Monthly Archives: June 2013

Just Drawing, and Drawing, AND DRAWING SOME MORE

Excuse me for shouting. I might be getting a little cranky. Heat does that. That’s why people go to their cabins in Wilsonia in the summer – to get out of the heat.

Before I start complaining, I’ll just show you another completed drawing and quietly go back to the drawing board. (Do you know anyone else who can honestly say that?)

pencil drawing of wilsonia cabinI had planned to do a different angle of this cabin. The roof is interesting from that other angle, but the light wasn’t so good. I redesigned the page and chose this angle with its dappled light on the stone chimney.

How to Participate in This Book Project

Greetings, Gentle Readers.

There are 2 ways to participate in this project:

1. Email me your stories and thoughts about cabin ownership, membership in a lovely mountain community, or whatever seems appropriate to you to be included in the book. I plan on including many of your thoughts as quotes

2. Comment on this blog. Otherwise, the sound of crickets chirping and grass growing leads me to believe I am all alone here. Sob.

Wilsonia cabin pencil drawing

 

It has come to my attention that the commenting system on this blog is quite annoying. 

At the top of each post it says “Leave a reply” or “# replies”. This is clickable. Click it. Type your stuff into the appropriate places and submit or respond or enter. (I’m fuzzy here because as the “administrator” of the blog, it shows me a different method.)

You will think your comment didn’t go through. It did. It lands in a Spam folder, which I have to open and mark as “Not Spam”.

After that it goes to a “Pending” folder. I have to open that and mark your comment as “Approved”.

I will correct typos and remove anything I deem too personal for the World Wide Web. And, I will respond to your comment.

Then, I will go to the Spam folder, mark my comment as Not Spam, go to the Pending Folder and approve my own comment.

No wonder people don’t comment on this blog! If I knew how to make it easier without breaking the blog, I would. However, I need to go draw now.

Thanks for visiting, reading and commenting.

 

Jeffrey Shooting Star Amidst More Street Confusion

The Cabins of Wilsonia will be in one color of ink. I’m drawing the cabins in pencil, and graphite is gray. This means the book will most likely be printed in the gray ink that most closely matches the color of the pencils.

All the photos from which I am working are in color. Sometimes I have convert one to black and white, because otherwise it is hard to tell if it will look any good in pencil.

For example, a cabin with bright blue shutters normally is known and appreciated for its bright blue shutters. How will that look in pencil? Will the drawing just look so-so?

The meadow that can be seen from Sierra Lane/Drive/Road (see? I can’t figure out this Wilsonia street designation!) is awash with Jeffrey Shooting Star in early July. It is fabulous. Of course, the color is the fabulous part.

shooting star

You’ve probably seen these. They like to grow with their feet wet.

I photographed a cabin on Alta, looking across that meadow from Sierra. (If I just say the name without the designation of Avenue/Way/Street then there is no confusion.) I thought it was a great way to show off the cabin’s superior location.

However, if the big deal about the view is the color, is there a point to drawing it in pencil?

Wilsonia Meadow IMG_8039

I think the light across the meadow in the lower photo makes this second view the clear winner.

And those Jeffrey Shooting Stars? They can be our little secret. We wouldn’t want 100s of looky-loos flooding Sierra Lane and turning it into Sierra Highway each July.

Drawing # 150 something or other

I remember some numbers, like my second grade best friend’s telephone, or my 6th grade teacher’s birthday, or how many feet in a mile.

But, because the numbers are changing so rapidly, I can’t remember the number of drawing I’m on.

Wilsonia cabin window

I do remember which street I am on. Park. Park is long. That will be a large-ish chapter.

Pine is next.

A Weird Task in Book Building

As I draw, it is necessary to scan each drawing. Then what do I do with it?

I package it up with mat board in a clear bag.

I ran out of mat boards, so went to eBay to find someone selling scraps. Because I am a very frugal person, I ordered the least expensive.

The corners were slightly banged up, but for my use, it didn’t matter.

But yuck! They smelled like mildew. I recognized this smell from when I was in college and stored some things in my uncle’s basement one summer. Smells linger in a memory. You have probably read that smells are one of the greatest memory invokers.

IMG_9571This is a small sample. You should have seen them spread all over the area that used to be my lower lawn (not enough water in my neighborhood to sustain that much green with a clear conscience.

What to do??

The sun! I laid them out in the sun. They curled. I flipped them over. They curled back. I sniffed. They smelled fine.

Phew. Who knew all the information and skills that would be necessary in building a book?

What’s Going On Here?

List Lady Here. A progress report, thoughts on building a book, and new information about the arrangement of Wilsonia streets for you:

pencil drawing of wilsonia cabin

This cabin on Park Street/Lane/Road/Avenue (just kidding on the last one!) is an architectural design repeated throughout Wilsonia. There were 5 cabins like this. Now there are 4, and one has been remodeled so isn’t immediately recognizable as the same design. Do you know which cabins these are?

  1. All the drawings are finished for June. Yes, you read that right. This is so I can do all of July’s drawings in June. What’s going on here? July is going to be extraordinarily busy for this California artist. If I don’t draw ahead, I’ll fall behind.
  2. I found someone who calls himself The Book Designer. He is a book designer. (Duh.) He helps people self-publish their books. (If they pay him.) I feel greatly reassured that when the time comes to make some difficult decisions such as cover design, typestyles, and finding a printer, The Book Designer will be my new best friend.
  3. Has anyone else besides me noticed all the streets in Wilsonia that begin with “L” are going east and west? This is confusing at times. When I think of all those L streets, I’m flipping through my mental Rolodex, reciting Laurel, Lily, LeConte, Lupine, Lilac. . . sometimes they are alphabetical, sometimes they are random. But I just figured out that they ARE alphabetically arranged in Wilsonia, beginning in the southern end of the community! There’s an AHA! moment!