My saturation studies.
My second red chip in needs more red.
Our "color explorations" assignment is going to be a challenge for sure. Got a lot to do.
Discussions about creativity, growing old, growing young, self-publishing, freedom, the craft of writing, art, and many other topics. Part confessional, part thinking out loud, I write what interests me at the moment. BTW, I write my books under the pen name R. Patrick Hughes.
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Thursday, January 22, 2015
UNF Color Theory: Values
Here is what I turned in today.
Comparing it to the achromatic value scale, my values are off in several areas.
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
UNF Color Theory: Color Wheel
This is my version of the color wheel for our class presentation today.
The weakest elements are in the greens. I need to push the tertiary greens more towards their immediate neighbors. Of course, I had problems with the violets, as did most everyone.
The weakest elements are in the greens. I need to push the tertiary greens more towards their immediate neighbors. Of course, I had problems with the violets, as did most everyone.
Friday, January 16, 2015
UNF Color Theory: Color Wheel
This is as far as I got in class. The purples were very difficult to mix. Not sure I'll ever get them right. I have to admit I like working with the Acryla Gouache. Not sure I'll ever use them for a real painting, because of how expensive they are. Maybe I'd use them for a fairly small painting. But the colors are nice.
Just the beginning; a lot to do. |
Thursday, January 8, 2015
UNF Color Theory: Introduction
These posts under UNF Color Theory are related to the art class I'm taking at the University of North Florida with Professor Raymond Gaddy. It was suggested that we all use Wordpress, but I already have this blog and do not want to get involved in another one, although it looks pretty easy to set up one with Wordpress. I may change my mind later if this one doesn't work well.
I've already posted a number of times on this blog about my art work and UNF and some of my professors. So, this is just a continuation of that theme. You can find various names under 'labels' if you wish.
The class blog site is Gaddy in 2D.
This is a recent painting of mine. The photo quality is poor. I need a better camera.
I've already posted a number of times on this blog about my art work and UNF and some of my professors. So, this is just a continuation of that theme. You can find various names under 'labels' if you wish.
The class blog site is Gaddy in 2D.
This is a recent painting of mine. The photo quality is poor. I need a better camera.
French Quarter, New Orleans acrylic on paper approximately 14.5 x 10.5 |
Saturday, October 25, 2014
Donna K Weaver: Where I Live and Why I Like It
My guest this week is one of the most supportive blogger/authors around. Donna Weaver is constantly promoting other writers and attending writer conferences to improve her own skills as a writer. A published writer of romance adventure novels, she's also honed her skills in another art--martial arts. She's a black belt in karate.
1. Geographical Information:
Country: USA
State or Province: Utah
City or Town: Orem
District within City or
Town: N/A
Neighborhood: N/A
2. Is there any place in your area that’s
considered a pilgrimage site, such as a religious shrine? If so, have you been
there? Calling the state a pilgrimage
site might be a bit much, but this area was definitely a gathering place for
early Mormon (members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints). I
think there are probably more redheads here than I’ve ever seen anywhere else,
simply because there are so many people of Scandinavian descent.
3. Is there a site that has special meaning for
you? Outside of my private religious
feelings, I love the area because of the mountains. I’ve lived a lot of years
in Sacramento. It’s a beautiful area, but relatively flat. It was easy to
forget that there were foothills less than an hour away. Here, I can’t look
outside and not see gorgeous
mountains. As I write this, the fall colors are already coming on. *sigh*
4. Is this where you were born and/or grew up? If
not, how did you come to live here? I
was a Navy brat. I started school in Seoul, South Korea. We also lived in the
Philippines for two years. Between 8th & 11th grades, I went to four
different schools. Then I joined the US Army and served in Germany. I’ve lived
here longer than I’ve ever lived anywhere in my life.
5. What do you like best about where you live? I think we have the best of both worlds.
While the community has over 90,000 people, it doesn’t really feel like a big
city. I like that, but I also like having amenities close by.
6. Do you plan on living here the rest of your
life? Probably not. When we retire in a
few years, we’re tentatively planning on living close to my hubby’s brother and
his wife. She prefers a community that isn’t quite a built out as this one. So,
not quite small town enough for her.
7. Do you have family in the area, or have you
ventured out on your own? When we moved
here 22 years ago, we ventured out on our own. Our two oldest kids have ranged
quite far, one lives in China and the other in Hawaii. The three youngest are
within half an hour though.
8. Are you happy where you live? As long as I don’t get to fretting about
some of the local psycho politics.
9. For tourists, what would you recommend seeing?
- In the immediate area, there’s
Sundance Ski Resort up Provo Canyon. And yes, Robert Redford owns it.
We’ve even seen him when we’re up there. They open the ski lifts in the
summer. If you want to mountain bike, you take your bike on the lift up
and ride down. For us less brave souls, we ride the lift up and back down.
This time of year, with the changing colors, is gorgeous.
- There’s also the amazing
Timpanogos caves or hiking the glacier on the back side of Timp.
- About twenty minutes from us is
a huge dinosaur museum with hands-on exhibits for the kids. It’s at
Thanksgiving Point, and they have some amazing gardens there. There’s also
an amphitheater for outdoor performances. Last year we saw the amazing
Piano Guys perform
- If you want to venture a little
farther out, you can check out the Kennicott copper mines—this you can see
from outer space.
- Get a little closer to Salt
Lake City, and there are lots of historical and religious sites to see
like Temple Square and This Is the Place Park. There’s also Hogle Zoo/
- If you travel a few hours south
or southeast, you can visit Zions National Park or Moab where you can see
the Arches National Park. This state is amazingly beautiful.
- Not quite that far south is
Cedar City and the Shakespeare Festival. They won a Tony award one for
their festival.
10. What do you do for entertainment where you live? Sporting
events, theater, concerts, so on and so forth. We like to watch movies, and there are lots of theaters. But there’s
also live theater here as well. There’s the Hale Center Theater Orem, which
does live theater in the round. Close and intimate an experience. Sundance has
lives plays as does the SCERA Center for the Arts. There are also two major
universities within about eight miles of each other, and they each offer both
sporting events and cultural/artistic events. The Orem Owls (a minor league
team feeding into the California Angels) has its home at Utah Valley University
in Orem. If you’re into college sports, having two universities so close
provides lots of games to watch.
11. If you’re a writer, have you included where you live in the
settings of any of your stories? If you’re a painter, have you painted any of
your area’s features? I haven’t so far,
but I will be with my next book which will be set here in Utah. The reason I
chose it, though, is that it will be a small-town political thriller. I run my
city’s elections, and I needed to know how things work. That meant taking
advantage of my knowledge of state election law.
12. Would you recommend others to move to where you live? Why? The economy is booming. American Express
built a large facility in Salt Lake County because there are so many bilingual
people here. And by bilingual I don’t mean a large group that speaks English
and one other language. Because there are so many people here who have served
internationally as LDS (Mormon) missionaries, they are able to get employees
who are bilingual in a large number of languages. Adobe just built a large
facility about fifteen minutes from here.
A lot of people come here to go to college, like it, and stay.
That’s good and bad. Utah has one of the highest education levels in the
country. It sometimes means the competition for jobs can be pretty intense.
Fortunately, there are a lot of jobs right now.
Thanks again,
Richard
Thank you, Donna. It's been a pleasure learning about where you live. I've been to Utah--Zion National Park, and that was amazing--but that's it. Maybe someday I can make it to Orem. Please visit Donna at Donna K Weaver.
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Claude Nougat: Where I Live and Why I Like It
My guest today is a lady who is an author, an artist, a poet, and a political analyst (should we call her a Renaissance woman?). Where she lives needs no introduction. Claude Nouget has published a climate fiction novel Forever Young, a romance Crimson Clouds, a trilogy Luna Rising, a collection of short stories Death on Facebook, and poetry.
Country: Italy
City: Rome
Neighborhood: Town center – inside of the old city’s walls.
District within City: Near the cathedral of San Giovanni:
2. Is there any place in your area that’s considered a pilgrimage site,
such as a religious shrine? If so, have you been there?
The whole of Rome is
full of incredibly beautiful churches and, no need to say it, is there? St
Peter’s is a must!
3. Is there a site that has special meaning for you?
The old church of St
Theodore – San Teodoro . Built in the 6th century, nestled in the
ruins of the Roman Forum, with the Palatine Hill as a backdrop, this is where I
got married to the one love in my life…a Sicilian (we’ve been married 36
years!). We walked to the church and the Roman police stopped the traffic for
us – I’ll never forget that day!
4. Is this where you were born and/or grew up? If not, how did you come to
live here?
I was born in Belgium
and as a child I lived in many countries: Sweden, Egypt, Russia, Colombia. I
finally arrived in the US when I was 17 and stayed there until my late 20s –
then back to Europe and eventually Rome, thinking I wouldn’t stay very
long…until love hit me!
5. What do you like best about where you live?
The monumental beauty
of the town, the wonderful Italian food, the fun trattorias come to mind but
above all, the kindness of simple people in the street. Italians have a “joie
de vivre” that they know how to share and that is very precious…
6. Do you plan on living here the rest of your life?
You bet!
7. Do you have family in the area, or have you ventured out on your own?
As I said, I am married here and have two children (now grown-up of course).
As I said, I am married here and have two children (now grown-up of course).
8. Are you happy where you live?
How could I not be?
9. For tourists, what would you recommend seeing?
A tour of Rome can be
done in a day but I would recommend at least a week, there’s so much to see,
from the Colosseum to the Sistine Chapel, from the Bocca della Verità (the
mouth of truth: it snaps shut if you lie!) to the Pantheon…The list is endless!
10. What do you do for entertainment where you live? Sporting events,
theater, concerts, so on and so forth.
I play golf and enjoy
the music – lots of places in Rome! In summer you have outdoors opera at the
Terme di Caracalla (in winter, you can go to the Opera House of course). There
are plenty of concerts and shows at the very modern Auditorium Parco della
Musica built by the famous architect Renzo Piano ….
And we got the Rolling Stones at the Circus Maximus (Circo Massimo) in July this year, unforgettable!
And we got the Rolling Stones at the Circus Maximus (Circo Massimo) in July this year, unforgettable!
11. If
you’re a writer, have you included where you live in the settings of any of
your stories? If you’re a painter, have you painted any of your area’s
features?
Absolutely, Rome turns
up in almost all of my books, notably in Crimson
Clouds ( a Boomer Lit novel, originally called “A Hook in the Sky”) and in
volume 3 of the Luna
Rising trilogy.
12. Would you recommend others to move to
Rome?
I certainly would!
Actually, the whole of Italy – it’s a great country to live in and to enjoy
life and I would especially recommend the countryside or small towns for people
considering a place to retire to. Cheaper than Rome and so relaxing…
And thanks Richard for
letting me share my news on your wonderful blog!
It's been my pleasure to have you. Please visit Claude's website Claude Nougat for more information and links to her various activities.
It's been my pleasure to have you. Please visit Claude's website Claude Nougat for more information and links to her various activities.
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