Parc Victoria is a large park not far from my house and I’ve done a lot of sketches in it. I’ve told myself many times that I needed to sketch the small chapel that’s on the grounds. It’s no longer used as a chapel and I know nothing of its history. Currently, from the looks of things, it’s now used to store equipment for the associated pro-quality soccer field that was built a couple years ago. Here’s my take on this cute little chapel.
Sketching Behind The Scenes
The older parts of Quebec City are very tightly clustered. There are no front yards and no space between the buildings. The result is many access portals into the rear parts of the buildings. Sometimes these are simple corridors. Often, though they are wide enough for a car, sometimes with parking available behind the buildings and/or courtyard gardens. I like the ones that lead to lots of clutter.
Here’s one such portal. It was done in a 3×5 Moleskine watercolor sketchbook using Platinum Carbon Black in my TWSBI Mini. Hope you like it.
Sketchcrawling Through The Garden
Yesterday I reported on our 44th Worldwide Sketchcrawl participation. What I didn’t do was show you my sketches and talk a bit about them as that post became quite large because of all the photos. Here be the follow up post on my sketchcrawl sketches.
The sketchcrawl was supposed to start at 10AM but I ended up getting there around 9:30. As you enter the botanical gardens there is a large water feature amounting to several lily-pad-filled ponds with small water features between them. I located shade, my first prerequisite for sketching on a sunny day, and started sketching next to the second of these ponds. It was a great place to be as I could meet people as they arrived while sketching. It breaks my meditative sketching state to have to get up ever few minutes to say hi but gosh… isn’t that what sketchcrawls are all about? I think so.
By the time I’d finished this sketch, I was sitting in the sun as at this time of year the sun swings across its southerly track across our sky fairly quickly. So, I was once again hunting for a shady spot.
I found it on the other side of the entrance, with several sketching options. I decided to draw the main kiosk that faces the entrance. Lots of brightly-colored flowers, a nice shape and the girl who manned (womaned?) the kiosk obliged by wearing a red shirt. I switched weapons for this sketch as I wanted to get some more experience with my Hero pens. I’ve got several of them and I don’t use them enough.
It was lunch time so we all met together to swap sketchbooks and wish we were as good as everyone else. For me, this is the best part of sketchcrawls. I do a lot of solo sketching and it’s really fun to get together with other sketchers, though my French is sufficiently bad that I’m more than a little bit limited in my ability to talk like an adult. Quebecers are quite patient, however.
After lunch I decided I should draw flowers. I don’t know flowers beyond red flowers, purple flowers, orange flowers, etc. I can tell you the names of all their parts, discuss at length the mating ‘habits’ of plants, and all the rest, as in another life I was a research scientist but when it comes to naming flowers… I got nada, or as we say around here, rien.
But flowers are cool. Depending upon how accurate you want to be while drawing them, they can be quite challenging as the more you drill down into their details the more difficult they become to properly depict. I’ve drawn very few, and it shows (grin). Here’s a couple. At least they look like flowers.
Quebec City: 44th Worldwide Sketchcrawl
Twas that time again and to participate in the 44th Worldwide Sketchcrawl we all gathered at the Jardin Botanique Roger-Van Den Ende de l’Université Laval. French names are often more than a mouthful. This is a large garden run by and adjacent to Laval University. The university gave us the run of the place, a very large place with tons of flowers and other things to sketch. We couldn’t have asked for better weather than we got. Sunny, warm but not stifling hot and the garden provided considerable amounts of shade, though not always in the required spot.
It was difficult to count the participants as we spread out across the landscape. Maybe we should have had a “sketcher hunt” the way kids hunt for Easter eggs as you could walk the trails and find sketchers scrunched down over plants, drawing away, or hiding in the shade while trying to draw an arbor. By my count, however, we set a new sketchcrawl record with 27 participants. Everyone seemed to have a good time.
The name of the game was to find some shade, identify something to draw, and then “just do it” as the saying goes. Much sketching was done on this day but we broke for lunch a little after noon and met in a large tent that exists for this purpose. It was fun to see most of the sketchers all in one place and to kibbitz and share sketches. Unfortunately, I took photos of this before everyone arrived but by the time they did I was embroiled in conversation and sketchbook swapping.
Here is evidence of sketching being committed and the perpetrators (click on a photo to see a larger view):
And here is a small sampling of the sketches that were done this Saturday:
This post is getting long enough that I think I’ll wait until tomorrow to post the sketches I did when I wasn’t taking photos of sketchers (grin). By the end of the day I think we’d all learned and/or remembered a few important things. These are:
1) Sketching is fun. 2) Sketching with other people is funner. 3) The shade moves quickly in Quebec City this time of year. 4) Anticipation – we’re all looking forward to the next sketchcrawl.Catching Up On My Walking
Having lost a couple days to rain, I was running a walking deficit for the week. I walk a lot and do so as my old man way of keeping my body from taking on the shape of an eggplant. That translates to walking a couple hours every day. With two days lost and the worldwide sketchcrawl coming up on Saturday, I’ve been living on the streets, hoofing everywhere and anywhere, trying to put in the miles.
This has gotten in the way of my sketching time. I just didn’t feel I could stop to sketch if I was going to get caught up. But I did stop to do this quick sketch. It’s one of the many gables on our train station.
I can skip a day or two without sketching, but when I do I start to feel like something is missing. My solution this time was to sit in the backyard and draw some flowers.
I rarely draw flowers but every time I do I think that I should do it more often. The shapes are endless.
I started this sketch with a rudimentary pencil sketch but most of the shapes were formed directly with watercolors, something I’ve only done once before and, back then, things didn’t go so well. Once done, I added some ink using a refillable Sharpie pen. I did this in a Stillman & Birn Delta series sketchbook. This is my first “ivory” sketchbook. It was fun and provided me with some much needed sketching/meditation time.

























