Tina Koyama Limited Edition Sketchbook

TinaBookI’m a lucky guy.  Tina Koyama sent me one of her small sketchbooks.  She makes these from light watercolor paper and endows them with creative covers.  Now that I’ve used one, I know why all photos of her exhibit a big smile.

I’ve only done half a dozen sketches in this 4×6 book but it’s really fun to use and the paper holds up nicely to my pointy devices.   It’s a single 5-sheet signature, providing 20, 4×6 sketch surfaces in a very small, light footprint.

2015-06-24artMy first use was to quickly sketch this odd metal sculpture.  I’m not sure what it’s supposed to represent but I guess it represents it.  No matter, it gave me a chance to scribble in the book and slop on a bit of watercolor.

And then it rained.  It’s still acting like spring here and I was cloistered behind windows, limiting both my spirits and sketching subjects.

2015-06-25diggerAcross the street was this digger, so I drew it.  I should have turned the book and drawn across the long dimension but I didn’t so this image is pretty small.  Still, it was fun to let the Namiki Falcon wander around for a while.

This last sketch was done while I was out for a long walk.  For some reason I was in the mood for a large scene when I walked through the park at Pointe de Lievre, so I plunked my butt on a picnic bench and quickly sketched this and used a waterbrush filled with dilute ink to shade it a bit.  I deemed it a good use of 15 minutes.

2015-06-26PointdeLievreI’m really enjoying Tina’s tiny sketchbook.  I’m not sure she has convinced me to spend a lot of time making my own as I’d need to make a lot of them given the way I use small sketchbooks, but she’s nudged me a bit closer to the edge.

Parc Des Braves – Quebec City

2015-06-17ParcDesBravesA few days ago I talked about Parc des braves and showed you a sketch I’d done of the toilet building.  I was back in that neighborhood and decided to draw the large monument in front of the parc.  This monument is in tribute to soldiers who died in one of the final battles (1760) of the French-English war.  It’s hard to capture a monument this tall but I hope I’ve done it justice.

Stillman & BIrn Beta (9x12), Namiki Falcon, De Atramentis Document Black

Stillman & BIrn Beta (9×12), Namiki Falcon, De Atramentis Document Black

Sketching At Caleshes Quebec

While the mayor of New York wants to eliminate the horse-drawn carriages from Central Park, Quebec embraces them.  They are part of our tourist trade and are responsible for relieving tourists from around the world of their money.  They also provide an ambiance that is pretty darn special.

I was excited to learn that one of the members of Le Collectif had arranged for us to get a couple hours to sketch at Caleches Quebec and their stable area.  It was more than a bit cool the morning we met and I wished I’d worn a jacket, but it didn’t dampen my spirits.  There were ten or more of us, sitting in the paddock area, trying to draw the horses who were wandering around in the pasture.  I’d drawn a horse statue before but never horses.  I definitely need more practice.

2015-06-19CalesheQuebec1

Stillman & Birn Gamma, Namiki Falcon, De Atramentis Document Black

Poor horses.  Every one of them looked better than I depicted them.  Here’s a couple more partial sketches.

2015-06-19CalesheQuebec2Practice, practice, practice.  Before leaving I decided that I should capture something of the place so I walked out to the entrance and drew the view as you enter the area.  It was a wonderful day but please, don’t tell the horses how poorly I drew them.  I hang out with these guys all summer as we both march around the old city, me sketching and them making tourists happy.

Stillman & Birn Gamma, Namiki Falcon, De Atramentis Document Black

Stillman & Birn Gamma, Namiki Falcon, De Atramentis Document Black

Today I Sketched A Toilet

Several of us went sketching at Parc des Braves in Quebec City.  I love this park.  Aside from its towering monument at the entrance, this park is nothing more than grass, picnic benches and a lot of trees. Still, I love it because it’s so quiet.

A very busy street runs in front of the park but when you enter, the first thing you have to do is descend below street level.  From there the park slopes away from the head end of the park.  This micro-geography causes the park to be devoid of any city sounds, leaving one to enjoy the tranquility of the park.

When it comes to sketching subjects, the logical choice is the large monument tower that commemorates fallen soldiers but I just wasn’t in the mood for that.  Instead I decided to draw the toilet.  Doesn’t everyone draw toilets?  Urban sketchers do – don’t they?  Anyways, here is the Parc des Brave toilet.

Stillman & Birn Gamma (10x7), Namiki Falcon, De Atramentis Document Black

Stillman & Birn Gamma (10×7), Namiki Falcon, De Atramentis Document Black

Sitting In The Park – Looking Up

I’ve noticed that since I’ve started sketching that I look up a lot.  In doing so I’ve realized how much we miss as we go through a daily routine.  But rooftops have lots to offer, as do features on multi-story buildings.  In large part, we pass by, never seeing any of it.

So it goes if you sit in the little garden/park in the St. Roch area of downtown Quebec City.  The flowers are great.  The artificial waterfall is great.  Even the people sitting and walking around are great.  The constant stream of buses and cars that pass by the park are great.  You can draw all day without looking up.  But if you do, you see this:

Stillman & Birn Gamma (10x7), Namiki Falcon, De Atramentis Document Black

Stillman & Birn Gamma (10×7), Namiki Falcon, De Atramentis Document Black