Author Archives: alissa

my sketchkit

Last week I showed all of the watercolour pencil colours in the sketchkit that I carry with me every day. Today I will show you the other parts of my sketchkit.

Sketchwrap

I have a customised pencil wrap for my watercolour pencils. It started as a store bought Derwent pencil wrap. Overtime I realised that the style of the wrap did not actually suit the way I draw and the way I use my pencils. I cut it in half and a crafty friend stitched one half on top of the other. I wrote a blogpost about making my sketchwrap at the time in 2013.

I found that the design was great for all of my on the spot sketching, for example leaning up against a wall, at cafes or on the plane.

I can have it out in front of me and see all of my colours at once with quick access to my pencils It takes up less space.  For example, at a café,  I can have my food and pencilwrap and sketchbook on the table.

Waterbrush

The waterbrush is basically an empty tube that you fill with water. It is fabulous for travel sketching and on location sketching as I have instant to water to add to my watercolour pencil sketches. The water lasts a very long time and there is always somewhere to refill it

I use the Kuretake / ZIG brand because it has a little filter that allows control of the flow of water. The Pentel brand ones tend to flood water a bit more. However, it is still something that needs practice to figure out how much water to let flow through the brush part to achieve what I want on the page.

I use the Medium size. To clean the brush in between colours, I squeeze the water through the brush onto a napkin until it runs clear.

Watercolour sketchbook

Since December 2008 I have used Moleskine watercolour sketchbooks (13 x 19 cm) . This photo is from some time ago as I am now up to my 108th sketchbook. I enjoy the way my watercolour pencils work on the page.

Sharpener

A cheap sharpener from the art shop – a Staedler to neatly fit into my sketchwrap. Just check before you buy that the watercolour pencils fits in the sharperner you choose. They are a hexagonal shape and do not fit into all sharpeners. I like a nice sharp point to add detail to a sketch.

NOTE: I do not use an eraser. All of my sketches start with the watercolour pencils.

Lamy Safari Joy Ink Pen

I use a Lamy Safari Joy ink pen. This has a refillable ink well.

I use a Fine nib and De Artrimentis Archive Ink. It is waterproof.

This is a quick review of what I carry with me. I have put this together over time. Please let me know if you have any questions.

the watercolour pencils I use

This week’s blog has all the watercolour pencils I currently carry with me in my pencil wrap. A few weeks ago I listed the Top 12 I would suggest anyone carry with them. I had a few requests to show all the watercolour pencils I carry. Out of the 120 FaberCastell Abrecht Durer watercolour pencils, I have narrowed it down to these.

I have drawn my pencils with their colours and then pulled the colour out over the page with the water brush (or a paintbrush). You can see the amazing amount of tone you can get from the one pencil. You can get an intense colour with a lot of pigment on the page and also a very delicate colour.

I have previously done a drawing like this just before I go on a big holiday. The last time I did this was in 2018 before my UK holiday. A few of the colours have changed, but most are the same.

Next week I will explain the different accessories I use – waterbrush, sharpener, pencil wrap.

Let me know if you have any questions about watercolour pencils.

Are any of your favourite”go-to” colours here?

Happy sketching

a return to travel sketching

This week’s blog has my sketches from the past week. I have been travelling interstate to see family and am back in my sketching comfort zone. I visited in December when borders had just opened and things were a little different. I was quite anxious when travelling and although I sketched at the airport, I was not as relaxed as this time. It reflected in my sketches each time.

This time it was as if my sketching muscle memory has returned. It all came back to me and was though I had not had a break of a few years.

Sketching planes is always fun, once you get all the angles right and the proportions. This is where holding up the pencil to measure comparative sizes of parts of the aircraft helps! ie in the sketch below, from this angle the length of the wing is the same size as the length of the airplane. I always sketch the wing too short and have to extend it out.

It was great that this plane did not have an aerobridge for the passengers to enter, they had to walk across the tarmac, which meant the front of the plane was not blocked out for me when I was sketching.

I was able to sketch on the plane again – always fun.

Once I arrived home I took part in my Mum’s life. They played Scrabble and I watched, listened and sketched. Very entertaining. There is no likeness in the sketch, but it is all about me capturing the moment of being there.

We went to a St Patricks Day lunch. with lots a green being worn, a silly quiz and lucky door prizes. I did a very quick sketch there and then drew Mum’s badge later that night at home.

These are my feet up relaxing. We had a very big, wonderful but exhausting family reunion lunch on Saturday. Sometimes you need to judge the time and place to sketch and at the reunion was not it. But I could document the day at the end of it with my feet up (and my green nail polish from St Patricks Day).

happy sketching

Alissa

This week’s sketches

Below are my sketches from this past week. All are in my Moleskine 13 x19 cm watercolour sketchbook with watercolour pencils. I have added water to some pages,which makes it look like paint. Other pages or areas of the page I have left as pencil on paper.

This was my view from the hairdresser as I waited 20 minutes for my haircolour to set. Luckily the car did not drive away in that time. I initially drew the car and then added the background and street.

I walked into the city and was struck by the brilliant blue sky and white clouds. I sketched the city skyline in the blue (Light Pthalo Blue I think) of the sky. I always sketch directly with the watercolour pencils onto the page. I never use a graphite pencil to do an initial sketch. I think this comes from my travel sketching where you really don’t have time to do things twice. There is also energy with those first lines, even (or especially) if they are wonky.

My lunch break drawing It was too cold outside to sketch, so I sat in the library I work in and drew one of the older books from the shelf. It lived a hard life before being acquired by us. All of the issues of his journal are available online, so there is no need to get books off the shelf. However, there is nothing like an old book, let alone being surrounded by them. It is good to be back at work.

This is not watercolour pencil. It is a multicoloured pencil where you have no control over colour It was given to me and is fun. This came from Daiso (a $2 shop in Sydney) and is Niji-Iro Pencil if you are interested

a quick sketch at a coffee shop

It is a holiday today, Here is my brunch.

Have a good week and happy sketching.

top 12 watercolour pencil colours

I carry 26 watercolour pencils with me everyday in a pencil wrap. I have chosen these colours over many years, but they are still not absolutely fixed. They are the colours that I have decided suit the objects and scenes I usually sketch. They are 26 from a potential of 120 FaberCastell Albrecht Durer watercolour pencils. These are the pencils that you can purchase individually.

Someone asked for my advice on my top colours for them to purchase. I realise that 26 is probably too much choice and most people may just want a handy kit they can put in a pencil case.

I have managed to narrow it to 12. I tried to make it 10, but that was too difficult!

I just love watercolour pencils. You can see the amazing variety of tones that you can get from one colour – from very intense to beautifully delicate and light. That is fun of playing and practising with your pencils and knowing what they can do with them when you are out and about or at home, you can look at something and you can tell yourself “I know what colour is perfect for that !”

Part of the knowledge is the colours and the other part is how much water to add with your waterbrush. My waterbrush is on the far left of the photo. It is basically a tube which you fill with water. You need to play with controlling the amount of water that flows. It is easy to flood the page until you get used to it. Mine has a Medium brush.

I hope that anyone who has newly discovered watercolour pencils is having fun exploring their possibilities. Let me know if you have any questions.

Which colours do you carry? any of these?

Below are two of my on-location sketches from the past week.

anything is sketchable

“Anything is Sketchable” is the title of my interview with Bethan Burton from Journalling with Nature. It went live last Monday. https://www.journalingwithnature.com/podcasts/episode-78-alissa-duke

I was honoured, excited and nervous to be invited as Bethan has interviewed some amazing individuals. In the end, it turned out to be a lovely hour’s chat

Since then, I have had a number of new nature journallers following this weekly art blog and my daily Instagram account.  Welcome to you! I thought I would write this week on the title of the podcast “Anything is Sketchable”.

For those new here I will introduce myself. I live in Melbourne and work full-time as a librarian. I sketch in my Moleskine watercolour journal everyday, and only use watercolour pencils and an ink pen. I just love to draw! I wrote a previous blog post on Why drawing makes me happy.  https://alissaduke.com/2015/07/why-drawing-makes-me-happy.html

I am an:
• urban sketcher
• a travel sketcher
• a nature sketcher – now I may want to call myself a nature journaller as this is a broader concept
• a sketching journaller


These are all in one sketchbook.

I was thinking as I was writing this blog and I was able to bring together and put down in words some thoughts about my sketching practice that I already knew. I can see this as I look through the list above and see my thoughts distilled and clarified.

My various approaches to sketching and drawings are tools that I choose to use depending on how I feel, the occasion and time available. My approach to sketching is a state of mind –”anything is sketchable” and there is never “nothing to sketch.”

Here are some of my approaches.

Sketching on location

This comes from my urban sketching and travel sketching background and is also used on other pages. Urban sketchers https://urbansketchers.org/who-we-are/   have a manifesto which includes sketching on location, capturing what we see from direct observation. Our drawings tell the story of our surroundings, the places we live, and where we travel.

As a travel sketcher, my key is to choose my subject quickly as I may not have much time to sketch. I sketch what attracts me and what I am curious about. It may not be the most obvious part of a scene I see in front of me.  The idea is to start getting some marks down on the page. If I get a longer time than expected, I keep adding colour and detail and spread across the pages. If I have to leave, it is still a record of me being there and that story.

I have written an earlier blog post on Why I sketch What I sketch

It is about seeing and grabbing opportunities and capturing the moment on the page. A queue is sketching time, in the waiting room, or just filling in time.  I can see that I transfer this to nature sketching as I usually sketch when out on a walk or walking to and from work through parks. Sketching the same trees and birds has allowed me to become familiar with stances and colours. I usually don’t add more to the page at home.

The subject can be unexpected. It is not planned and not always pretty.   You may never sketch that object or scene again but for that sketching time, it is fascinating as you watch how bits interconnect. By observing you see more and see textures and patterns you may not have noticed before. For me, this is the same for nature sketching any other type of sketching.

Unfinished look

It took me many years to realise that the unfinished look is my style and to be completely comfortable with this. It allows me to not complete a sketch – the edges are disappearing I can have details on one part of the page, but not another.  It is a state of mind. I usually do not add further to the sketch at home. Sometimes I add water to the page or extra colour – the joy of watercolour pencil! I also write on my pages, always the date, place, who I am with, and why. Context is important. I leave space on the page and add this at home. The sketch is always the feature.

Everyday sketching

I sketch and draw objects, from my everyday life. This includes food and drinks, events, objects I purchase.

Details

The joy of watercolour pencils is they are portable and suit my quick sketching, The other key importance to me is that they also can be used to add fine detail to a page with a sharpened lead. I usually do detailed drawings over a few evenings, adding layers and detail Objects have a story to tell a story –  whether a childhood toy, nature object or dinner I am eating. And I love books !

Sometimes I like to combine a quick sketch and details close up. The best of both worlds! I like to use this combination.

In the end, it is your journal. The page is yours alone, to look back later and bring back memories of time and place. My approach is one of many sketching styles, and watercolour pencils are just one tool you can use in your art kit.

Happy sketching and let me know if you have any questions.

This is much longer than my usual blog posts !

This week’s sketches

Hello to new subscribers to my weekly art blog. I thought I would let you know what to expect to see on my blog each week.

I am a watercolour pencil artist, urban sketcher, nature journaller. I enjoy quick sketches and studied drawings.

Some weeks I feature a project I am working on or an event I have been to. I usually provide a bit of background and context and work-in-progress photographs.

I also try to regularly write about my watercolour pencils and how I use them, giving practical examples. I have been drawing daily with watercolour pencils for over ten years and am still learning and getting excited by what am able to accomplish with them. I hope to inspire people to use these and just have fun putting pencil to paper.

And then there are weeks like this, where I show what I have been sketching and drawing during the week. This can be an eclectic mix depending on what I have been doing. I am still working from home full time so my daily sketches do not feature as many ‘out and about’ sketching as they would have a few years ago.

This week I attended an outdoor event: a tour of the gardens at Bishopscourt, the residence of the Melbourne Anglican Archbishop. The house is the oldest in East Melbourne (1853) and the gardens have their history too.

I am very rusty at drawing groups of people as I have not been in this situation for so long now.

I sketched at the hairdressers. The top half is me in the mirror The feet are the person on the other side of the mirror. Iti s like one of those books from childhood.

I had the opportunity to draw some food.

I attended a Zoom life drawing session one night. The theme was the cult movie Blade Runner, with the models dressed and posing as main characters.

I have also been working on my “You Can’t Draw in Books” project for a potential event. This involves drawing in books that are about to be discarded, illustrating the words on the page. I give it a new life. More news on this project later.

I hope you enjoy the blog.

Coast Walk & Draw

Yesterday I participated in a real person event. So much of my interaction with people has been online since March 2020. Life is opening up in Melbourne, however, I am still working from home and cautious on my event attendance.

I was so pleased and proud of myself that I registered and attended “Coast Walk & Draw” run by Port Phillip EcoCentre. It included a coastal path walk and talk and a nature sketching session by my sketching friend Amy who hosts Melbourne Nature Journal Club.

It was a big event for me also as it involved one hour of travel and two forms of public transport each way to a place I have never been to. This is way outside my comfort zone. Now that I have done it once, I am feeling a lot better about the whole concept. It was just what I needed.

There were 20 people on the walk of all ages and the weather was absolutely beautiful.


The session was run by The Port Phillip EcoCentre which have “been transforming the way Melbourne understands wildlife, waterways and climate change since 1999”. The guides Ben, Reiko, and Justine shared their amazing and deep knowledge of the area, which is a Marine Sanctuary. They showed us natural objects that had been found in the waters. Ben is a passionate Vertebrate-Palaeontologist (YouTube, Instagram, blog ) and showed us whale and shark bones found on scuba diving expeditions in the area. They are from 5-6 million years in the past!. They also pointed out the marine life in the sea as we walked along the coastal wall. I saw my first ‘wild’ starfish. (It should be called a sea star, but that will take me ages to get used to) This was an 11 armed starfish. Amazing.

and the sketching !!!

After the walk, we sat in the shade and Amy provided a wonderful introduction to those who had never done nature sketching and removed any fears or questions people had about nature sketching. What is it? how to do it? Amy provided a great take-home handout that had all the hints and tips and prompts written down.

We had 40 minutes to sketch. I had been wanting sketch during the entire walk, and then when I had the chance to, I did not know where to begin. Someone had mentioned Salt Bush growing in the area. As we were by the sea I decided to sketch that. I sketched one branch up close and in colour (Earth Green Faber Castell) and then the outline of some others in the background to show that it is part of a bush.

I had lots of questions that I wrote on the page and am still looking up all the answers.

I added the ocean in the background as we sat talking after, just to give some context.

I also tried a bit of sketching the group and presenters I am so out of practice.

A big day. A good day.

And finally, Amy mentioned that you don’t have to go somewhere exotic to sketch nature, it is all around us. Look up at the clouds. I agree, anything is sketchable.

sketching at Melbourne Zoo

Saturday was perfect, with weather at 26 degrees in Melbourne. Although it was a weekend, school holidays had just finished and I hoped the crowds would not be there. It all worked out wonderfully. If there were busy areas, I just moved on.

Each time I visit the zoo I am drawing in an old ledger. It is larger than my daily sketchbook but not too heavy.

I sketched with my usual watercolour pencils. The ledger paper isn’t made for watercolour. I do not add the water at the time as I just don’t have the time. The priority of my visit is capturing gestures. Maybe next time I will add water to the page on the spot. Adding water to the pencil on the page or off the pencil works best on smaller areas. I would have to think about what parts of the sketch I would add it to.

African Wild Dogs. Their enclosure is often the first place I stop and I rarely see them. So when they were near the viewing section I made the most of it. There were two (of the four) and they moved around this area a lot. They have such an interesting body structure – really long legs. Often one sketch is the result of many walk bys by the Wild Dogs. The face on close-up is an example. Each time he stopped at looked in my direction I tried to add more detail. In the end, they moved to an area and we could not see them. Time to move on.

In the same section are the lions – there are two and they are usually sitting upon the platforms. They stay still and move their head a bit. This time I had a few sketches in progress where their faces were at a different angle. I could then add to a different sketch as they changed the direction they were looking.

Sumatran Tiger

Not all sketches can be completed to the degree I had hoped. This Sumantran Tiger was lying down under a tree and did not move. Most of his body was in the shade and it was in the distance. You get the idea.

Eastern Black and White Colobus. There were two. This is a medium-sized primate. These African natives are known for their shiny black coats and long flowing white mane that drapes over their back and tail. Oh So glamourous looking!

Northern white cheeked gibbon

There were two, in middle distance swinging around the ropes. Then they disappeared from view, only to appear on the glass window in front of us. You could see the details of his paws. amazing.

I took my pencil wrap with me with its 26 or so watercolour pencil colours. However, there were probably just two colours I used all day: Black and Burnt Ochre.

Oh and Violet for the Pygmy Hippopotamus. They are actually a greenish brown/black. I just chose violet. Pygmy hippos share the same general form as hippopotamus but is only half as tall as the hippopotamus. Adult pygmy hippos stand about 75–100 cm (2.46–3.28 ft) high at the shoulder, are 150–175 cm (4.92–5.74 ft) in length and weigh 180–275 kg (397–606 lb).

I am hoping to use my Zoo Member often. Yesterday I was there from 9.00 -2.30. Probably too much sunshine and standing ( I don’t use a chair). It is so easy to keep going as there is always something more around the corner.

back to nature sketching

It has been a while since I walked through my local Gardens to do nature sketching.

I collected all those lovely shells at the Gold Coast and was given a box of lovely nature objects, as well as finding dead insects. So many things to draw, but all stay at home.

This weekend I was handed the opportunity to get out and about with TWO online Nature Sketching Journal Clubs. First Melbourne with AmyDiana and then on Sunday Brisbane with Bethan Burton. They both followed a similar format of a tutorial and guidance and then we went out “in the field”, whether that was your houseplants, back yard, for me Fitzroy Gardens. There were people from around Australia and the world !

Thirty or forty minutes out, sketching or writing or whatever you were comfortable with. For me, it is sketching. It felt So good to be out. Then back to talk about our experience and what we noticed about our environment and ourselves.

Part of nature journalling is curiosity. I often wonder things in my head, but in these sessions I tend to write them on the page and actually follow them up by researching online. I have been in Melbourne for seven years and have always wondered about the markings on the magpies. I have been drawing them for years (see them here ) and did notice the difference between Sydney and Melbourne.

And now I know because I looked it up! basically

The two most easily distinguished magpies are the black-backed magpie & the white-backed magpie (in which there are nine subspecies)
The Black-backed Magpie
New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Northern Territory, Western Australia
The White-backed Magpie Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania, Western Australia.

Males: Males have a pure white on the back of their neck with no grey.
Females: Females have grey and speckled feathers on the back of their neck

On Sunday I joined the Brisbane Online group. In a similar format, this time the discussion was about Zooming In and Zooming Out. Zooming as in close-in and long shot, not what we call zoom now.(for meetings)

I chose a Moreton Bay Fig. I would usually draw the tree trunk (as I just love them) and then focus (zoom) in on some detail, maybe some lichen or fold in the tree. This time I chose to Zoom Out and show the tree in context, with other trees around it.

Once again. Once again, a lot of writing down the questions in my head. I was curious about the vines that dropdown. It seems that the Lord Howe form of Moreton Bay fig has a habit of dropping ariel roots from its branches. The type in the Fitzroy Gardens does not have the vines. I lived in Brisbane for many years and remember the New Farms Park Moreton Bay Figs – amazing.

I am looking forward to catching up with another online session. In-person would be amazing. One day…