Monthly Archives: March 2024

Clunes 2024

Below are photos of my stall at Clunes Booktown Festival this weekend. I have arrived home and unpacked. Now putting my feet up.It was a wonderful weekend, meeting some lovely people. Thanks to everyone who dropped by to say hello and purchased my books or cards. I had some great conversations and met some lovely stallholders too. .

A big thank you to my good friend Louise who assisted once again all weekend and to Adam and Michaela who provided flew down from Queensland to wine and dine us and drive us around. All have signed up for next year! They also bought lots of books.

All books that did not sell on the day will be available on my ETSY website in the next few days.

Thanks Clunes and everyone for a wonderful weekend.

This week’s sketches and Clunes prep

A few sketches this week. A wonderful on location event to sketch at the Melbourne Athenaeum Library for Melbourne Rare Book Week. The inaugural Gary Morgan Oration by Andrew May on Mwelbourne Inc “Little laws and the shaping of a frontier town.”

some sketches from the week. Some quick sketches in ink only. Others are longer sketches with watercolour pencils.

Most of my spare time has been the final preparations for next Sat/Sun Clunes Book Town Festival. I have four very heavy suitcases full of my drawn-in books, book and library-themed greeting cards, signs etc.

This is a major event in my year.

Clunes Booktown Festival. outside of Melbourne. is a book lover’s paradise. For a whole weekend, the main street is taken over by second hand book seller stalls There is also. newly published authors, readings, panel discussions and entertainment.

If you are coming drop by and say hello to me. I am in the old Bluestone Building.

There won’t be a blog next week as I will be at Clunes.

Happy sketching everyone.

watermelon again

Yesterday I drew my watermelon, think it would be a great idea for a blog post. I wrote some notes on the pages, and then realised I had done this before, in 2023. I have reposted those step-by-step drawings.

The only difference is one change in colour. Yesterday I used Deep Red, previously it was Alizaron Crimson. This was not a specific decision. I just happened to have changed colours in my daily sketch kit. You can see the difference. It’s subtle, but there is one.

I also added Cream , as there was a yellowishness to some of the rind. The whole scan it a bit more yellow than the drawing. In the juicy part next to the rind is a light green, not yellow as seen here.

Step One

Waterbrush and the three watercolour pencil colours used . Alizaron Crimson, Pine Green and Grass Green

Draw the watermelon shape and outline directly with the watercolour pencil colour that is going to be used. The watermelon is red the skin is green.

Heavily and roughly add colour in the areas of of the watermelon that are darkest.

Step Three

Using the waterbrush, rest it in the coloured areas and pull the colour across the page. This adds a lighter colour to areas of the page.

Step Four

Wait to dry, then add more colour in some areas to give depth and texture, Dabbling the watercolour brush on areas of colour can give, texture, and remove any hard lines.
Add hard lines with a sharpened watercolour pencil along some of the skin and just some of the darkened areas of the watermelon.

Nature sketching class at RBGV

On Saturday I held a “Nature Sketching with Watercolour Pencil” class at the Royal Botanic Gardens of Victoria. I had been invited by Friends of the Garden and held a class in February for Summer and this one was for their Autumn calendar.

We set the tables up in the courtyard next to Plant Cottage, where the Friends are based. After a light rain shower. the blue skies appeared and we were very fortunate to have two wonderful hours outside.

A lovely group of 12 attendees learnt about watercolour pencils, water brushes and sketchbooks before finding a place near the cottage to sketch. Some had not done any art since high school, there were a few botanical artists and one professional artist. Hopefully, they all took away something. For some people it is motivating and inspiration, for others it is techniques,

There is so much to sketch in the gardens and it is so relaxing to observe a piece of nature as you sketch it.

Below is a step-by-step process of using watercolour pencils to draw a red hot poker plant. Using the colours :

  • Light Chrome Yellow
  • Pale Geranium Lake
  • Grass Green
  • Chrome Green Oxide

The first is sketched quickly and quite heavily with watercolour pencils

The Second sketch is after I have added a little water to the pages, moving it slightly. You can see that the pigment becomes activated and you can move it around on the page.

The Third sketch is after I have waited for the page to dry and I have gone over the sketch with the colours. I add more detail with a sharpened pencil. I build up the density of the colour and add the impression of detail, with specific lines.

I probably could have done a fourth sketch to complete it, but I ran out of page and time.

This sketch shows how my sketches have the unfinished look. It is not a great scan. but you can see how some areas are finshed with water added and sme remain only in pasncil, and I have added the outlines of some cactus in the background,

I did another sketch just before class, experimenting with Pink Madder

The students did one 20-minute sketch before moving to another space and a different plan of scene and then one more move.

The Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne & I hope to run another session in Winter and Summer. And there goes the year!

I hope this inspires and motivates you. Let me know if you have any questions about watercolour pencils or how you use them.