Showing posts with label collage sketchbook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label collage sketchbook. Show all posts

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Phipps Collage Sketchbook: Final Watercolor Painting

This grand old palm tree elegantly stretches her fronds high & greets you when you first arrive to the central greenhouse of Phipps Conservatory in Pittsburgh.  Seeing her in January made me feel welcome, as if I'd stepped off a jet in Florida.

I painted the old palm tree in my collage sketchbook on a blank page (no background acrylic paint on this one).

I started with a light pencil sketch, then painted the first washes of color.  I practiced making the frond-y texture of the palm leaves with a fan brush on scrap paper before adding them to my painting.
The dark shadows under the palm tree make her lofty tips seem brighter, and set off the pink orchid blooms surrounding her. 
I kept layering in lights and darks until it felt right.  

Colors I used:

Hooker's green for the palm foliage.

Hooker's green plus yellow ochre for the yellowy fronds.

Burnt sienna and yellow ochre for the brick steps and retaining wall.

Permanent rose for the pink orchids.

Hooker's green and permanent blue violet for the dark shadows in and on the palm tree.

Sap green plus Winsor lemon for the touches of yellow-green.


If you're feeling winter's chill and can't escape to a greenhouse, I hope you'll make your own drawing or painting from my reference photo!

Happy Creating! 

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Creating in my Collage Sketch Book

You may have seen my earlier posts on creating a painted paper collage sketchbook
here and here.
In this post, I'm sharing a few photos of the process and including the reference photos I took at Phipps Conservatory.
If you're inspired, I hope you'll make drawings and paintings from my reference pics!
I've always loved this little statue, and especially delighted in the sash of dried flowers she's now decorated with.  I started with a pencil drawing on a blank page.
I added in watercolor greens to the background, with yellow-green first.  When the first wash of green dried, I mixed a dark green with phthalo blue and burnt sienna.  I added a touch of permanent blue violet to make extra dark shadows.

It was fun to make shadowy leaves and then to use the shadows to "carve" lighter green leaves (bottom right area).
With the background done, I mixed a pale violet for the shadows on the statue.  

I wanted to show that she was made of stone, so I kept the colors cool and desaturated by mixing permanent blue violet with a touch of yellow ochre.  The yellow muted the purple's brightness.
I splashed in Azo yellow, permanent rose and permanent blue violet to the sash for the dried flowers.  I added a few touches of the warm Azo yellow to the background to unify the page.

I drew these orchids in with Posca paint markers.
Here is some gorgeous foliage with striking patterns.  I used a Stabilo All pencil for the dark markings on the leaves.

Here's a yellow orchid I drew with Neocolor II watercolor crayons and the Stabilo All pencil

The bold magenta color of these begonias caught my eye.  It was fun to mix the Posca marker colors to try to recreate that shade of pink. I love how the green from the painted paper page shows through in spots & contrasts with the pink.

I love the gnarly trunk and twisted limbs of this bonsai tree.  But there was very little contrast between the tree and the background.
I used the filters function on my phone's photo editor and turned the color photo black and white, then turned up the contrast.
I used both photos as references for this drawing.
Adding in the trunk first with Neocolor II watercolor crayons, I created foliage with Posca paint markers.
I found that having these painted papers made the process of drawing so much less "scary."  I realized that fear of the blank page is a real force holding me back from creating. 
Splashing paint on paper in a messy, no-pressure way is fun in itself, AND it helps me to jump into drawing faster.  Win-win!

I hope you give this technique a try!

Happy Creating!

Sunday, January 18, 2026

My Finished Collage Sketchbook!


Recently, a friend and I had a winter sketching session at Phipps Conservatory, an indoor botanical gardens in Pittsburgh, PA.  I made special collage sketchbooks for us to use, and have just finished filling mine with art from that day.  Here's the video showing a flip through of my completed book!

If you'd like to see how I made the journals, check out my earlier YouTube video, 
Collage Sketch Book

 I hope this inspires you to make your own collage sketchbook and to fill it with art!

Happy Creating!