This May I'm going to teach a class on basic field sketching techniques for beginners at the Biggest Week in American Birding warbler festival. Fun!!! We'll learn several ways to draw and write about birds (including the two-second bird sketches, as well as ways to draw detailed bird renderings with accurate field marks). We'll also work on techniques for drawing flowers, leaves, and even landscapes. If you're not an artist, don't worry. The goal of field sketching is not to create finished pieces of art, it's to learn how to get better at observing nature...and develop a deeper appreciation of nature.
...keep singing those spring love songs Mr. Mourning Dove. I'll keep sketching you! |
Spring Migration
at the Biggest Week in American Birding!
While I'm at the festival, I'll be blogging too. Hope to see you there!
For more information on the field sketching
and nature journaling class and bus tour, click here!
Check out the new BSBO Swamp Shop!
All proceeds go to the Black Swamp Bird Observatory:
Spring Migration at Magee Marsh is so much fun. I'm looking forward to walking the boardwalk and seeing all the warblers!! |
15 comments:
Lovely photo of the Mourning Dove, and delightful sketches! I know it would take me much longer than two seconds to get sketches anywhere near what you did. Now if I just lived closer I could take your class.....
just so sweet.
Nice sketching, Kelly. Love your photo of the Dove. The Collared Doves have taken over everything around here, so I rarely get to see a Mourning Dove anymore.
I couldn't sketch something that good even if I worked on it all day. They're lovely--even in your scribbles you manage to capture them well!
Sue and Elaine...you would be surprised at what you can sketch with a few of the tricks I have learned over the years. Observation and drawing tricks are all you need to record what you see in the wild! :-D
I am signed up for your Biggest Birding Week session. Can't wait. I have done Nature Journaling programs with middle school students, but sketching is where I fall short. Looking forward to picking up some pointers and improving my stick figure birds.
Hi Kelly
Lovely sketches.
Guy
...thanks Tex, Mona and Guy!
....and PA Brannon....yeah! I'm looking forward to meeting you. It's going to be so much fun. I'd love to hear about your nature journaling programs you taught.
In two seconds, thats brilliant Kelly.
Roy....thanks...each little bird took between 2 and 10 seconds. I say "two second" to mean fast and without detail.
I too am impressed by your speed drawing. Wow. Surely the Magee thing is still a few weeks away? But what a good thing to look forward to, unless it's too crowded to be enjoyable. If we go, it won't be on the main weekend.
P.S. That hiker high was Banjo52, temporarily on a different computer.
gosh, i would take your class, i would love to learn to draw birds. I guess i better just do some two minute sketches....
practice is what it takes. yours are wonderful to see and hold a feeling of the bird too~
Beautiful post! I love the sketches and that dove is just adorable. I think you are spot on about sketching quickly that way you do not have time to put too much thought into it and it frees you up to just create a piece of art as well as teaches you how to "see". I would love to take your class if only I were closer.
Banjo...I'll be at Magee the week of May 12. I can't wait for those spring warblers!
Tammie...you draw great birds! ...and you're right, all it takes is practice and observation to learn to draw birds.
Sublime...I agree with you. It really is tempting to try to get detailed on these little sketches, but it is also frustrating when getting detailed because birds move nonstop. Just capturing the feel or impression of the bird is best in this case. You can get detailed back in the studio! :-)
...of course, when trying to ID birds, details are necessary, but sometimes, you just want the feel of the bird.
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