I spent a happy couple of hours at Swansea Print Workshop this afternoon, experimenting with the vintage wooden typefaces to design my next little experiment in letterpress. I had more or less settled on this one but then I couldn’t find any quoins to hold it together, so I’ll have to go back to finish it. Never mind, it’s good to have time to play with stuff and see what happens.
Playing With New Toy.
My new toy came through the post today, a box of Caran d’Ache Neo-Pastel colours. For a long time now I’ve been following the blog of USA based artist Aletha Kuschan and I’ve been so impressed by her work, particularly her lovely vibrant pastel drawings. She kindly told me what she used for them. So I had to have some. I did a very quick scribble onto Khadi handmade paper. I love the colours, the juicy intensity and the feel of the pastel as it glides over the surface. But I’m not keen on the way it moved over the very thick paper. Back to the drawing board (hahaha)
#StandingStoneSunday: The Sketchbook Stones
When I was travelling around South Wales studying standing stones with pre-historian Dewi Bowen and filmmaker Melvyn Williams, I generally worked onto large sheets of prepared paper. But sometimes I travelled light with just a brown paper sketchbook and it gave me a different insight into what I was drawing, I focused more on the decorative aspects of the subject.
This stone is Ty’n Y Selar and it’s sited near the ancient community of Margam in Neath Port Talbot, overlooked by the very busy and noisy M4 motorway. I drew with conte crayons in white, black and sanguine.
#Caturday: The Golden One.
Teaching Watercolour Basics
I did some more adult teaching this week, I’m running a short course in watercolour basics, covering a range of simple and accessible techniques. The group started with stretching some watercolour paper with paper gumstrip (learnt last week), sectioning it up with masking tape and producing 4 samples of different techniques. This is the demonstration one I did, using coarse salt, rice, cling film and aluminium foil. It’s frustrating that we all have to wait until next week to see how they turn out when they’re dry!
I’ve used Winsor & Newton’s Cotman half pan colours onto a heavy Bockingford paper.
Archive Life Drawing: 1
I’ve been browsing through some of my archives and seeing loads of work I’d forgotten about. This is from 10 years ago, working with an older male model, John. I went through a brief phase of drawing onto collaged paper and mixing up my drawing materials – charcoal, conte crayon and oil bars. I don’t know why I stopped working like this. Looking back I really quite like it.
Unplanned Scraping.
I carried on with the nocturne painting by scraping on some pinks with a palette knife. It wasn’t planned, I had some Titanium White, Medium Magenta and Dioxazine Violet left over from another painting and as always, “waste not, want not”. I’m not sure if the colour will make it though to the final piece but it will add to the texture and give richness and depth to the colour.
I’m using Liquitex Heavy Body acrylic paint onto a recycled textured stretched canvas with a metal Daler Rowney palette knife.
Slapping It On …..
I carried on with the still life painting I started a couple of weeks ago. I’m really enjoying this, I’m not being precious about it so I can just slap the paint on without stressing about it, impasto style. If I don’t like what I’ve done, I’ll just paint over it. It’s gradually building up into something resembling the original.




I’m using Liquitex Heavy Body acrylic paint onto a canvas board, although I began the painting in Daler Rowney System 3 acrylic ink.
#StandingStoneSunday.
It’s Standing Stone Sunday on social media again and I’ve chosen a strange little drawing I did of a relatively local monument, Maen Ceti (Arthur’s Stone) at Cefn Bryn on the Gower Peninsula. It’s a huge magnificent megalith in beautiful countryside and it’s easy to get distracted and concentrate on the surroundings when I’m drawing or painting. This time I made a conscious decision to do something different and played around with making interesting marks. I started with a piece of paper prepared with gesso and my homemade walnut ink and build on that background with conte crayons in black, white and sanguine.
If you want to see more of my standing stone art, please browse my digital gallery here.
Friday Night at the Patti.
Husb and I went to a gig last night, The Beat at the Patti Pavilion, a beautiful old venue on the seafront that had put on gigs all through the 1970s. Friday nights at the Patti are a fond memory of my youth and I saw some wonderful bands there. The gigs have been resumed after a gap of about 40 years! Of course I had to have a scribble.















