Summer guests

Every summer our Bed and Breakfast is fully booked. Mostly by regulars who visit year after year, finding our meals unsurpassed, our hospitality most gracious and our facilities nothing but quality; in short, five star accommodation at a reasonable price.
Mr Frog arrived later than usual this year and is still awaiting the lady of this affair to arrive. Every evening he protests his discontentment at her not being here yet, in his distinguished baritone voice. I hope she arrives soon, I don’t like seeing my guests unhappy.

_scan10053.jpg

Once again we had the honor of assisting in the arrival of Mr and Mr Swallow’s young ones. What a lovely couple they are, so caring and loving and protective of the live they have created. the happy event happened only 5 days ago and it was a grand event here. We opened up a bottle of bubbly and all the guests attended to celebrate the wonder of new life and admire the 5 adorable infants.

 _scan10059.jpg

 Miss White butterfly brought many more of her friends along this year and I really had to be inventive to accommodate all these teenagers. But I love every minute of their delightful company! We have come into the habit of sharing an hour or so together every afternoon, where I learn from them all about being a delicate and beautiful and delightful adolescent again. Along with the ever roaming dark and handsome bees, they enjoy energetic parties until late night, Fortunately the neighbors haven’t complained yet. I suspect they know and understand all about the habits of these young people.

 _scan10056.jpg

 We are also very honored to accommodate very well-known international models in our B&B every year, miss Dragonfly and company. They keep mostly to themselves, are very discreet and love their privacy. But when the moment shows itself, I’ll stare at them shamelessly, wishing I had their elegance and beauty Soon they will all be moving on to make room for the next half of the summer guests, leaving me just enough time to tidy up, restock the pantry and put out fresh flowers. The arrival of our summer guests, is a highlight in the season, something we look forward to year after year.
All these sketches were done in pen and WC in moleskine.

 _scan10055.jpg

 30 comments:

Tonniece said…
It sounds so super there, with all the guests, the night sounds, and the beginnings of new life.
Wonderful wc’s depicting all that activity.
June 13, 2007 11:17 PM  
Jenny said…
You have such beautiful, interesting guests! Seems they give you infinite pleasure in return for your excellent accommodations. You are wise to appreciate your exciting life.
June 13, 2007 11:30 PM  
Lin said…
RONELL!!THIS IS ABSOLUTELY DELIGHTFUL! HUMOROUS, FUN, INGENEOUS, ENTERTAINING, AND SO BEAUTIFULLY PAINTED!! WHAT A DELIGHT!MOVE OVER WEE GUESTS, I, TOO, WANT A ROOM!BRAVA, CARA .. THIS IS FANTASTIC!!
June 13, 2007 11:34 PM  
Andrew said…
too much fun…couldnt wait to see what you were terming your summer guests…lol
June 14, 2007 12:00 AM  
Anonymous said…
Love this B&B!hfm
http://tcores.blogspot.com
June 14, 2007 12:48 AM  
juj said…
Your sketches are – as always – simply wonderful, but I especially enjoyed the story. I have a much nicer perspective on the wildlife in my yard now. Thanks for the much needed break in my day.
June 14, 2007 12:54 AM  
Brenda Y said…
You had me going!! I was thinking, “hmm, I didn’t know Ronell ran a B & B,” only to discover very shortly the true identity of your “guests!” Outstanding story and FABULOUS sketches!! Loved every word and brush stroke.
June 14, 2007 1:21 AM  
bec said…
you had me going too! so cool, I thought….she runs a b&b! HA! You’ve brought your guests to life for me with your beautiful watercolors! Thank you!
June 14, 2007 2:22 AM  
mARTa said…
Well, it’s not going to take much more than this to convince me that I MUST come for a night and see what all this magic is about! I’ll have to email you soon so we can work out some dates! Will the dragonfly models be gone by October…so sad that I might miss them! What a midsummer night’s dream you live!
June 14, 2007 4:01 AM  
Nancy said…
I love it when I click on my digest e-mail and find that you have posted new sketches. It makes my day!
June 14, 2007 4:03 AM  
good with color said…
These are some of the nicet summer drawings/paintings I have seen in a long time. They will be great to look back to when cold weather returns with its different visitors. Your accompanying notes are a joy to read.
csqwbm
June 14, 2007 5:48 AM  
caseytoussaint said…
What a treat! These are just delightful, Ronell. It’s so much fun to see all your ‘guests’ close up. I feel honored to have heard Mr. Frog complaining in person. You’ve brightened up this grey day for me – thank you!
June 14, 2007 11:32 AM  
Ujwala said…
i love all of them! very very nice. i hope mr frog finds his companion soon.
June 14, 2007 1:18 PM  
Lindsay said…
Ronell! I did not know you ran a B and B for such elegant visitors. I’m very impressed. My compliments to the gardner!This post is the essance of summer!
June 14, 2007 3:17 PM  
Sandy said…
Love your B&B post with the description of its’ guests. This was so fun Ronell. Paintings are beautiful and delicate as usual. Don’t let those teenagers wear ya out okay…I’m having the same problem with mine…very energetic and raucous…I must subscribe to your emails..I always come late to the party.sandy
June 14, 2007 5:07 PM  
Christeen said…
What a charming narrative- I felt like I was there, marveling at your guests in person 🙂
Your paintings are beautiful!
June 14, 2007 5:14 PM  
Sandy said…
Ronell, you are just a blast – Lovely work as always! What a treat to be your Guest!!
June 14, 2007 5:15 PM  
Diahn said…
How lovely! If you ever start accepting human guests, I believe I’ll have to make a flight over and stay a while – such fabulous and interesting company it would be!!
June 14, 2007 6:02 PM  
Carole said…
Your blog is just a delight to read and look at! You’ve managed to make me smile on a cold, wet day here – thank you.
June 14, 2007 6:19 PM  
Robyn said…
They are beautiful guests, Ronell, the very best kind, I think. I would adore to have Swallows born in my garden and a cloud of butterflies in the lavender was one of my most magical early memories of a European summer.
Now I’m going to subscribe to your blog so I don’t arrive last with my praise!
June 14, 2007 7:40 PM  
Lynn said…
What a wonderful post! Thank you for sharing this part of your life. I love your sketches.
June 14, 2007 9:47 PM  
Dave said…
You make it look and sound idyllic! Wonderful post.
June 15, 2007 12:03 AM  
martha said…
Wonderful nature sketches – so loose and colorful!
June 15, 2007 12:54 AM  
phthaloblu said…
What wonderful sketches and I just love the way you write! It’s what makes your blog so interesting.
June 15, 2007 1:40 AM  
Nancy Van Blaricom said…
Ok Ronell, here’s the deal. You have a contest offering the winner a weeks all expenses paid vacation to your b & b, then you pretend to honestly pick the winner… but all along it will be me that gets to come. Oh what fun it will be.Oh the other hand…. have you ever given thought of writing an illistrated book of a summer or fall etc in the life of Ronell? I think it would be wonderful to read and look at. You have such a way with words and paints…….. Give it some thought, for us, your fans.
June 15, 2007 5:16 AM  
Africantapestry said…
Thank you for all the kind comments.
You made an interesting point there, Sandy and Robyn…subscribing to a blog? I don’t know how that works and thought that was for “professional bloggers”…I would also like to subscribe to some work, because I also arrive late with comments…tell me too how to do it!
Ronell
June 15, 2007 6:28 PM  
Desiree said…
OH what fun you are! I loved the story and was ready to sign up to visit your B&B, maybe you should think about writing ads for peoples business’! Great work.
June 15, 2007 7:21 PM  
Sandy said…
oh boy…how to have a subscribe button..I would go to the dashboard and read up from there. Maybe it will talk about it. If not just google how to put email subscription on blog, that ought to do it..but I would definitely sign up. I wanna be in line FIRST…its’ all about me, don’t ya know..hahaha.
June 16, 2007 7:30 PM  
Jana Bouc said…
This was such a delight to read and see. I’m awed by your creativeness, sense of humor and talent. A little butterfly landed on my knee the other day in my backyard and I got to study it for a quite awhile. It reminded me of how my mother used to give me “butterfly kisses” with her eyelashes as it was so delicate and gentle.
June 17, 2007 8:08 AM  
luci said…
Love, *love*, the story, Ronell. And of course the beautiful pictures that illustrate it all. Your garden is as magical as the one in Secret Garden. 🙂

From shade to shade in summer

In summer we travel from shade to shade.

Early mornings, cup of coffee in hand, are spent on the terrace, sitting on a rock at the entrance to one of our caves and contemplating. The shade of the huge cliff at your back is a welcome relief after a hot night’s suffering. These stairs, leading up to the terrace, were done in pen and watercolor, on Fabriano WC paperHP(extra white).

_scan10052.jpg

After all that meditating and musing, while watching the sun brightening the skies, it is time to move out of the shade and into the working shoes, which are ready on the go at the kitchen door. These are actually the working boots of Hartman, mine wasn’t to be found, but they aren’t as characterful as his anyway. But, pretending they are mine, they will prune and dig and weed and water, while the sun still has a gentle caress. This was done in pen and watercolor on Fabriano CP paper.

_scan10051.jpg

All the prunings and snippings of early morning will go into some vase somewhere in the house as well as an empty container in the garden in a shady spot, like the mint in this old kettle on a crooked, rusty chair. This corner was sketched in pen and watercolor on Fabriano HP(extra white)

 _scan10054.jpg

Finally the day will end in the welcoming shade of our summer kitchen right at the back of the garden, where we enjoy the most wonderful alfresco meals, prepared by Hartman. (The door right at the back goes into a cave, which accounts for the wonderful coolness in summer)This is his kingdom, where he cooks and fries and experiments and flips and flops, with me in the role of sous-chef and lighting candles and lanterns, picking herbs, fiddling here and meddling there. We play guitar and sing and eat and while away the beautiful summer evenings, ending it all with some more contemplating and musing. Tomorrow we’ll start the day again, moving from shade tot shade. This was done in watercolor on Fabriano HP.

dsc_0057-1.jpg

29 comments:

Christeen said…
Wow- what a great entry! Thanks for sharing this illustrated peek into a summer day for you and Hartman… gorgeous stuff!
June 7, 2007 6:13 PM  
Sandy said…
So lovely Ronell and restful and light – makes me yearn to get out into my garden.
June 7, 2007 6:22 PM  
Dave said…
Lovely to hear about your summer days and to see your illustrations of it!
June 7, 2007 7:56 PM  
Robyn said…
I love them all but the mint in the kettle is my favourite. Delightful post as usual, Ronell and I learn for the first time that Hartman likes to cook. We are so lucky to have such men! Your garden, with all its special nooks, looks like paradise
June 7, 2007 8:03 PM  
Claudia said…
I enjoyed v e r y much reading your blog entry and seeing the wonderful, loose sketches!!! Keep up the good work!!!
June 7, 2007 9:15 PM  
Bonny said…
Ronell, you have been busy doing these lovely paintings! They are all fabulous! My favourite one is of the teapot and the mint growing in it. The ‘cave’ is fascinating because of the perspective and the story behind it.
Thanks for sharing!
June 7, 2007 9:59 PM  
Anonymous said…
Gorgeous work! I love the shoes.hfm
http://tcores.blogspot.com
June 7, 2007 10:50 PM  
mARTa said…
oh, I am envious of you as well! These are all so lovely and inviting! I am already in a mental travel mode and anticipating my trip this fall. I am so excited about meeting you, Casey and Robyn! My day was spent having my nails done, a pedicure and out for sushi with my husband and then an art show this evening. Maybe tomorrow I should play in the garden!
June 8, 2007 12:23 AM  
Susan Hosken said…
Yours is the first shade challenge response I’ve seen. I can’t think of what to do so was pleased to see your response.
Lots of love from Susan in Australia
June 8, 2007 12:46 AM  
Lin said…
WOWOW!!! What a way to live a life .. what spectacular sketching and painting!! I am awed!
June 8, 2007 1:16 AM  
Brenda Y said…
If there were “best blog entry” awards–you would get it!! What a fascinating narative of a day in the life of. . . The drawings and loose watercolor technique is absolutely FANTASTIC! My favorite is your summer kitchen/cave entrance–OHMYGOSH I would absolutely LOVE to cook in that kitchen!!! What a wonderful life and so happy you share it with us-THANKS!!
June 8, 2007 2:11 AM  
Lindsay said…
I love your “day in the life of”.
Lovely sketches. The stairs are so lyrical!! Thanks for sharing a slice of your day.
June 8, 2007 2:56 AM  
Ujwala said…
sketches are lovely and the post well written. i especially like the first one because you’ve tackled perspective which is one of my stumbling blocks.
June 8, 2007 5:44 AM  
caseytoussaint said…
What a beautiful, poetic rendering of you private world, there behind the big old wooden gate. Those cars buzzing past have no idea what a paradise you’re hiding!
June 8, 2007 9:00 AM  
Stacy said…
Lovely story, beautiful paintings and the perfect way to spend a summer day! Thanks for sharing!
June 8, 2007 2:58 PM  
Carole said…
What an idyllic way to spend the day – thanks for sharing! Beautiful paintings, as always. I don’t know how you manage to keep them so loose and casual looking, and yet have such accuracy in things like the chair, steps and perspective. You talented lady!
June 8, 2007 4:32 PM  
Nancy Van Blaricom said…
What a wonderful story teller… I could read a whole book with you as the author … bravo!I can’t pick a favorite of your watercolors….. I want them all. Beautiful colors depicting a summer day.
June 8, 2007 4:43 PM  
SCquiltaddict said…
lovely as usual…what time is dinner???:> and whats hartmann cooking?!
June 8, 2007 5:31 PM  
Anonymous said…
Hi RonellI frequently visit you block to check on latest post and commentaries. Normally I refrain from commenting but this time around I can not resist. Maybe I was compelled by the fact that I was implicated so much this time around.Being true to your philosophy of telling stories with painting I could read much more in your carefully constricted associated text. Of course I have an additional advantage above your normal critiques by the fact that I know these place so well myself. But what the heck something must compensate for my lack of artistic expertise.For instance I could feel the shade and almost smell the associated odor of the moss on the wall while looking at the painting of the stairs. I could sense the relive of the end of the days work in the garden associated in the pair of shoes hinting to fact that they have been taken off only moments ago. The mint in the cattle spoke of you and the combination of your love for the garden and antiques. I could not help to immediately visualize many moments of joy in the garden or “brocante” after an unusual find.However what struck me most was the emotions and many memories of good times that were evoked by looking at the painting of summer kitchen.I believe that artist are feeling good if the can touch people and their emotions with their art. If they can get people to act or react they are in euphoria. Well…. This time around you can reach euphoria because looking at all of this it moves me to stop working immediately……. make may my way home…… to our summer kitchen…. to start a fire …… so I can be KING..Well done RonellHartman
June 8, 2007 5:32 PM  
Teri C said…
STUNNING!!! The art and the commentary!! As the paintings downloaded I loved the next one and then the next one. Just stunning!!!
June 8, 2007 6:01 PM  
Robyn said…
Okay – that’s done it! Now I’m in love with Hartman!
June 8, 2007 7:28 PM  
Sandy said…
I’m ready to move.. Can I catch a plane tomorrow. Will you meet me at the airport. Can I eat with you. Can I sit in the shade with Hartman. Wonderful wonderful post and paintings…sandy
June 8, 2007 7:59 PM  
Lynn said…
Absolutely wonderful! What a fabulous life you live. You are an inspiration.
June 8, 2007 10:21 PM  
Africantapestry said…
Thank you so much for all your kind and encouraging comments and a special thanks to Hartman for his appreciation…for having had me sitting and crying here…because I’m happy.
Hie hie Robyn, you make me laugh…you and your husband should hop on the plane and come visit…them men can cook and we can…well..do what we do best?
And that goes for you too Sandy, come and cook and eat!
Thanks everybody!
Ronell
June 8, 2007 11:18 PM  
bec said…
wish I had a summer kitchen… is it really in a cave? lovely paintings!
June 8, 2007 11:19 PM  
mARTa said…
ah ronelle…is that invite still open to me next fall? LOL…I’m in love with Hartman now too!
June 9, 2007 6:43 AM  
Tea & Margaritas in My Garden said…
What wonderful art and words!tea
xo
June 9, 2007 5:01 PM  
Robyn said…
Oh Ronell, we’d so love to come but our dogs have shocking table manners!
June 9, 2007 11:23 PM  
phthaloblu said…
These are beautiful paintings and great commentary.

The details of a wisteria

The wisterias are magnificent now, their beauty cascading over walls and pergolas and trees and gates, windows and towers, roofs and even pathways. I just had to take on a painting or two, try and capture a little of their glory.

I tried twice again, not being too happy with the first try. I took on another corner, more “architectural”, more detailed, brighter colors, with which I am quite content..it feels like “me”.

dsc_0003-4.jpg

And I just can’t get away from it- detail- I need detail. Without it, I can’t stress. I can’t be obsessive compulsive. Without detail in my life, I can’t experience beauty. I can’t create beauty. Without detail, life is very foggy and leaves only an impression of what might be out there…very much like the first painting of these wisterias.

dsc_0011-3.jpg

Watercolor and ink on Arches HP
23 x 31cm (9″ x 12″)

 

14 comments:

Fanta said…
Wonderful again, Ronell. I love the way the shadows “dance” on the wall surface created by your careful layering, especially in the first one.
Have a great Sunday!
April 22, 2007 2:01 PM  
Lindsay said…
I like how you do these a couple of times! Lovely job.
I’ve been trying to get my wisteris to bloom for YEARS. Stubborn things refuse to flower.
April 22, 2007 5:14 PM  
Teri C said…
You are persistant arn’t you! The signs of a good detail person….I recognize it because that’s me too.Those wisteria are wonderfu and beautiful. So glad you persisted to your satisfaction.BTW, I was just reading about creativity and a detail person is called “bios’ or the dteails of life, and the person that has an overview of things is called ‘zoe’ or the essence of life.

Hmm, I bet that is more information than you wanted! 🙂

April 22, 2007 6:43 PM  
Lin said…
GORGEOUS GORGEOUS GORGEOUS!!!! The frost nipped ours and I haven’t seen much since then — so I am thoroughly enjoying yours!! Did you know you can eat the flowers?? BUT ABSOLUTELY NOT THE SEEDS!!
April 22, 2007 11:13 PM  
Lin said…
PS — I’M RIGHT THERE WITH YOU AND DETAIL … MAKES ME SO UNCOMFORTABLE WHEN I LEAVE IT OUT!!! Hard to learn to live with simlicity — i do love the detail!!! lol
April 22, 2007 11:14 PM  
Dave said…
I love wisteria, and you’ve really captured it in these lovely pictures!
April 22, 2007 11:36 PM  
beautiful! i LOVE wisteria and the draping laziness of it. great pictures!
April 23, 2007 1:59 AM  
Nancy said…
Love the wisteria – I, too, have been trying to get mine to bloom – they are 9 years old now. Is there any hope?These a gorgeous!
April 23, 2007 5:13 AM  
aPugsLife-laserone said…
Oh my gosh, I just love these! My favorite is the first one. I’m such a sucker for blue. Very beautiful! 🙂
April 23, 2007 9:26 AM  
caseytoussaint said…
These are both beautiful, but the second one does more to convey the delicacy of wisteria – such a tough subject.
April 23, 2007 10:59 AM  
Sandy said…
I love Wisteria and mine is huge, but never blooms !!!!! I want to paint them too!!! Just Lovely! You have been busy!
April 23, 2007 5:07 PM  
Carole said…
I’m another wisteria fan, and I agree that you’ve really got the essence of wisteria in this second painting. The twisted branches and those wonderful long cascades of blue/lilac flowers. I once painted the detail of just one of those tiny little flowers – I may post it on my blog.
April 23, 2007 10:55 PM  
phthaloblu said…
I understand all about detail. Yep! As much as I try to get away from it, I am only happy when it looks like what I’m looking at. These are both so beautiful. I love wisteria, too, the way it hangs and looks. It’s all around my house, but not in my yard. Wonderfully done.
April 24, 2007 3:15 PM  
platitudinal said…
Thank you for your unrelenting pursue of details, we all benefit from it and get to enjoy the beauty you created based from your search.*Honestly speaking, though, Ronell, I think both takes of the wisterias are appealing. 🙂

The elegant fences of the countryside

The countryside provides a wealth of “elegant” fences…
I took Robyn(http://havedogswilltravel.blogspot.com/ ), up on her suggestion a previous time, and did these sketches on site with a water soluble pen and 2 waterbrushes and my moleskin, along with nerves of steel(for standing right on the edge of the narrow French countryroads) and a pretence(so I would at least give the impression that I know what I’m doing) and chewing gum – that is for the nerves and the pretence…

_scan10016.jpg

_scan10017.jpg

_scan10018.jpg

Deborah said…
Once again a lovely little series of fences. They all look like cool breezy days but you have given them a real softness.
April 6, 2007 7:42 PM  
Shirley said…
These are such fun – interesting fences and nice loose sketches.
April 6, 2007 7:57 PM  
Lin said…
AWESOME!!! I LOVE THE BITS OF DETAIL YOU PUT IN IT — AND THE SHADING IS TERRIFIC!
April 6, 2007 8:13 PM  
bec said…
You’re makin me want to get out and try the pen, brush and water plein air thing too! Nice atmosphere in your work….each of your fences seems to tell a story.
April 6, 2007 9:42 PM  
Carole said…
I could use some of these in my project! I really like these lively sketches. They inspire me to try and loosen up a bit! Great stuff.
April 6, 2007 10:00 PM  
Teri C said…
You are spoiling us…I love all your little answers to a challenge. Each one of these is wonderful!!
April 6, 2007 10:01 PM  
jill said…
fantastic job. amazing how interesting an old fence can be and how truly beautiful when done well. i really liked these!
April 7, 2007 1:54 AM  
caseytoussaint said…
Ronell, these are exceptional. And I know how utterly terrifying it can be to stand on a country road in France. Your sketching style is so free and expressive.
April 7, 2007 9:01 AM  
Africantapestry said…
Thank you for all the comments, I really appreciate them!Bec…You should give the plein air etc. a go, you’ll get hooked and there is a very special satisfaction in looking back at your sketch and remembering the experience.I’m looking forward to seeing yours soon!Carole, your latest landscape/fence is already a nice lively and loose sketch!

Thanks!
Ronell

April 7, 2007 11:34 AM  
Lindsay said…
These are completely CHARMING! I love every one of them. You make them look as if they were done in color with the beautiful grays.
April 7, 2007 1:34 PM  
mARTa said…
oh Ronell, they are all wonderful. I love your sketches and would love to sit with you and Casey and sketch sometime!! If only we didn’t have an ocean between us!
April 8, 2007 6:47 AM  
MrsSnowy said…
I’d just like to clarify that I did NOT suggest you stand on the edge of narrow French roads, Ronell! You must have nerves of steel. Your fences are full of atmosphere and that tone looks very classy.
I’m grinning from ear to ear, from getting a personal mention in your blog. Thank you 🙂
April 8, 2007 10:37 AM  
platitudinal said…
To Ronell whose nerves are made of steel,I admire how you can produce such lovely sketches under strenuous circumstance. I especially love how the lines seem so lively and lithe … they told us a tale of how your pen and brushes danced deftly on the paper.*Many thanks for the chewing gum tip!

April 8, 2007 3:28 PM  
Emma Pod said…
I like your somewhat dilapidated fences! Each one has such good tonal values and they evoke the countryside. I think the gum-chewing was a good trick to give you courage and fortitude.
April 8, 2007 10:00 PM  
Africantapestry said…
Thank you for the comments, everyone!Marta..oceans, in my opinion, are there to be crossed! So, cross it and come visit for a 3 nights or so(I have more than enough room) and we can sketch whatever stands still long enough to give us a line and a color!My pleasure to you, Robyn, after all, it was your idea that roamed in my thoughts when I set out to do this challenge.

And, I actually hate chewing gum, apart from it being groase seeing someone chew constantly and stepping in it in the streets, it hurts my jaw!
Ronell

April 9, 2007 9:07 AM  
Sandy said…
Each fence study is very interesting, and quite intriguing – you found unique subjects. Bravo!
April 9, 2007 6:06 PM  
Linda said…
Great studies! I particularly like the top one — although I’m having a hard time imagining what it would have been like standing on the side of a narrow road with no shoulder to draw! You get points for bravery!
April 9, 2007 11:29 PM  
Jana Bouc said…
Charming sketches and fun to picture you there chewing gum trying to look confident. I like the way you’ve suggested detail in a painterly way.
April 10, 2007 4:36 PM  
Fanta said…
I simply adore these dramatic fences. I like this “organized mess” that comes with it in your compositions.
April 13, 2007 12:18 PM  
andrea joseph’s sketchblog said…
These are fabulous studies. Really nice indeed. I think the new pen has worked well. They actually make me want to get out and do this challenge. The top one is my fave!

Picking grapes

These are my last sketches on the vineyards and grape picking in Stellenbsoch. They were done in pen and wash. I plan on using all these sketches to put together a series of paintings…hopefully it will move beyond planning!
This was much more difficult than sketching the “pickers” when they were taking a break. They really picked so fast and their heads were constantly bobbing up and down in the vineyard. Just as I thought I could capture one, he would disappear. In the end I stood further back to only capture glimpses of color in the vineyards.
The first sketch is of one of the many women pickers. This woman had such a presence about her and after a few hopeless attempts to sketch her picking, I asked her if she would keep still for maybe just one minute? The minute turned out to be much shorter than I know a minute to be, but I did manage to get her down.

The last sketch of the pressing machine was very boring for me to draw. I don’t like machines of any kind, except of course my coffee machine…I didn’t succeed in capturing it’s function, so it is hard to see what happens where, but at least you have an where the grapes fall into the shaft…

dsc_0013-2.jpg

dsc_0029-1.jpg

dsc_0017-2.jpg

dsc_0017-3.jpg

dsc_0020-1.jpg

dsc_0021-1.jpg

11 comments:

caseytoussaint said…
Wow, Ronell, these are incredible. They tell so much – travel journaling at it’s best. I hope there are more to come!
March 16, 2007 6:41 PM  
Lin said…
These are STUNNING!!! Fresh, VIBRANT! GREAT USE of ink and wash — lovely lovely lovely!! DITTO!! MORE !!!
March 16, 2007 10:33 PM  
gabi campanario said…
ronell, i can blog-travel to these vineyards thanks to these moments you captured so well with your pen and washes! i really like them. the first one is my favorite. look forward to more!
March 17, 2007 4:33 AM  
Ujwala said…
the whole series of them are fabulous! and i hope that you do get around to making paintings from them.
March 17, 2007 8:15 AM  
Jana Bouc said…
Wonderful work! All that’s missing is the glass of wine! You really captured all the steps along the way and your drawings of people are really excellent! I love the colors.
March 17, 2007 5:21 PM  
Africantapestry said…
Thank you all, for the encouraging comments..
ronell
March 17, 2007 9:07 PM  
Anonymous said…
Hi Ronell This looks cool.
March 18, 2007 3:00 PM  
phthaloblu said…
What can I say except that these are just beautiful!
March 19, 2007 2:39 AM  
aPugsLife-laserone said…
Oh my gosh, these are just beautiful. Really nice work!!! …by the way, “Peeps” are little marshmallow candies coated in colored sugar. I just did a second Peep drawing on my art blog and also wrote a bit about peeps and provided pictures and links. Heheheh. 🙂
March 19, 2007 8:22 AM  
“Maggie” said…
Ronell,I love your loose sketches and colors of the vineyards and that capture moments of time. Wonderful!I want to say thank you for visiting my blog and glad you liked my blind contour. I love drawing them!

March 19, 2007 1:14 PM  
Africantapestry said…
Thank you everybody for the nice comments, I really appraciate your visiting!
Ronell

Napping in the shade of the vines

Here is the second batch of sketches of my trip to Stellenbosch, South Africa.

The first two sketches – pencil and watercolor on hotpressed Fabriano paper.

The last three – ink and wash on rough Canson paper, which I am quite happy with – it gives a feel of the roughness of the day and the job…grape picking isn’t so romantic when the heat comes down on your shoulders at about 35 degrees C.

I did the sketching on the spot and the washes later that afternoon. I was mostly interested in catching their actions and gestures and since they were clothed in all the colors of the rainbow, I could only run through my whole color palette afterwards to depict that.

As for the light – it was in the middle of the day and far too white to be spectacular.

I really enjoyed this day of drawing. The Cape folk are so easy to get along with – they take life in their stride, aren’t afraid to laugh, to joke, to talk, to differ and their wit has no equal! They were on lunch break and didn’t mind at all that I sketched them while they were taking naps. In fact, they ganged up behind me, looking to see who the next one was to be sketched, making suggestions, made jokes, even gave advice. I shared in their lunches and drinks, but unfortunately couldn’t share in the napping…would’ve liked to though!!

I had such fun.

I hope I did capture some romance in these napping in the shade of the vines….

dsc_0001-3.jpg

dsc_0005-3.jpg

dsc_0010-1.jpg

dsc_0017-1.jpg

 

6 comments:

Susan Cornelis said…
THanks for sharing all this wonderful sun and relaxation. I really get it from this post, pictures and text!
March 14, 2007 6:06 PM  
caseytoussaint said…
I just love these Ronell – thanks for sharing a little bit of your vacation with us! The colors are beautiful – well done!
March 14, 2007 9:17 PM  
Christeen said…
These just carried me away- what a great job with the colors, and the people’s positions are really believable- well done!
March 15, 2007 6:44 PM  
Jana Bouc said…
These are great. From your colors it looks like it was really hot–no wonder everyone was taking siestas.
March 17, 2007 5:19 PM  
Africantapestry said…
Thank you for the nice comments…much appreciated.
Ronell
March 17, 2007 9:10 PM  
phthaloblu said…
Your sketches are so beautiful! You really got the postures of the people down so well that you can actually feel them napping.