike?

She asks some tough questions, and since I have no intention of ever selling anything...I do it for myself...but ....do I????

I share with you, for validation or to share the experience? 

Questions, Questions, Questions????

The classes are  supplemented with Q&A sessions as well as a sharing work on an FB private group. Golly I'm amazed at how so many students have such SERIOUS ANGST about putting fricking lines on a paper....jeesh! Louise's entire emphasis is on PLAY to see what you like doing? Interestingly it was the blind self portraits that people were angsting about...looking in a mirror at your own reflection...really!

Anyway, What I have learned so far.

I'm finding out...I don't like black (I already knew that) and I don't like white paper showing(I really don't like that). I love line/color movement and some sort of balance or composition. I love COLORS--all kinds of color. I love working in more than one media at the same time. I really work fast....so fast I am done far ahead of the timed sessions end. Here's a peek at a one of the studies.

15 minuted each, a Limited palette to mix your own colors, realistic subject matter, I chose watercolors as my main medium. No. 3-4 we added another drawing mediums first...then paint.


oldnewgreenredo

oldnewgreenredo
My set up...with all the finished pieces. Each one was less than 15 minutes...except the last one was 14:50.

oldnewgreenredo

No. 1...I was too caught up in the patterned cloth...and watercolor mushes when you work too fast and runs into each other. I was using colors full strength and too much water...so the colors are fighting each other.

oldnewgreenredo

No.2 I worked in more simplified layers and got everything under control? I was compelled to paint blue/gray in the background...If I work on this further I will totally darken the background do a very dark shade.  I like the movement in the red cloth...the leaves are-Eh!

oldnewgreenredo

No. 3 We added an additional drawing medium here (I chose watercolor gel sticks...which was the turquoise and bright yellow)-t
(These sticks break down in water and I LOVE THEM!)
The pitcher/pot got some attention and some gray/black/white treatment. My last bit was the dark green lines here and there...I like the mixing of the green/brown which was the red, blue and yellow mixed together. I actually left the white background...but, so want to paint it brown...lol.

oldnewgreenredo

No. 4 Well by now I felt I had explored the horizontal, so I flipped the paper vertical.
The pot was worked/clarified with water color pencil and the wc gel sticks are the base of the leaves. I am happy with the stoneware/white glaze on the pot and actually left some paper white. I like the leaves in this one, using the red/green to create the brownish tones...bits of the dark green surfaced here also, and I would use more of that if I had time. This one was right down to the end of the 15 minute limit. I also like the red balance on this one...amazing how a color can take over a piece, and here the red doesn't.

MOST IMPORTANT...I'm learning to STOP when I am done, or satisfied....and not having to ponder on what to do next. Setting a piece aside and then going on to the next idea...on another paper. I think I will work everything in a series now, exploring what works and what doesn't. I'm still analyzing all my other class work with Louise, we have quite few projects yet to go. So that will be later...

Besides all the analyzing today, I used up a bunch of scraps and paper samples, cards, cardstock, printer paper, various papers ripped from sketchbooks, some with marks or splaxhes  and Aged/Altered them from techniques from Graphics Fairy in her Aging Papers series.  She really does share so much, I know she has a paid subscription, but I have been following her freebies for probably 10 years...and what a trip it's been. 




The finished papers with the warm tones and neutrals with greens will be perfect for Fall projects. The Papers have coffee washes, washes made from Pthalo Green, black, Cadmium Yellow Deep, Pthalo Blue, Lemon Yellow Lt, splatters and lots of energy. I can't wait to use them in Collages and Drawings. 

I think once a week, I will just paint pieces for chopping up...for other works. Great way to utilize...mistakes, messes, and odd bits of papers. 

Well, that's it for today...Have a great holiday weekend, we are in quarrantine...so who knows what else will get done. New Mantra

Please Paint for Yourself!

All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own unless identified, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions, posts or any products shown.  






10 comments:

  1. The sauces look amazing, how nice that they come from your garden.
    Amalia
    xo

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Usually I have about 30 quarts of tomatoes put up by now...not this year. But thanks, and long slow cooking is the secret! Sandi

      Delete
  2. Sorry about the c@vid! Looks like it didn't keep you too down. Fun vid!!! Great colors in your paintings!!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well, being stuck at home helped...and sitting painting is far less taxing then house or garden work...but I'm so far behind. Thanks for visiting! Sandi

      Delete
  3. Great advice Sandi, paint for yourself! I hope you both recover and can have your fish boil~
    Jenna

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We are shooting for this weekend depending...hubby has a secondary sinus infection now, but we are both negative now. Thanks for visiting! Sandi

      Delete
  4. I don’t think there’s anything more joyful or meaningful than tending your own garden and creating whatever your heart longs for. Funny how it takes getting older to realize that the simplest things are often the most valuable. I just wish I had understood that a little sooner.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, golly such a life's lesson. I was fortunate I worked at home and for my own pottery business. You do learn to appreciate the small things...and gardens are a pain and a savior both. Thanks for visiting, Sandi

      Delete
  5. It's really fun to read your analysis and look at the paintings, which are terrific. I love working in colors, too, though monochrome and b/w is a good challenge for me. I think being self critical is key for art -- acknowledging the good and the "what we'd do differently." And yes, knowing when to stop! Ten days of Covid? I hope it's over by now. I'm so sorry.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, Jeanie. I try to not analyze if it is good...but what I'm learning from it. It's great when something unexpected happens and you smile to yourself...that's the best. Covid, I'm clear now but not 100%, hubby is negative now, but with a secondary sinus infection,...it was just hanging on for ever. Now he will start the anti-biotics...nothing to mess with apparently. This course was the best, but, I'm way behind on everything else, so I'll have to step away for a bit. Grins, thanks for visiting, Sandi

      Delete

Thank you for any and all comments. I will be happy to answer any questions or comments in replies or email! HUGS!