I took my tiny pocket watercolor kit on a trail, and when I was midway through my sketch, it fell apart! My search for a replacement turned up some results, and I can also fix this one with some duck tape (but the cute image on the cover will not be visible) or go towards a luxury option of demi part toolkit palette.
Virtual Traveling (with Street View World Tour) - Underwater!
On My Table: Beginning of April 2026
This is a very honest photo of the top of my table - I did not try to make anything nice, more or less visible, I did not remove my tea and extra objects (there are three jars with paint water!). This is how it was - mess and all :) An unfinished spread with an experimental sketch for a series of works I would like to make. Lots and lots of materials one on top of another on that page.
Tips for Drawing at the Protest
Last Saturday, I participated in a peaceful No Kings protest in the Bay Area. There were many people, dogs, music, and of course, I drew there!
I found a nice corner with some shade, and because it was a corner, there were people coming from many sides, and there was a traffic light where they would stop for a little bit, so I had a few extra moments to draw. I took with me a minimum amount of tools - see my sketchbook with a little pen pouch attached to it with an elastic band. When drawing a crowd, I apply the following techniques:
- drawing some of my subjects in whole, especially if they talk to someone near me (that duck suit with a lady who gave me a button);
- combining some people out of many looks at them as they stand, talk, and walk (three people who were actually waiting for the light to turn green - on the second sketch, or a group on the corner (first sketch, right side)
- putting together some figures out of several people (little humans near the tree), plus adding notes and taking a break to draw something else from time to time (like trees).
My Radish-Growing Update
After devouring my first radish, I was looking forward to the continuation of the season. But it proved to be quite short! The second radish was pretty cool and deserves a few of portraits (I used thicker gouache with this one and tried different techniques of applying paint while waiting for lunch time). But since then, we had a heatwave, and I believe the rest of my plants promptly decided to "bolt" - meaning they now have beautiful flowers and no edible root. The Internet is full of ideas about why and what now, but I think I will enjoy drawing beautiful plants instead of beautiful roots.












