A previous owner of our home planted these beautiful Surprise Lilies. At least, I've always called them Surprise Lilies. I've also seen them called Resurrection Lilies, and Magic Lilies. Gardeners have always had regionally popular names for some flowers. This is why scientific names, in this case, Lycoris squamigera, are important. In any case, the foliage is long gone on these plants. For weeks now, I've had a withered brown mess of dead leaves. But I knew what was coming.
They smell lovely, and the colors are stunning! This morning, it was 69 degrees, so I was out taking pictures and enjoying the cool weather.
Close up...
These lovely flowers hail from Japan. They are in the amaryllis family, one of my long-time favorites.
Aren't they beautiful? And the young buds have a deeper color. The artist in me is mulling over what colors of paint would mix to produce this deep rosy-lavender. Quinacridone rose? Ultramarine violet? Permanent mauve?
More young flowers...
The only creature that didn't seem to appreciate the cooler temperatures was this bee on some goldenrod in the garden bed. It was moving very slowly.
I'm going to be doing some work on this blog over the next few weeks. I'm planning to highlight more plants and flowers, as I transition back to nature writing. I'll still be visiting art topics, and that will continue to have a botany and nature focus, as always. Thank you for visiting!
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Monday, August 8, 2016
Thursday, March 31, 2016
Stretching
Today was the kind of cold, rainy, grey day that forces you to stay indoors, even if you are anxious to go outside.
Fortunately, as the days get longer, my indoor plants are responding with flowers.
For a while now, I have been trying to decide how to move forward with sharing more of my drawings. Pencil drawing comes naturally to me. When I pick up a pencil, I am not thinking about how the tip will respond on the paper, or how the line will look. I just know... from many years of practice.
But pencil is difficult to reproduce. If I want to share natural history drawings, pen is a much better choice, even though I think the look of pencil is more lifelike.
So I've been playing around with pen drawings. I am stretching into territory I don't want to enter, really. But art that is real involves some risk. Sometimes you have to just try it.
Today, stuck inside, I picked up the Lamy pen that has been giving me headaches. I have been struggling with it, wishing I had a technical pen (which is on my list to try next, because I think it will be much more suited to my style!). The problem is not with the pen. It is with my tendency to press hard on the nib... with predictably disastrous results when you are discussing fountain pens! But today, somehow, I managed to lighten up a bit. I even managed to get a blind contour drawing of my African Violets done without feeling as though I had unleashed a squid full of ink at the paper.
I'm using a very dark brown ink by Sailor in the pen. I still don't care for stark black; my eyes rebel while I am drawing if I use that on white paper. Interestingly, when I spilled a bit of this ink, the color was bluish black. The stains on my fingers were black. But the ink is definitely a dark brown, a sepia to be more precise.
It is water-soluble, so I have more options to explore.
All in all, not a bad rainy day project. And I am still exploring reductive drawing, and enjoying it very much. More on that to come.
Fortunately, as the days get longer, my indoor plants are responding with flowers.
For a while now, I have been trying to decide how to move forward with sharing more of my drawings. Pencil drawing comes naturally to me. When I pick up a pencil, I am not thinking about how the tip will respond on the paper, or how the line will look. I just know... from many years of practice.
But pencil is difficult to reproduce. If I want to share natural history drawings, pen is a much better choice, even though I think the look of pencil is more lifelike.
So I've been playing around with pen drawings. I am stretching into territory I don't want to enter, really. But art that is real involves some risk. Sometimes you have to just try it.
Today, stuck inside, I picked up the Lamy pen that has been giving me headaches. I have been struggling with it, wishing I had a technical pen (which is on my list to try next, because I think it will be much more suited to my style!). The problem is not with the pen. It is with my tendency to press hard on the nib... with predictably disastrous results when you are discussing fountain pens! But today, somehow, I managed to lighten up a bit. I even managed to get a blind contour drawing of my African Violets done without feeling as though I had unleashed a squid full of ink at the paper.
I'm using a very dark brown ink by Sailor in the pen. I still don't care for stark black; my eyes rebel while I am drawing if I use that on white paper. Interestingly, when I spilled a bit of this ink, the color was bluish black. The stains on my fingers were black. But the ink is definitely a dark brown, a sepia to be more precise.
It is water-soluble, so I have more options to explore.
All in all, not a bad rainy day project. And I am still exploring reductive drawing, and enjoying it very much. More on that to come.
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
More African violets
More flowers... this is why I need to have flowers in the house!
Sometimes, when the light hits these just so, they sparkle as though they are covered in tiny crystals.
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