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GUIDING ANGEL

GUIDING ANGEL
Happy New Year!

Sunday, July 11, 2010

a Summer Sunday morning

On this quiet summer Sunday morning, I've taken a few pictures of our garden and our cat, Tommy. Having missed adding photos and posts since Spring ( where have all the days gone?) it was about time to store some photo reference for future watercolors and to share the results with you. I have no idea when I'll have the "results", mind you, so I'll simply share the photos for now.

Tommy loves to lounge by one of the sentry bunnies we added last fall. I planted some Lady's Mantle to surround him. The bunny, that is. On the opposite side of the steps, the other bunny is enveloped in hostas and looks so sweet peeping out.

I use butterfly photos to help me postion wings on my fairy images, and the two on the coneflowers posed long enough to have their photograph taken. There were once daylily growers in our area who sold a wonderful variety of them. Here's a sample of one of the bicolors. Over the years, they've spread and I transplant them here and there. I discourage the deer by using a bottle brush to disperse a mixture of eggs beaten with water and cayenne pepper. My approach to gardening is a bit haphazard, and I've created too many beds to maintain neatly, but that hasn't stopped me yet.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Suncatchers

On this rainy Saturday, I'm hoping for a break in the clouds so I can spring clean around my garden. Perennials need room to expand and it's an ideal time to divide late blooming plants like daylilies. I'm looking forward to seeing if my poppies and peonies will bloom since I moved a few of them in the fall. Sometimes, they need a season to recover.

While I wait, I'll show you suncatchers sporting some of my fairy art. Even on a rainy day they sparkle at my windows, casting rainbows. These are handpainted glass suncatchers by Amia, to whom I've licensed ten images. I have a new group of images in my head which I hope will be put to paper soon.

Like many of you, perhaps, when I'm indoors I look out and see all the areas which could use some TLC and when I do get out there I look back at my studio inspired to paint something new. I've not been so good at partitioning my days, so will see how it goes. Wish me luck, please.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Spring is here!

This week, the first peeper emerged calling for a mate from across the road. After a few days the chorus joined in announcing that Spring had arrived at last. Heavy rainstorms had washed away the two plus feet of snow that weighed us down only weeks ago, and snowdrops and the earliest of our croci bloomed to our delight. Today, my camera didn't cooperate when I tried to take a photo of them and our tiny Tete a Tete jonquils. So, here instead is a picture of Daffodil Hill taken around this time last year blooming about a week earlier than it will this year. We naturalized daffodils in our backyard many years ago so each bulb now produces more than a dozen flowers, enough for bouquets to share. When they're blooming I'm reminded of a favorite poem from childhood which begins:
I wondered lonely as a cloud
that floats on high o'er vale and hill,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
a host of golden daffodils
beside the lake beneath the trees
fluttering and dancing in the breeze
( I hope my memory serves me well here).

There's so much to do out there it's hard to decide which chore gets top priority. Yesterday, I tackled the bramble and weed trees that are crowding around our two peach trees. I suppose the practical thing to do is to make a To Do list. Let's see, where do I begin.......

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Blue skies

What a beautiful weekend! Higher temperatures are melting the 20+ inches of snow we received last week. Hardy shoots of snowdrops have finally popped up and the earliest variety of croci are beginning to bloom. Does every winter that passes seem longer than the last or has it been just this winter? This weekend it's been lovely to walk Sparky, our Beagle Lab mix ( called a Blab by his vet), without concern about slippery patches. Just a short week ago, it looked like this outside.

Though it's hard to stay indoors on such a sunny day, I intend to tidy up my studio. On second thought, maybe I'll just wait til the sun goes down. My studio has files jammed with book and licensing illustrations, as you can see in this photo taken when it was a bit less cluttered. Yes, this is how it looks at it's best. Not visible is the wall of books and the back wall of closets. I'm afraid that if I had twice the space it would still get cluttered. It's so tempting to add books. A recent purchase is Jerry Pinkney's The Lion & The Mouse. Not surprisingly, it's beautiful and the story is told in a new and interesting way. No surprise there, either.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

When tragedy strikes

Everything came to a stop this week when a couple of weather systems collided and a heavy snowstorm settled over our heads. After two days, more than twenty inches of snow was deposited. My mood remained upbeat because we didn't lose power. It'd have been another story had it been otherwise, that's for sure.

As the snow fell, I decided to use my time indoors to devote to a new fairy image, Valentine Gift.

I painted peacefully until the news of the devastating earthquake in Chile brought everything to a stop again. What a helpless feeling comes over us when we hear of yet another horrible event in the world. Trying to go on with our normal activities seems almost disrespectful. I hesitated to continue my little picture. Why try to paint something pretty?  Then, I remembered a quote of Renoir: " Why shouldn't art be pretty? There are enough unpleasant things in the world".

 So, here is Valentine Gift at early and final stages ( unless a look later in the week prompts me to go into it again)

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Well, imagine this. A blog of my very own. Welcome one and all.

What kept me from blogging previously is the feeling I haven't much to say and little time in which to say it. However, after visiting blogs of people who I'm sure are busier than me, I decided it was time to get started, and will not let any concerns about not having much to say get in the way. So often, the most rewarding experiences to come my way have happened after making a leap of faith. So, why not plunge into blogging and see what happens?

Most of the blogs I read are those of other illustrators and designers. What interests me most is seeing them in their environment, reading their thoughts and seeing the things which generate new art. It's inspiring. Blogs may have posts about many different subjects but for artists they are all ingredients waiting to be used in this piece or the next one.

Here's my second art instruction book, Enchanting Elves. which came out last summer. One of the joys of illustrating and writing it was it made me focus in ways I never had before and led to more satisfying results than before. Hopefully, writing this blog will do the same.


Tommy & Friend

Tommy & Friend

Butterflies

Butterflies

Daylilies

Daylilies

Phlox

Phlox

Bouquet Fairy

Bouquet Fairy

Woodland Fairy

Woodland Fairy

Rose Fairy

Rose Fairy

Mermaid & Seahorse

Mermaid & Seahorse

Among Friends

Among Friends

Pegasus Fairy

Pegasus Fairy

Noon Fairy

Noon Fairy

Hydrangea Fairy

Hydrangea Fairy

My Studio

My Studio
In Neater Days

Daffodil Hill

Daffodil Hill
This time last year

20+ plus Inches

20+ plus Inches

Valentine Gift 1

Valentine Gift 1

Valentine Gift 2

Valentine Gift 2

Enchanting Elves

Enchanting Elves