Tuesday, 18 August 2015

West Australian Wildflowers

It isn't officially spring until the beginning of September but it has sprung early this year. There are many patches of remnant native bushland dotted around the Perth metropolitan area which are a delight to visit at any time of year but particularly when everything is in flower! Nearly two weeks ago a friend and I went for a walk in the bush just adjacent to Landsdale Farm. So many pretty flowers to admire including the ubiquitous hibbertia and Swan River myrtle.

 





 
 Above is the carnivorous sundew drosera.
 


 
Today my friend and I visited the Hepburn Heights bushland reserve which looked particularly pretty in the mid-afternoon light. Today was one of those ridiculously perfect winter's days when the sun is shining and the breeze is fresh.
 


 
                                                                         Moi!

 






 

Tuesday, 4 August 2015

And the winner is....

 
Thanks to all of you who kindly left comments on my last post and went into the draw for a copy of my shiny new book!
 
All the names went into a hat, and the lucky winner is..........Debbie Nolan (View from Harmony Hills). Yay, Debbie! please email me your address and I will send you a copy ASAP.

I am also excited to announce that my book is now available online at Amazon, and other outlets such as The Book Depository will be soon to follow. ***Update*** now also available on The Book Depository - and they do free delivery.

 
The idea for the book came about when I embarked upon a ten day painting challenge in 2012. After years of procrastination, I was thrilled at how potent and motivating the challenge format proved to be.
 
Below is the painting I did on the very first day of the ten day challenge, and the following is the same subject matter painted in a more stylised manner about six months later. There aren't any photos in my book but a lot of the paintings mentioned can be seen in the older posts on this blog.
 
 
 
The photo below is a clear example of the progress I made through regular painting sessions.
Using the same props, the still life on the left was done about a year after the one on the right.          



                                      Acrylic on board and canvas board respectively (2012)

And to other matters - there is a lot of prettiness in the garden at the moment but only when it comes to my pot plants. The garden in general has gone to rack and ruin. I hope to get out into the bushland soon to take photos of the emerging wildflowers.





                                                             
I hope you are all having a great week!

Tuesday, 28 July 2015

Grabbing the Muse by the Throat

 
Exciting news - my book is born!!
 
 
 
It will be a week or two yet before it is available online at The Book Depository, Amazon and other online stores.
Everyone who leaves a comment on this post in the next week will go into a draw to win a free copy of my book!!


All of the violas in this photo have since disappeared but I have some others still  flowering happily. Today I used this photo for reference for the watercolour and pen sketch below. I can see now that the colour I used for the leaves makes them look a bit anaemic, but I'm very happy with it overall.
 
 
I did the one below a couple of days ago from life. I have always known these violas by the common name of Johnny Jump-ups and they are favourites of mine. If my memory serves me right, I once read that they also have another common name which is the longest in the English language - "Meet her in the entry, kiss her in the buttery" How rustically divine is that!?
 
 
 

Sunday, 12 July 2015

Egg-beater


                                                              Pen and watercolour

This is the first sketch I've done for a while so I felt a bit rusty when I got out my sketch book this evening. I went straight in with the ink pen and made quite a few false starts with the perspective. But it's amazing what can be covered up with some strategically placed rendering. This egg-beater is battered but beloved, and hails from my childhood.

I have finally finished writing the book I have been working on for nearly three years!!! I can hardly believe it as it seemed I would never get to the end of it. In recent months, every ounce of my creative energy has been devoted to working on it. The editing process has been incredibly intense and time-consuming; hence my absence from painting and blogging lately. The official publishing date is the 20th July so hopefully it will feature in my next post.

 As much as I've enjoyed many aspects of writing the book, I will be very glad to be free to move onto other projects. Getting a book over the last hurdles is all-consuming and I've really missed having a life outside of it these past couple of months.

I've barely had a moment to spend in the garden other than to pluck rogue snails from my miniature garden and re-locate them to hopefully tastier and more robust parts of the garden. They've eaten the miniature "lawn" to the roots. I hate to kill them but I may need to harden my heart. The snails I pluck afresh are beginning to look familiar. I think they are able to move much more quickly than they let on!
 
 
 
Thankfully, the snails don't like to eat moss so that is looking very lush. And just look at these  exquisite little pink flowers!(you may need to click onto the photo to get a good look!)


 
I'm looking forward to revealing all with my book very soon!!!


                                 

Sunday, 7 June 2015

Small Joys

 
I've recently created a miniature garden using only Australian native plants. I made the ceramic toadstools with my own fair hands.

 
 
 
 Australian natives are perfect for miniature gardens as many of them have the most delicate flowers.

 
 I caught these miniature villains in the act, but before banishing them to the far reaches of the garden I did a photo shoot!

 
 
Another garden under construction
 
 
                                                               A Stylidium garden
                                                                               
 
                                      My one small foray into painting over this past month.

 
My sister's book is now available on Kindle as well as in print form from Amazon and The Book Depository.
 
I am getting ever closer to finishing my own book. The cover design is almost complete and I am doing the final tweaks to the manuscript. It has consumed me of late but I realised when looking through my recent photos that I have had some very pleasant interludes amongst the toil. Some of them I caught on camera. There must be something in the air as many of my friends have been bringing out their most fetching tableware!
 
 
 What I thought was to be a catch up for a simple cup of tea one day turned into an elegant repast.
                                    
                                          

Another friend had recently inherited some beautiful old china
 
 
Another day was an al fresco lunch on a friend's balcony with the prettiest pavlova served for dessert.


 
 
And a recent afternoon tea to celebrate a friend's kitchen renovation.
 
 
                                   It's always worth taking the camera along on a bushwalk.

 


 
 
                                                           And on a beach walk!

 

 
Surfers at sunset.