Multiproject Update for Q3.5 of 2022

Once again, the third quarter blends into the fourth, and my projects have been inching along chaotically. I’ve been behind on updates, so I will share the outputs I’ve hoarded these past few months in bits and pieces from now.

Here are some topics that have been on my mind these past few months.

US Midterm Elections

Participating in election campaigns is a natural extension to environmental advocacy in my opinion, since politics has become increasingly entwined with environmental action. It’s natural that politicians would disagree on what environmental actions the government should take, but in the US, climate change is politicized far beyond that.

The environmental groups I participate in all pivoted to ‘getting out the vote’ (GOTV) efforts to encourage climate-conscious voters to go to the polls this midterm. If you’ve been following the election news, you know it’s been an existential-for-democracy nail-biter, and women and young voters stepped up to the quest. We environmentalists are pretty relieved with the results.

So the lead-up was quite a frenzy for me, writing postcards, phone-banking, making media, and trying to freak out as productively as possible.

Travel

I took a much-needed vacation to Scotland and Ireland to visit friends.

I returned refreshed and with plenty of sketches and vacation photographs to make art from. I’m excited to dust off the inks! My library of landscape references was running low.

Organizing my research

For a while now, my research and other notes have been exploding out of my organization systems. I mainly relied on indexes (BuJo style) at the beginning of my notebooks and the occasional spreadsheet to track the writing I produced.

Recently, I’ve gotten on the ‘second brain’ train. (If you haven’t heard, the book Building a Second Brain by Tiago Forte has been taking nerd circles by storm. It’s a book about note-taking, and it was very relevant to my situation.)

I made an organization system in an environment called Obsidian. The main advantage of Obsidian is it enables you to link notes together and manages the links when you move or rename files. There’s other handy functionality from plug-ins and add-ons.

So far, I’ve added about 800 notes about various topics in the last few months, and organized them into a loose structure. I think I’ve finally found a system that can keep up with the bouncing-jumping-skipping way that I work.

I think of it as an extension of my notebook index. I effectively made a map to my notes across all notebooks, hard drives, and cloud accounts, so I can cross-reference them.

* * *

So that’s what being going on under the surface! As for the actual projects, I will summarize briefly and post more details soon.

  • Research quest: My advocacy goal was to have an op ed accepted (continuing to build on the foundation of comments and letters to the editor). I’ve gotten in the swing of writing and submitting them, with no luck so far. As for reading and blogging, I have some updates to share soon. [Update: Redondo Beach Climate Action]
  • Novel: I’ve consolidated my manuscript, and there’s a chunk of editing to do. Somehow, every winter I get a burst of writing productivity [Update: the plan for December]. I’m hoping the pattern will hold in the months ahead! I have some concept art to share as well.
  • Art: I’ve been working in digital illustration mostly! Pictures (and a bit of video) coming soon! [Update: picture]

So, there it is. More of a trailer than an actual update, but I’m glad to be back to sharing some writing and art!

InkSplosion – Botanical Ink Paintings!

Brushing up on a favorite medium

I’m back to working with botanical inks again! A new box of them* arrived last month and I’d been eager to use them in some pictures. I considered recording the ‘unboxing‘ and trying them out, but I’m glad I didn’t, for reasons that will become clear…

I don’t know what I was thinking, but I thought it would be a good idea to shake the ink bottle before opening it.

And it was not! The indigo ink foamed like the most appetizing cappuccino ever, and exploded all over my desk (see the crime scene image on the bottom left). I siphoned as much as I could of the ink streaming down my hand into the jar-lid I use as a palette.

I opened a second bottle of a slightly different shade of indigo (without shaking it this time, of course), and it still foamed everywhere! Though not as much. I’m not sure why I opened the second bottle, since I already had a full lid of ink to use. Probably curiosity. Fortunately nothing valuable got splashed.

Anyway, after I washed all the ink off myself, I had a full lid of ink I needed to use before it dried (as best I could). So I canceled all my plans and spent the rest of the evening painting. I made four paintings on the day, and started a fifth that I finished a few days later.

From the top-left, they are:

  • a tree I could see from my window,
  • two attempts at a jar of water I was drinking from, and had put a teabag and leaf-bits into, for the flavor (I think the second one is a bit better in terms of perspective),
  • one Himalayan street from a vacation photo,
  • and one forest in Portland, Oregon.

Feel free to click on any of them to get a more zoomed-in look.

The foaming seems to have to do with the ink having been bottled at a lower temperature. I had four more bottles of ink (I really do love the stuff!) so I refrigerated them before opening, and they caused no mess or disturbance whatsoever. So I guess I learned something!

The first issue I always run into when I start painting after any sort of break is: putting too much paint or ink (and water) on my brush. It’s so tempting to slather the color on and make big, dark marks on paper.

But the detail of the picture always suffers. You can see a bit of that in the first attempt at the jar on the window sill.

It takes a page or so of splashy experiments to rein that craziness in. Every time.

It was fun to get back to this medium! Especially since I’ve been working in watercolor and digital in-between, as well as taking online art courses, here and there. I can sense these activities’ influence on my work.

Anyway, I think I made the most of a silly situation. The InkSplosion left my office/studio smelling a bit inky for a day or two, but at least I got a lot of painting done over a short time!

* BioHue brand. Not sponsored.

Cunning Fire Fan Art

The two main characters from the webcomic Cunning Fire.

I wanted to do something fun and cute! So I drew the characters from a webcomic I’ve been reading. If you haven’t read it, you’re in for a treat, because you can do what I did, and binge-read the hundreds of pages that are already up. It’s a beautiful urban fantasy story about witches.

It’s made by Kaz Rowe, and they also have a great YouTube channel about LGBT+ history.

A recurring theme on my blog is becoming ‘fun things I found on YouTube’. I guess I spend a lot of time there!

Nature Girl Series – Part 3

This is the third and final ink drawing in my Nature Girl series! (Here are parts 1 and 2.)

I did a bit more preparation for this one than the last – working out the perspective on the tree, since we’re looking at it from high up, and trying out a couple of different compositions in thumbnail form.

I like this one! Even though I can see its flaws, like the where’s-Waldo aspect of my character – she’s hard to spot. Or is that a sign of success? I integrated her into the landscape a bit too well.

I enjoyed making this series! It was fun getting ink all over my hands, working analog, and practicing new art skills. Now, I’m gearing up for another drawing series to do this quarter.

Do you like organizing your projects into series or challenges? I’d recommend trying it if you haven’t!

Nature Girl Series – Picture 2

…and anatomy practice.

This is the second drawing I did as an experiment in combining landscapes and characters! I did a little more sketching with thin pen lines this time, before doing the thick dip pen inking. Also, I practiced drawing heads from this angle in my sketchbook a few times, since I hadn’t tried it before.

After my first attempt at the drawing, I put it aside, but something about the head position seemed off. So I took a picture and figured out the anatomy using red lines:

Luckily, I was able to fix the issues in the ink drawing, before going back to digital to change the background color and add highlights. That way, the original looks right too.

Part of the trouble comes from sketching with pen without using pencil first. Going ink-first is a habit I have from my sketchbook. Maybe I’ll try it the sensible way next time. But not before…

Nature Girl series part 3! (Coming soon.)