

Tiny little watercolors of tiny little chickens.
Just the thought of getting letters from Santa written by Tolkien makes me happy. He has a funny handwriting, he makes up stories and he does little illustrations . It is a wonderful book (the copy selling now looks different from mine).
This is my 2010 Christmas card - it's a linocut with watercolored berries.
Another Christmas card linocut - with red ink. I hardly ever use any ink other than black because it can look kind of kooky.
Every July I tell myself I need to make my Christmas card, and I start thinking about it - even doing sketches. And then I put it off - because it's July and I have plenty of time.

This year is the latest I've ever left cards. I'm starting to think about cards welcoming 2012. sigh.
Here's a small watercolor sketch that actually led to bigger paintings.
I was happier with this version because there was a bigger range of tones - both lights and darks.





Two watercolors from the same photo. Two different treatments.
I forgot to mention in my last post that I'm veering slightly from the "beasts" part of my blog title so that I can include lots of illustrations I've done. Maybe I should have called it mostly beasts.
My grandfather was very handsome when he was young. This is a watery watercolor I did from a photo I found. I wish I could always see such strong contrasts in faces and model them with shadows.
This is a linocut. I don't have a photo of him pouring tea for a frog, so I must have used one of him looking down as reference.



These tigers are from a time when I was trying out what I could do with colored pencils. White pencil on brown paper made me think differently about drawing - the brown was already a color to work with...or around. I made a note on the first tiger drawing shown that it took me three hours to do. It takes lots of careful and small strokes for me to get the texture I want with colored pencil. I'm not very good at laying out a drawing in advance - I like to get going and then see how things turn out, but it was hard to put ten or more hours into a piece before I realized that my proportions looked kooky.



While I was looking at the sketches I've done of meerkats I was trying to remember why I did them. I can't keep saying "I just love (name of animal here)". Probably with most animals I want to draw them because I like their facial expression. They look cranky or serious or happy.