I was in a watercolor class today, with a favorite teacher,
Elizabeth Ellison, in a class that's about really about learning watercolor techniques and "tools to use."
I was so delighted to somehow produce a couple of pleasing studies, one of mountains, channeling (again) the Rockies of my childhood, not the smooth mountains of the Southern Appalachians where I live now, and feel at home, and the other, following Elizabeth's mention of a beech, turned into a remembrance of a sycamore.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj3UlvK3w4RG0zdVB8Ui1_LEeP0E0xMmY4epwaIKRaouK_XMKoR1qPzlS9FFO73zVYj-Zxioa8YMj_mruNCZB5gWQxuJt1l3Xcy9tSU4zJr2WTD50ZYTVEKp2q78GAFW8EFjpZ03ci1AiCx/s400/mountains.jpg) |
mountains |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkOWeSdJZJJH0fe6L8bWq9Je8vTHJjwZ3Phw4ACJyHpunuXPpAJxQFDtl7xOMRFQamSXcoUsRYdgL4wYLXKx8fN8YGLneT7ZhANvHRcrUnlVHx-IYSJRnx6Eer1eKw6_uY9VuJikcDdaF9/s400/tree-study.jpg) |
tree study |
You are a multi-talented woman! Love the sycamore.
ReplyDeleteVery Nice article.
ReplyDeleteLove to read your blogs.
Thanks for sharing these articles.
Thanks, Gail, for your supportive comment! I figure it's important to express our creativity wherever we can, whether we're "talented" at it, or not....
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