Monthly Archives: March 2025

sketching vegetables video

I have been meaning to film some watercolour pencil sketching for quite a while. I don’t film regularly so it is always a challenge to remember the technical parts of it.

Yesterday I went grocery shopping, choosing some colourful vegetables, that would be ideal for showing watercolour pencils: pumpkin, carrots, broccoli and red onion.

Now that I have my subject, I decide what I want to sketch and then where it will sit on the page.

I do this all in my head. I don’t do thumbnails (small tonal studies). My sketches are not still-life compositions. They a quick, often spur of the moment, captures on the page. Often the subject will move or get moved. A lot of my sketching process is based on travel sketching.

Before I started to sketch I choose the watercolour pencils that I am going to use. I always chose from MY SKETCHKIT that I carry with me everyday. It has 26 watercolour pencils, an ink pen and sharpener. I know my pencils, their colours and what they do on the paper and then when water is added.

If you have watercolour pencils play with them on the page, make marks. scribble. add water and see what happens. I have been using watercolour pencils for over 20 years and know them well, but still excited by what they can do.

Today I used:

  • Magenta
  • Orange Glaze
  • Chrome Oxide Green
  • Grass Green
  • Payne’s Grey
  • Naples Yellow
  • I would have used Pine Green but forgot to put it aside for this demonstration.

I do have the whole 126 Faber Castell watercolour pencil range, but usually only use these when I need very specific colours for a commission.

In my watercolour pencil classes. I explain watercolour pencils, paper, waterbrush and we play on the pages. We then go and find a place to sketch for 15 minutes! Not a lot of time but enough to get some colourful lines on the page, capturing the essence of the object or scene. As you will see…

In the first video my first marks on the page are getting the basic shapes of the vegetables on the page. I sketch in the colour of the object ie the carrots and orange, the broccoli is green etc.

The next steps are:

  • sketch with heavier lines and blocks of colour
  • spread with waterbrush
  • wait to dry
  • add another layer of the colour to intensify the colour and add volume or texture.

While I am waiting for one area to dry I work on another, You will see that I move all over the page, changing colours.

NOTE : when I use a new colour on the page I squeeze the waterbrush onto a napkin / serviette (or my hand, because I did not have one nearby). This is to clear the waterbrush of the previous colour.

You can slow this down by locating the Speed control (the first icon. the two parallel lines) and the SPEED . slow down to 0.25 for the slowest.

My second video – focusing on just one vegetable.

See how much can be achieved in 15 minutes! I have sketched pumpkins before and I also know the colours. It is the impression of detail, not actual detail. There are a few areas where I add hard, defined lines to give that impression.

While I was sketching and filming, I was making notes in my head of what to explain. I know that I have left a lot out. Please feel free to ask any questions.

I hope this has inspired and motivated you to get your watercolour pencils out again.

I will now go and cook these and may even sketch the final meal!

Happy Sketching

Clunes Booktown Festival

I am home from another wonderful Clunes Booktown Festival.

This two-day annual event dominates my evenings and weekends in the months leading up to it. Once I receive the email confirming my application, I focus on drawing in the old books I have been acquiring throughout the year.

We drove up from Melbourne 1 1/2 hours and immediately set up in the Old Bluestone Church. Most of the stall holders are in the main street in the large white marquees. There was excitement in the air, with everyone setting up stalls, signs and books.

The weather was perfect sunny, Autumnal weather all weekend. It could have been better.

and in the town. Thousands of book lovers filled the streets to browse books, enjoy the talks entertainment and local traders.

You get the idea !

Here is our Old Bluestone building set up.

Cheers to us at the end of day 1

and again on Monday morning with coffee.

and of course, I brought some bargains to draw in for next year!

I had wonderful conversations with friends, librarians, and book lovers galore.

My greatest thanks to my good friends Adam & Micheala who provided transport support and fed me ! Also to the organisers and many volunteers who made it a success.

Any books that I did not sell on the weekend will be added to my ETSY store this coming weekend !

This week’s sketches

Another busy week. Most of most non-work (I have a full-time job) time has been spent drawing in books for my stall at Clunes Booktown Festival in just three weeks!

Last week I started by celebrating swimming by drawing my goggles.

Thsi was mirrored in the goggles I drew in a book

My other sketches were very quick.

A quick lunch break sketch. fire hydrant . Red watercolour pencil . unfinished . I won’t go back and complete it. I am happy just to have done some sketching on the day.

Drawing a pencil in Pitman’s Shorthand Instructor 1930s. I love to draw my pencils and pencil shavings, so this was an excellent opportunity.

I did not do Shorthand at high school, but it was still part of the BP (Business Practices ) subjects you could choose.

Drawing an owl on a page about birds in “The Camera in the Fields: a practical guide to nature photography” by F.C.Snell (1905.)

Each book I draw in has different quality paper pages printed in different years. I never know what it is going to be like until I add pencil to paper and then add the water. It is always different. This is slightly glossy. Adding water with a small paintbrush the colour gets richer and darker. But the colour slides all over the surface. I will see what I can do with this one ! I also used water soluble crayon on the black and white parts of the page. The colour is thicker and darker, but it quite waxy. so I can’t use watercolour pencil on top of it.

I have 53 books drawn in at the moment and ready to sell. I have 16 almost complete.

And 10 to be complete. I have decided on the page to draw in and what image to draw.

Work in Progress.

Drawing in Herbs, Spices and Flavourings by Tom Stobart 1977 .