• classes
  • VIDA Collection
  • Minted
  • Privacy Policy

Ria Sharon

pondering creativity, process, and making art

  • Email
  • Instagram
  • Medium
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

An Artist’s Sketch: Esther BeLer Wodrich

July 14, 2015 by riasharon

esther My analytical side wants to face each challenge of recreating what I see while the artist within wants to create something beautiful. I meticulously measure, align and mark to put together works in an autobiography of times and places past. Each work begins with a bit of fear and trepidation as my inner perfectionist strains to recreate what I see while accepting each imperfection as part of the beauty of the process. I am a graduate of The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, although I’m primarily self-taught in watercolor.

I’ve been blessed with a loving husband and 4 beautiful children who sometimes surface in my art but each of whom are the greatest of artworks themselves. In 2011, I was diagnosed with a thankfully treatable form of cancer, but that diagnosis shook my world. This was a defining moment that put everything into perspective and challenged me to reconsider how I was using my gifts and talents. It pushed me to return to pursuing my too long neglected love of art. Now I spend part of each day sitting down with some paper, fond memories and something to mark the page with. God has given me a talent and desire to create, that no matter how busy life can get I cannot reasonably give up.

BeLer_SouthwarkBridge

1. What’s your medium of choice and what do you love about it?
Since having children, my go to medium changed from oils to watercolor for it’s ease of setup and cleanup. Now I love it because I can achieve the detail I want. This past year I’ve been working on an architectural series in watercolor, pen and ink. I love how the pen and ink allows for sharp contrasts and crisp lines, while the watercolor adds layers of color.

2. What are you working on right now? What’s on your camera/desk/easel or in your studio?
I recently started a drawing of the interior of the Great Hall at Ellis Island. I didn’t plan for it to coincide with Independence Day, but am grateful for the timely reminder of freedom.

3. What practices/activities are most valuable to your creative process?
Nearing the end #The100DayProject, it has been enlightening to see how working a little bit each day has been very beneficial. Not only am I producing more work, but it is sharpening my skills, my drive and my imagination. Working each day has become a priority – I wake up early in order to ensure a little uninterrupted time before the rest of the day’s activities take over.

4. What’s one thing you want to share with others about your art and/or process?
My art forms a visual autobiography. I am passionate about experiences in my life and the people who fill those memories. I enjoy the process of recreating what I see, especially special people and places in my life that I cherish. I love to be surrounded by beauty as well as fond memories and am grateful to be able to share my talents and skills to help others surround themselves with memories they love, too.

No matter if I’m working on a graphite portrait or a detailed architectural drawing, I’ve learned that if you want things “just right”, there are no short cuts. Be patient and don’t rush to finish.

Hmm. I suppose that’s two things. I recently wrote about my process (don’t worry, it’s short).

5. What advice would you give to your young artist self?
I’m afraid this is a bit cliché, but truly it is to be yourself (ooh, I have a blog post on this one, too!). I struggled for a long time to find my “niche.” I became overly concerned with the conceptual or with creating a unique style instead of spending time creating. I tried and failed to create in ways that were outside of my nature that left me feeling disatisfied and my art feeling forced. Frankly, not recognizing or accepting who I was as a representational artist was both discouraging to me as an artist but worse, paralyzed my ability to create for a long time. My advice can be bullet pointed as follows:
• Accept who you are as an artist and a person.
• Ignore those nagging doubts in your head.
• Success will not simply fall into your lap.
• If you really want it, work HARD for it. Really, really hard.

BeLer_profile

Inspired by Esther?
Want to know when the next sketch is posted?






 

Filed Under: an artist's sketch, process Tagged With: drawing, watercolor painting

Your Own Unique Style

July 13, 2015 by riasharon

Do you have a unique style?
I admire artists I know whose style is instantly recognizable that I don’t even have to see their name to know that an image/illustration is theirs. Sharon Derry of Secret Leaves is like this for me and Melissa Sweet and Kim Klassen.

I aspire to that.
Maybe it’s just me but I actually feel a certain amount of pressure to find it already, dammit!

It’s a bit of an existential crisis because for us creatives, our art is so personal, such an extension of ourselves that this whole “style” discourse is actually an on-the-ground way of asking the ultimate questions: Who am I? What is my purpose?

These days, I’m finding a lot of comfort in the words of Bayles and Orland in Art and Fear:

The unconsidered gesture, the repeated phrasing, the automatic selection, the characteristic reaction to subject matter and materials—these are the very things we refer to as style. Lots of people, artists included, consider this a virtue. Viewed closely, however, style is not a virtue, it is an inevitability—the inescapable result of doing anything more than a few times.

Novel, right? They say, “Style is the natural consequence of habit.”

What if it’s that obvious?
What if there’s no need to search because there’s nothing to find:
Your unique style is the natural result of what you do over and over.

What happens if you apply this metaphor to that ultimate question:
Your unique self/life is the result of what you do over and over.

riasharon-20-years

Left to right: 1994, 2004, 2015

Life is a sum of all your choices. ~ Camus

Filed Under: process

A Hummingbird Blessing

July 13, 2015 by riasharon

hummingbird-blessing

Do you have a special fondness for hummingbirds? They have always held special meaning for me — symbolizing the sweetness and joy of life. So I’m delighted to share, not only this magical creature but also an accompanying joyful blessing with each print.

This limited edition is of my most popular gouache painting to date, of a Purple-throated Woodstar. This species is native to South America and in real life measures only 2.5 inches from tip to tail — so this 4×6 print is close to life size!

I am making a series of 12 of these prints and offering them as a signed and numbered edition. With each one, you’ll also find on the back a hand-lettered blessing composed especially for you. Buy yours here.

Filed Under: art prints Tagged With: bird prints, hummingbird prints, Purple-throated Woodstar

Slaying dragons and other nuisances along the way

July 9, 2015 by riasharon

klagenfurt-dragonThere’s a moment in the hero’s journey that people sometimes forget. It’s called the first threshold.

I’ve observed that change of any sort is a hero (or heroine’s) journey. You commit yourself to losing weight, learning how to tango, quit smoking, make art…. In big and small ways, we are attempting to leave our old familiar selves behind.

So if you Google “hero’s journey” you’ll find out that the first threshold is the point of no return for Luke Skywalker or Bilbo Baggins or whoever (you/me). You’re really gonna do this thing! You’re burning the boats, so to speak! But in all the search results, you might have overlooked the references to the threshold guardian.

Wuh?

In the action adventure story, the threshold guardian is especially important for moving the plot along and keeping moviegoers in their seats. It might be something exciting like, say, … a dragon.

In our personal journeys, let’s face it, it’s just a pain in the bum. It’s the thing that makes you question why you ever wanted to do this dance/art/healthy living thing in the first place. It’s the force that will test our commitment and desire for whatever it is that is sending us on our journey instead of staying in our comfy reading chair in the Shire otherwise known as the status quo..

My dragon comes in the form of my inner wet blanket who says, Why are you doing this again? Why would anyone care? You know there are a hundred million artists and illustrators… not to mention bloggers, creativity coaches, urban sketchers etcetera in the world already, right? What, exactly, are you doing anyway? Whatever it is, you know it’s already been done. And of course, is this even any good?

It’s a familiar foe, that one: fear.

Why am I sharing all this? Because I’m a geek. And because I’m trying to talk myself back on the horse to slay the dragon.

A friend of mine once told me, there’s nothing like action to give fear the middle finger.

So despite the internal snorting and puffs of smoke, I’m just going to keep making art every day.

Onward.

Filed Under: process

An Artist’s Sketch: Sanjukta Sen

July 7, 2015 by riasharon

sanjSanjukta Sen was born in India, brought up in Singapore and is currently residing in the UK. Currently pursuing an undergraduate degree in Politics and International Relations at the University of Cambridge, she has grown up in an environment where art is highly appreciated – her father and sister are very into film and photography and her mother has been a practicing artist for almost 20 years now. She used to dabble in the usual arts and crafts as a child, but has only taken art up properly in the last two months when she needed something to keep her sane during the infamously stressful “exam term.” She does the odd illustration and graphic design commission here and there for the university newspaper, Varsity, as well as her college newsletter, Griffin and various societies.

sanjukta

1. What’s your medium of choice and what do you love about it?
I primarily sketch things from life and I am too impatient to use pencils/erasers, so I put ink straight down onto the paper and wash my sketches with watercolour. At the risk of sounding cheesy, I love the spontaneity of the whole process. Once ink is down, it’s down and you can’t change it and instead of trying to plan every stroke you just end up going with the flow and accept what you put down. Similarly, you really can’t control watercolours – they have a mind of their own and flow and mix with each other. I’m still learning to embrace this anarchy and take joy in the novelness of the effect it produces compared to a more controllable medium.

2. What are you working on right now? What’s on your camera/desk/easel or in your studio?
I’m always sketching things around me – people, buildings, mundane everyday objects. As such I don’t have specific projects that I’m continuously working on. However, I do have a separate summer sketchbook that I am maintaining in parallel with my other sketchbooks – I’m drawing a building or two in every city that I’ve visited in the last few weeks and will visit in the next few months (we get very long summer breaks!). Moreover, since next year will be my last year in Cambridge, I plan on dedicating a significant portion of my free time to sketching everything in this city – from the restaurants to the theaters to the colleges to the libraries and museums – you get the drift. What I will then do with these sketches I have not decided yet, but I want to record every single thing in this city in some sort of a visual diary and share it with people.

3. What practices/activities are most valuable to your creative process?
I love being inspired. I often go into bookshops and sit in the corner flicking through books on urban sketching, or illustration, or graphic design in general. I spend hours online looking through the works of artists, their styles, what they find interesting, their medium of choice etc. It’s what keeps me inspired to continue working. It can be very demotivating seeing all these wonderful artists online on instagram etc. and thinking “I’ll never be that good, is it worth continuing?” Yes, it is, mainly because everyone has to start off somewhere. I’ve only been sketching properly for about 2 months now, I have years and years ahead of me and browsing through artists’ works and inspiring myself gets me excited about seeing where I end up.

4. What’s one thing you want to share with others about your art and/or process?
I want my art to make people happy, or at least happier. One of my artistic inspirations is Quentin Blake – he went to the same Cambridge college as I go to now and I’ve had the fortune to meet him. In his interviews he talks a lot about wanting to make people happy through his art, and he definitely does that. I’ve created an unofficial mascot for my college – the Downing Hedgehog – and every week I produce a cartoon of him doing something cute or motivating. Cambridge especially can be an extremely difficult environment to live and study in, and through both my illustrations and urban sketches I try to put a happier spin to everything. I don’t have a “style” yet but I would love to have one that radiates positivity. I’m working on it.

5. What advice would you give to your young artist self?
I’m still reasonably young and definitely very newborn to the art community, so I wouldn’t necessarily have any advice to give myself two months ago. One thing I do need to keep in mind though, both when I started off and in the future, is that not everything I do will be great, or even half-good. I am going to have spells of terrible sketches (and I already have had them), but I need to not get frustrated and keep going at it.

urban-sketch






 

Filed Under: an artist's sketch Tagged With: urban sketching, watercolor sketches

Wide Open Course: Need

July 7, 2015 by riasharon

IMG_2916

This is my response for Day 1 of the Wide Open eCourse. The subject: Lost. You can follow the body of work for this class with #wideopencourse on Instagram.

This was tougher for me to discern — not that I don’t need. I do. But is it time? Stillness? Space? Calm? Peace? There are so many things that I need… I would never be able to pick just one for my luxury item on Survivor! ;P

After contemplating this for much of today, I’ve decided vulnerability requires a need that I feel guilt or shame to admit; something I need and yet another part of me judges for needing. You know, all the others are “acceptable needs” or “of-course-don’t-we-all” needs. So… the need that I reject is: BEAUTY.

Filed Under: process

Wide Open Course: Lost

July 6, 2015 by riasharon

lost

This is my response for Day 1 of the Wide Open eCourse. The subject: Lost. You can follow the body of work for this class with #wideopencourse on Instagram.

For many years, I’ve avoided going back to my college campus. Just thinking about that time in my life fills me with feelings of loss and regret… primarily because of story I’ve been telling myself… that it was then that I lost my way, when I started choosing “shoulds.” When I read the prompt for day 1, this was what came to me right away.

But I had a last minute opportunity to stroll through the old stomping grounds this last weekend and was able to show my daughter where I spent a significant four years. I realized that my story was incomplete. Yes, I did lose myself there in many ways. But the other part of the story is that I CHOSE to be there. And the me that made that choice was REAL. And the reasons I chose to be there were TRUE… AND are just as real and true today as they were 25 years ago. I would make the same choice again. #wideopencourse #lost

Filed Under: process Tagged With: art daily 2015, choose must, creative process, creativity found, life is colorful, watercolor sketch

An Artist’s Sketch: Lisa Lehmann

June 30, 2015 by riasharon

lisa-lehmanArtist by trade. Maker by birth. Dreamer. Wife to best friend. Mama to 4 “smalls” (or not so small 17, 16, 13 & 11). Addicted to coffee… and dark chocolate Lover of wine. Self-proclaimed fashionista. “Ink” connoisseur. Captivated by nature. Plays with fire. Enchanted by the written word. Seeking authenticity. Crazy about her furry girls. Child of the King. Typically, Lisa can be found with a camera in one hand… Starbucks in the other, a golden retriever by her side and slightly covered in silver dust. Guaranteed to be wearing fabulous boots, sitting on bleachers at one of her “small peoples” sporting events, with a sparkle in her eye and a smile on her face.

lisa-lehmann

1. What’s your medium of choice and what do you love about it?
Metal! Because it can move in unexpected ways and become something so delicate and beautiful but yet be so strong!

2. What are you working on right now? What’s on your camera/desk/easel or in your studio?
New stones I picked up at a show. Turning them into amazing one of a kind pendants!

3. What practices/activities are most valuable to your creative process?
The design process is huge. But it’s different every time. It depends on the medium. If i’m working with stones, I really need to touch them, trace them and then let the design flow from stone itself. Other times, it’s a design that comes to mind out of “need” / “want” for myself and then a pencil needs to hit paper. From there a copper or silver model needs to be created to work out the logistics of the design. How does it look? Feel? Is it balanced? Does it work?

4. What’s one thing you want to share with others about your art and/or process?
Find your own way. You can hear others process. You can study books on design. But everyone is different. You need to try many methods and see what feels best for you. And what works today might not work tomorrow, and that is ok. Exploration is part of the discovery. And beautiful things come from that discovery!

5. What advice would you give to your young artist self?
Trust your instincts. Try everything. Experiment. Explore. Discover. Be yourself. Do not be afraid to fail. And when you do, because you will… don’t give up. Just get up and start again. I tried to fit in a mold that I absolutely did not fit in for a very long time, but when I finally stopped worrying about what others thought about me, or my work, I was free to be me. And me is pretty ok.

studio-jewel

Inspired by Lisa?
Want to know when the next sketch is posted?






 

Filed Under: an artist's sketch Tagged With: goldsmith, jewel

Who’s driving the bus?

June 27, 2015 by riasharon

painterlyWhat counts, in making art, is the actual fit between the contents of your head and the qualities of your materials. The knowledge you need to make that fit comes from noticing what really happens as you work — the way the materials respond, and the way that response (and resistance) suggests new ideas to you. ~ David Bayles and Ted Orland

Allowing the paint to lead today.

Filed Under: process

Love Wins

June 27, 2015 by riasharon

love.wins

By popular request, I’m making my Love Wins Pup Art print available for purchase.
The design fits a standard 8″ x 10″ frame, and looks great with or without a mat.
US$34 (SHIPPING COST IS INCLUDED in the price).

Within 1-2 business days, your signed print will be packaged with chipboard backing in a cellophane sleeve and shipped via USPS.





———————–
SHIPPING
———————–
Shipping is included in the price — anywhere in the U.S. via USPS First Class or worldwide via USPS First Class International. International tracking is available for some countries only.

***International buyers, please check with your local authorities on additional duty, custom, and VAT fees due at the time of delivery. These fees are the sole responsibility of the buyer.

If an item is returned due to lack of duty/custom/VAT fees, I can offer a full refund minus any shipping charges once the item gets returned to me. Note that international returns can take up to 3 – 4 months.

Filed Under: art prints

How do you know if it’s good?

June 25, 2015 by riasharon

windows.hi

How do you know when something’s good?
Good question.
The bad news: you don’t.
The good news: you don’t have to know.

I was asked this question recently and it got me thinking… do you EVER really know?!

I mean, I’ve talked to published New York Times best-selling authors who still feel like they’re “faking it.”
I’ve listened to well established artists who still describe that feeling of total panic as they sit in front of the blank page.
I’m coming to the realization that there’s no there there.
It’s so trite but true: it’s not the destination, it’s the journey. For reals.

What would happen if, instead of looking at your last painting/print/picture and asking, “Is this any good?” You asked yourself, “Did making that feel good?”

Because guess what? You absolutely know when something feels good.

If it felt good to make that thing, make another one.
Rinse.
Repeat.

Filed Under: art journal, process

An Artist’s Sketch: Cynthia Morris

June 23, 2015 by riasharon

CynthiaDevoted to capturing life on the page in full color, Cynthia Morris loves to illustrate everyday moments in ink and watercolor. Her Writual Blessings deck is a colorful affirmation deck designed to banish writer’s block.

Cynthia is also the author of several books including the Paris novel Chasing Sylvia Beach and the how-to guide Create Your Writer’s Life. Cynthia intrepid traveler and foodie.

For her day job, Cynthia runs her company Original Impulse, where she coaches writers, artists and entrepreneurs to make their creative dreams a thrilling reality. Her Capture the Wow creativity workshops are held in the US and Europe and bring the joy of travel to the every day. Cynthia is on the faculty of Jonathan Fields’ Good Life Project and loves to bring the lessons and thrills of art making to life.

You can connect with Cynthia on her website, on Facebook, or on Instagram.

cynthia-bio
1. What’s your medium of choice and what do you love about it?
My medium of choice is watercolor with ink drawings. I love making something appear on the page in line and then watching it come to life on a whole other level with color.

2. What are you working on right now? What’s on your camera/desk/easel or in your studio?
I just finished illustrating a book called the abundant artist. Now I’m working on a piece for Two Hands Paperie in Boulder. I’m the featured artist in their next newsletter. It’s a travel theme and I’m doing the wrap sheet.

I’m also in the middle of the 100 days project. I have been doing one watercolor painting per day since April 4. That’s a lot of fun.

3. What practices/activities are most valuable to your creative process?
I rely on many practices to help me stay sane. I have dedicated yoga and meditation practices. I bike and walk a lot.

The Biggest asset for my creativity though, is my journal keeping. I have many notebooks going at once to keep me and my projects straight, and to stay inspired.

4. What’s one thing you want to share with others about your art and/or process?
For me making art is largely an intuitive process. That’s what I love about it. I’m not overthinking anything. I will get an idea and then I’ll just flow with it. I love giving my intellectual mind a break with art making.

5. What advice would you give to your young artist self?
Don’t worry about that F you got in high school. You will be an artist if you want to be. Just have fun.

cynthia-morris

Inspired by Cynthia?
Want to know when the next sketch is posted?






 

Filed Under: an artist's sketch

Top 10 things I’ve learned from making art every day for six months

June 23, 2015 by riasharon

day70

10. The more you make, the easier it gets.

9. The more you make, the better it gets.

8. The more you make, the more confident you are that you can make the next thing.

7. Themes start to emerge (and other things start to fall away)

6. You develop some “muscle memory.”

5. You don’t take each thing too seriously.

4. You start to take yourself more seriously.

3. Other people start to take you more seriously.

2. You still have a brief moment of panic before you start anything.

1. You start calling yourself an artist.

day1

(Top image: Day 70 of my 100 Day Project. Bottom image: Day 1)

Filed Under: process

An Artist’s Sketch: Jennifer Hallock

June 17, 2015 by riasharon

JenniferHallockJennifer is formally trained in graphic design but enjoys a career as an interior stylist in New York and Connecticut, which she adores for so many reasons but mostly because she make things beautiful, and gets to help people transform their personal spaces into real sanctuaries. She thinks everyone is a creator, it’s just a matter of figuring out what your medium is. She has been lucky enough to have had parents that encouraged her to figure that out at a young age. She sells a lot of prints of her paintings through online venues like minted.com but typically gives a lot of her art away. She’s not about trying to be an artist, “I make stuff and that makes me happy. if what i made makes you happy too, then all the better, you’re welcome to it.”

You can find Jennifer on Instagram on her blog, Sometimes Divine, on her website, and on Minted.

Jennifer-Hallock

1. What’s your medium of choice and what do you love about it?
I’d say I’m equally in love with photography and painting, but spend more time painting these days. I use acrylics and love how you can keep piling up the paint, transforming it layer by layer until you get the result that feels best. The best paintings are the ones that you couldn’t get right and thought were a muddled mess not worth saving until, something strange happens and you don’t know how, but the paint ends up where it needs to be and all of a sudden it’s gorgeous. Sort of like life!

2. What are you working on right now? What’s on your camera/desk/easel or in your studio?
I always have like 15 projects going on at once. There’s always a painting in progress, a file full of photos in my computer waiting to be edited and a few clients waiting for me to make them happy. My most important project though, when it comes to creating, is more about the life I’m creating for myself, figuring out what I’m here to contribute, and helping my teenage son gain the awareness and tools he’ll need to create a life he’ll really thrive in.

nebula-web-2

3. What practices/activities are most valuable to your creative process?
Other artists’ works and lives are of great inspiration to me. It’s amazing how much things have changed since the introduction of social media in terms of exposure and community. Instagram is my venue of choice and I can’t tell you how many awesome artists I’ve been introduced to, supported and received support from through this platform.

I’m also very selective about the people and activities that I let into my life. I’ve decided that if I don’t deem something/someone extraordinary or in some way beneficial to my personal growth, it doesn’t make the cut. This helps to keep positive energy flowing into my life as opposed to it being drained, which is really important to creating my best work.

4. What’s one thing you want to share with others about your art and/or process?
I’m very interested in love and beauty and try to embody that in my life and everything I create. If I feel like I’m not in that space, I can’t make anything — except a mess. There are important and talented artists that do really profound things when their insides are dark and stormy. I’m not one of them.

I also read a ton which helps me to stay in that centered space that allows me to create things I love. I can get really turned around and kind of obsessed over really big questions about life that I’ll never be able to answer. Reading about how really smart people have confronted these questions, their observations and views, has a super calming effect on me and often leads me to feel a bit more comfortable with the unknown. Sometimes I’m even fooled into thinking I have a clue.

spontanious-web-25. What advice would you give to your young artist self?
Ooooh so much! First of all I’d tell her that if you want to hang out in your cut-offs all day and paint, then do it. Do exactly what you want. That pressure you feel to “be something” and “get somewhere” isn’t real. I wasted about 10 years in a career that, while exciting, was not my calling. I was more concerned with security and what people thought than following what was true and right for me. There’s no such thing as security and if you betray what your heart knows trying to seek it, then when things unravel, which they absolutely will, you will be left at ground zero. Life has a way of doing whatever it can (no matter how painful) to set you on the path you’re built for. So I’d tell her to pay attention! The stuff you only think you may know, you actually do know. You don’t need to be anything, it’s enough to just be. And the only place to get to is right now. This one I’m still learning, presence will probably remain my biggest challenge and hardest life lesson.

All makers know that it’s the process that keeps them coming back for more, not the finished piece. I’d tell her that this is also true in life. It’s never about the destination and always about the many (terrifying, exhilarating, mundane and totally perfect) moments that delivered you there.

Inspired by Jennifer?
Want to know when the next sketch is posted?






 

Filed Under: an artist's sketch Tagged With: art, creativity, painting

An Artist’s Sketch: Stefanie Renee

June 10, 2015 by riasharon

stefStefanie Renee has been part of creative endeavors over the years ~ co-founding Teahouse Studios from 2010-2013 and currently co-creating Mabel Magazine – a print magazine all about Making a Living, Creating a Life.

Her day jobs includes working along side other creative women entrepreneurs online and Photographer: her photography has been featured in Mingle, Cloth•Paper Scissors Studios, Mabel, Taproot and a book “Just us Girls: 48 Creative Art & Craft Projects for Mothers & Daughters to Do Together”.

In her free time she is spending time with her two daughters, painting or taking photos of the world around her. Follow her on Instagram at : @StefanieRenee and @MabelMagazine

StefanieRenee-studio-150605

1. What’s your medium of choice and what do you love about it?
It’s usually my SLR camera or my iPhone camera but lately I’ve been picking up the pen, paint brush and watercolors. I still of course take photos but when I’m working on the computer in my studio, the sketchbook and paint is what I turn to. It’s easy, small and it’s feeding my soul right now.

2. What are you working on right now? What’s on your camera/desk/easel or in your studio?
I like having numerous projects going on at the same time, keeps the creative juices flowing. I have been committed to a 365 project for the last 4 years; where I take at least 1 photo a day and post on Instagram. I continue to do that. Late last year I started sketching people, mostly women’s faces after being inspired by other artists I was following on Instagram. I started the hashtag #stefscribbles on Instagram so I wouldn’t put too much pressure on myself and because I really did consider them scribbles.

In April I wanted to commit to doing a sketch a day and posting them on Instagram and Facebook. When I started posting them my daughters started seeing what I was doing and wanted them to all have names and then a few friends started commenting by creating stories or backgrounds about each sketch. I also started with some little vignette stories and now they are becoming quite addictive. I just love the imaginative bits other people contribute and the sketch “people” really come alive.

#stefscribbles

I also am a part of a collaborative project – Mabel Magazine with my dear friend Liz Kalloch. We started Mabel in 2014 and we just finished up with our 3rd issue and gearing up for the 4th coming out in Novembe 2015. It’s something I had dreamt about doing for a long time and it makes me so happy it’s come to fruition and keeps getting better and better. More about Mabel can be found at www.Mabelmag.com

3. What practices/activities are most valuable to your creative process?
I think giving myself projects, like the 365 project or monthly creative practices…it’s fun to see the evolution and it gets me out of the everyday monotony of “work” life. I also take walks — getting out into nature is imperative for my mental health and creativity.

4. What’s one thing you want to share with others about your art and/or process?
To just start. Whether it’s a doodle, or a photo of a flower on a walk, it’s something. Something to get out of your head and into your creativity. This has helped me through some pretty stressful times and I have to still remind myself when I get overwhelmed or busy that taking myself out of the situation and onto a walk to soak up the sun and nature helps considerably.

#stefscribbles
5. What advice would you give to your young artist self?
To put yourself out there, to start creating every day and to not give up or compare yourself to anyone else. To follow what makes you happy and to just keep at it.

Recent Sketches…
Alisha Katz Hastings-Kimball, ceramic artist
Tracey Clark, photographer
Mic Boekelmann, portrait painter and art coach

Inspired by Stefanie?
Want to know when the next sketch is posted?






 

Filed Under: an artist's sketch Tagged With: portaits, watercolor

An Artist’s Sketch: Monica Duwel

June 3, 2015 by riasharon

Monica Monica is an illustratory designer, currently living in Saint Louis, but with deeply seeded Indiana roots. She is a pop culture enthusiast, a teller of dad jokes and Netflix marathoner. Her knowledge of the Kardashians is truly astounding and she can name all of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s children on command. She looks up to Detective Olivia Benson, Taylor Swift and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Her evenings are either spent at concerts or creating something. Her voice resides in her artwork and she uses it as a vehicle to disperse ideas and opinions. Her backpack is always filled with paper, headphone and a handful of utensils.

She has a beautiful girlfriend, Elizabeth that puts up with her messes and ridiculous forgetfulness. They have cat that is the spawn of Satan that has name but normally just gets called Cat. Her preference would be to wear jeans and converse for every occasion. One day, she hopes to have a wiener dog named Ted Kennedy.

IMG_3689

1. What’s your medium of choice and what do you love about it?
Good old fashion, paper and pencil are my first and my forever loves. But I love the forgiveness that a computer can give. Digital exploration has become something I have grown to love. As I started to become more comfortable as a designer, I found that both hand-generated and computer-generated art could exist in the same sphere. I draw inspiration from Kate Bingaman-Burt, Mikey Burton, Tad Carpenter, Frank Chimero and Lisa Congdon. I see these artists creating a successful marriage between illustration and design. These “designy illustrators” made me fall in love all over again with the paper and pencil, while still utilizing the millions of possibilities the computer holds.

2. What are you working on right now? What’s on your camera/desk/easel or in your studio?
Other than art, music is my biggest passion, so I’m currently working on a book that will document all the shows I’ve seen this year. Often music inspires me creatively, so it seemed like a logical pairing. I also feel like this is a great chance to try and capture the essence of a musical experience on paper. We’ll see if I finish. I have a lot of half finished projects.

Another project I am working on is a zine that will hopefully explore the queer identity through a couple of volumes. Often there are only certain narratives that surface about the queer experience and that is truly unfortunate. I feel like that is the struggle with a lot of minority groups. One member or narrative is chosen as the voice of the many, when in actuality there are so many more voices to be heard. I wanted to offer a space for queer individuals to tell their stories from their lens, so we can get a more holistic representation of queer identity. Once again, a work in progress, but I love the direction this one is taking.

cover

Patrick

Rhiana

3. What practices/activities are most valuable to your creative process?
I try to never throw anything out. Most pieces I create are born from thumbnail sketches and doodles. Sometimes the doodles make the actual piece. The journey to the finished piece is most valuable to me. Sometimes ideas will not work for a particular piece but will work for another.

4. What’s one thing you want to share with others about your art and/or process?
I have a sketchbook, but I feel like it often limits me. Especially new ones. Which sounds stupid, right? But think about it. How much pressure do you feel to have a really good first page or a book full of masterpieces? I used to find that pressure crippling. There is nothing stopping you from three-hole punching printer paper and putting it in a three-ring binder. Draw something you really can’t stand and hope it never sees the light of day? Rip it out of the binder. No harm no foul — and you can get over that terrifying “first page syndrome.” It’s surprisingly liberating.

5. What advice would you give to your young artist self?
• Create a community with fellow creatives. Use them as sounding boards. Use them to teach you new things. Use them to inspire you. Immerse yourself with collaborative and supportive individuals that expand your environment. But never compare yourself to them. Do not judge your first step by their twenty-third.
• Allow yourself the space to try different styles and mediums. Do not limit yourself. Every project is a chance to explore.
• Great tools will not make you a great artist. Practice and exploration will.

Recent Sketches…
Melissa Villadiego, lampwork artist
Xanthe Berkeley, photographer and filmmaker
Sharon Derry, book and paper artist

Inspired by Monica?
Want to know when the next sketch is posted?






 

Filed Under: an artist's sketch Tagged With: doodles, illustration

Custom Dog Portraits

June 1, 2015 by riasharon

Dog Portraits

Happy first day of June! You know what that means, right? That’s 21 days until… Father’s Day!

I don’t make ties so if that was what you were planning on getting dad, I can’t help you. I DO, however, make these adorable custom dog portraits that would make really great gifts for Dog Daddies.

If you’re interested in having one delivered in time for Father’s Day, please place your order this week to ensure delivery.
Shipping is included. 🙂

p.s. If you’re wondering if I’ll be making printable Father’s Day cards, the answer is… probably. Get on the mailing list and you’ll be the first to know!

Filed Under: portrait Tagged With: custom pet portraits, dog art, dog drawings, dog painting, dog paintings, dog portraits, dog prints, pet paintings, pet pictures, pet portrait, pet portraits from photos, portraits of dogs

An Artist’s Sketch: Melissa Villadiego

May 27, 2015 by riasharon

MelissaIn 2003, Melissa decided on a whim to take a lampworking class, the art melting glass using a surface-mix torch and was immediately hooked to the limitless and colorful opportunities glass presents.

Today, she focuses on offering unique jewelry that incorporates vintage details with a modern twist by incorporating her own artisan glass creations with precious stones and mixed metals. She is always inspired by color, graphic elements in nature and patterns in everyday objects.

1. What’s your medium of choice and what do you love about it?
Glass: I’ve been lampworking, the art of making glass beads using a 2,000+ degree flame, for 12 years. I refer lampwork as the “miniature” version of glassblowing which people are more familiar with. I love it because with the endless color palette, it’s almost like painting, but with heat and flame. I love how glass can glow under light. Glass is a great medium to experiment and try new things.

villadesign_01

2. What are you working on right now? What’s on your camera/desk/easel or in your studio?
I have a variety of jewelry projects going on since I have some upcoming shows. While glass is my main focus, I do metalwork as well, so I’ve been refining my metalsmithing skills and incorporating glass and silver together, along with bits of copper. There are several glass cabochons that need to be set in silver, copper that that needs to be etched and beads that need to be cleaned. The list goes on and on!

3. What practices/activities are most valuable to your creative process?
I kinda mentioned it above, but lists! I initially got out of the habit, but started it again and it keeps me on track. Plus, it is extremely satisfying to cross off items. Also, I tend to work better under pressure… having that deadline helps me focus.

4. What’s one thing you want to share with others about your art and/or process?
First rules of torching… always wear cotton or a natural fiber. Pull your long hair back. The rolling chair can be your best friend. A stainless steel mandrel that has been in a 950 degree kiln for 10 minutes is hot. Ah yes… I’ve had quite a few life lessons working with glass!

5. What advice would you give to your young artist self?
Do what makes you happy.
It’s really not that big of a deal… make it work.

villadesign-montage

Inspired by Melissa?
Want to know when the next sketch is posted?






 

Filed Under: an artist's sketch

End of School Year Teacher Gifts

May 24, 2015 by riasharon

teacher-gift-tagsLast week, I promised I’d share some end of school year teacher gift ideas. So here they are! A printable gift tag will personalize whatever you decide to give your child’s awesome homeroom teacher/math specialist/dance coach….

Click to download below. Then print and either trim out or use a 2″ circle punch. Each file comes with 6 printable gift tags, front and back.
Thank You! … for helping me GROW!
You’re the Best! Thank You!

PD051516-teachers

Filed Under: free printables Tagged With: end of school year teacher gifts, end of year gift for teachers, end of year gifts for teachers, end of year teacher gift ideas, gift ideas for teacher, gifts for teachers day, printable gift tag, printable gifts, teacher appreciations day

Congrats, Grad! Free Graduation Greetings Here

May 22, 2015 by riasharon

grad-cards

Oh my goodness, it’s the end of the year already! My social stream has been flooded with caps and gowns and I have to admit, I’ve scrambled around to find cards and gifts from the new grads—from elementary school through graduate school. So if you find yourself in a similar predicament, no worries! Download these free graduation greetings…

Bravo!
Well done!
The best is yet to come.

p.s. Next up, Teacher’s Gifts! 😀 (If you want a heads up on when you can download these and other free printables, sign up for UPDATES—in the sidebar)

Filed Under: free printables Tagged With: free printable graduation cards, graduation card messages, graduation card sayings, graduation greeting, graduation greetings, graduation sayings, graduation sentiments, greetings for graduation, printable card

« Previous Page
Next Page »

A little about me

I have an undergraduate degree in art. By day, I work in higher ed and in my free time I'm currently putting myself through DIY grad school.

I teach classes on creativity and inspiration on Skillshare. I occasionally share my original paintings on Etsy and fine art prints on Minted. I've also been known to make puppy portraits.

Sign up for updates!

We respect your email privacy

 

Shop now: wall art on Minted.

Categories

48dayscreative an artist's sketch artist's date art journal art prints classes collaboration color theory craft design DIY art school Documentation drawings etsy events floral paintings free printables gouache greeting cards illustration Illustration Friday kid art learning hand lettering portrait process products scroll-free year shows The Artist's Way tribe Uncategorized watercolor
dog birthday parties

Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Blossom theme by Restored 316

Copyright © 2025 · Blossom Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in