©Copyright 2008 by Judy Wood. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Judy Wood’s website.
©Copyright 2008 by Judy Wood. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Judy Wood’s website.
I wiped out his eye and started over with it. This is a pretty funky painting, but I’m calling it done and moving along to another one. I just can’t stand to quit on one…
There are some things I could go in and fix…I’m staring at them now. But I guess I’ll leave them. It’s time to start another one!
Donna Ridgway
©Copyright 2008 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Donna Ridgway’s website.
©Copyright 2008 by Sue Steiner. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Sue Steiner’s website.
We are having absolutely spectacular fall weather here in northwest lower Michigan; warm, sunny days and cool nights which have brought out equally spectacular fall colors. We are nowhere near peak color yet, but it’s a good color year with the brilliant oranges and reds of the maples contrasted against the dark evergreens and golden yellows of our beech trees and poplars. It’s been a bumper year for beechnuts, so the squirrels are again busy bounding about in our yard gathering their harvest for the winter.
Thankfully, we have no apples, so that means no deer to browse on my perennials and shrubs. On the other hand, that also means no apples for us, which means I had to buy some for the first time in three years!
Unfortunately, I’m stuck in the house looking out while continuing to work on gathering financial information for our advisor guy; made all the more urgent by the financial crisis in our world. Ugh! I’ve been adding up our monthly expenses and wondering how everything got so much more expensive so quickly.
In spite of also nursing a sore throat and headache, I did manage to get outside yesterday to give my car a very overdue interior cleaning. I felt a little sad while doing it because I was washing the last of Bo’s muddy paw prints off the back seat and vacuuming up his hairs from the cargo area. We lost him two years ago this month, and yes, it’s been that long since the car had a good cleaning!

I still miss Bo. I remember the joy this small Lab mix pooch brought to the family for nearly 16 years after we rescued him on a freezing December night from a household that had banished him to the yard with no shelter from the cold and wind and very little human contact. We were just going to take a look at him that night in response to the ad in the paper, but when my husband saw the conditions he was living in; tied to a tree and shivering; there was no way he was going to let that dog spend another cold and miserable night in that place. Bo eagerly hopped in our car with not even a look back as our kids showered him with attention.
In the first 24 hours we had him, he had to be shoved out the door to go potty because he was so afraid that he couldn’t come back in. We got him as a companion for our German Shepherd, and they bonded immediately. Bo thought he was in Heaven and showed us every day how grateful he was. He and Daisy became best friends and spent hours playing in the big dog yard until Daisy became too old and crippled to enjoy the rough housing.
Bo had a habit of tuning you out when his attention was focused on something. If he got loose, he would take off on a dead run out the gate and into the road. Most likely it was this propensity that caused him to end up a stray on the doorstep of the family that took him in, so one of his nicknames became Hobo Joe. More often we called him Bobo. We could never trust him to be on the loose, but around the house he wanted nothing more than to be at your side - or Daisy’s.
Bo never did get over his dislike of the cold or isolation, and after Daisy died he became strictly an inside dog.
Well, now I’ve digressed. The two photos at the top are views from my studio. Our lake is quite narrow and long, and on a still morning like this one, the fall colors are reflected in the water, adding to the brilliance of the scene. I love the view from my studio window, and one of these days I’m going to paint it.
Speaking of the studio, poor Bard is languishing on the easel as I work on these financial figures. It will take two or three days in a row that I can dedicate to painting in order to finish him up, and so far I haven’t been able to put them together. I’m determined to finish him by month’s end, however.
©Copyright 2008 by Karen Baker Thumm. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Karen Baker Thumm’s website.
The fifth Canine Art Guild online exhibition is now live…!
“Helping Paws 2008“ is now online!
A wide and varied display of dog art can be viewed (and the best: all is for sale! Definately worth a visit!). Each and every artist entered has pledge to donate proceeds of their sales to a shelter or charity of their choice. Well worth a visit.
Here is one of my three entries “Close to Home”

“Close to home”
Mixed media (graphite/charcoal) on paper, 20×20 cm
200 Euros (20% donated to DCGR)
This is the best place for any dog: out in the open, on a long lead, beside its loved ones (not only one pair of legs but two!) discovering new sights and sounds.
This black lab is well surrounded and at peace with its life.
Through my art I would like to heighten the awareness of how these gorgeous, quiet and loyal canines are in dire need of a warm safe bed of a good home.
The Dumfriesshire & Cumbria is a Scottish charity focused on re-homing retired or abandoned Greyhounds. As a charity they not only use what they raise for kennel fees, vet fees, fostering expenses and advertising but also try to raise public awareness of the plight of dogs at the end of their racing/coursing careers. To date 500 ex racers and coursers have found new homes.
Have a great Sunday!
©Copyright 2008 by Sheona Hamilton Grant. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Sheona Hamilton Grant’s website.
Ah, beloved pets. Is there anything more comforting than to see them as they are today, knowing their short lives are going to become part of your personal history down the road? The black and tan is my beloved, aged Q, or “little biting dog”–LBD, who is 17 years old this year. Still spry, but with growths, totally deaf and cataracts are taking her once sharp eyesight.
Sparky is the “accidental” dog–I almost didn’t get him, but at the last minute decided that Onslow needed a playmate. Dogs, true to their own needs, disrupted my best-laid plans. Onslow cares for and stays with Q, and Sparky has become my constant companion.
This is an original oil, 11 x 14, but not for sale. I like to keep some of my memories.
In finishing up this work, I was concerned again with the lighting, having sunshine coming in through a western window, and it being more late afternoon than evening. So any whispers of alizarin in the shadows are cancelled by the greenish influence of afternoon. But there is the whisper of cad orange in all of the lights. Even the thalo blue highlights on the dogs have that graying influence of the orange. Keeps the blues from being TOO strong. If you compare this image with the previous one, you can discern how much or little I did to finish it up.
On other news, I finished the installation of the new sink and counter/cabinets in the cleanup room of my studio. Here’s a photo of the project…I’m happy that I got through the plumbing–it wasn’t as tough as I thought! I’ll need this for the workshops I’m planning for Two Trees (Riverside, California) in February of 2009.

Yes, those are paintings (the smaller ones) stored on the end wall and above the faucets.
You can see my entire blog here.
You can order my Color System DVDs and Flash Cards HERE.
If you need to email me directly, please click here.
©Copyright 2008 by Elin Pendleton. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Elin Pendleton’s website.
I will also do a barn visit/photo shoot for portraits of your Horse, with or without the owner or child in the photo. I have a 50 mile radius that I will travel (contact me for a barn visit quote) from the Belfast, Maine area. I will also consider other pets, such as dogs, donkeys and the like.
The Digital Photographs below, are from the Waldo County Riding and Driving Club, Belfast, Maine, summer shows of 2008. All but one was taken with my new camera. And at the time I was taking them, I wasn’t thinking ‘Portrait photos’, And I feel they came out rather well. If I had been in Photography Portrait mode of thinking, I’m sure the photos would be even better, as I would have paid more attention to the backgrounds and composition of the photo.
Contact me through my website: http://www.debfloodart.com
©Copyright 2008 by Debbie Flood. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Debbie Flood’s website.
©Copyright 2008 by Heather Anderson. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Heather Anderson’s website.
Lately, there have been rumors of a cougar being sighted in this part of Iowa, and in particular, just within a mile of where I pasture the horses. A couple of fellows say some of their hunting dogs went missing and were found hanging in the fork of a tree and not in a condition to follow them home. So far though, no tracks and no actual verification. We have been keeping a careful eye out for any signs.
We did find an unfortunate victim while doing chores the other night…
It was difficult to tell just what had caused this unusual mutilation.
Then.
We saw it.
Not a cougar.
No!
But a dreaded CHUPACABRA!!!!
for anyone not up to speed on cryptozoology, here you go:
Chupacabra (also Chupacabras /tʃupa’kabɾas/, from Spanish chupar: to suck, cabra: goat; goat sucker) is a legendary cryptid rumored to inhabit parts of the Americas. It is associated more recently with sightings of an allegedly unknown animal in Puerto Rico (where these sightings were first reported), Mexico, and the United States, especially in the latter’s Latin American communities.[1] The name comes from the animal’s reported habit of attacking and drinking the blood of livestock, especially goats. Physical descriptions of the creature vary. Eyewitness sightings have been claimed as early as 1990 in Puerto Rico, and have since been reported as far north as Maine, and as far south as Chile. It is supposedly a heavy creature, the size of a small bear, with a row of spines reaching from the neck to the base of the tail. Most biologists and wildlife management officials view the chupacabra as an urban legend.[2] From Wikipedia.org
Legend no more! Run, Radar, RUN!
©Copyright 2008 by Bethany Caskey. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Bethany Caskey’s website.
Not everything went according to plan this weekend, not that that’s an unusual occurence. When many of your activities are centered around photography in the outdoors, things can sometimes fail to work out the way they were expected to.
What I thought I would be doing was heading to a cowboy event north of the city to get some photos. I’m not totally sure what this event involved, just that it was a gathering of cowboys and horses that would likely give me some good photo ops, and that’s usually all I require to set me on my way. It was to be held on both Saturday and Sunday, and since Saturday was a supremely lovely day with a bit of a breeze (perfect for photography) I decided it might be possible to ride outside for a change so resolved to do the cowboy photos on Sunday and ride outside on Saturday. Of course we didn’t last long outside as despite the wind the flies were making poor Alpac frantic, so we had to retreat to the indoors to do our schooling. Then as the fates would have it, the weather turned overnight and Sunday was downright chilly and unpleasant, definitely not perfect or even adequate for photography, so I didn’t go that day and still don’t know what it was all about. Apparently it’s an annual get-together, though, so maybe next year I’ll get in on the action.
Sunday evening we had a selection of family and friends over for dinner, with the addition of some out of town guests, in the form of the breeder of my Boxers and her friend Maureen, both from Edmonton and in the city for the weekend dog show with their show dogs. Josie (the Boxer breeder) and I have kept in touch over the years, and she was keen to visit with the boys, who she hadn’t seen since they were just turning three. As it happens, today is their birthday, so I decided I’d better make a cake in their honour for the occasion. Sadly, they didn’t get to have any since it was chocolate which isn’t good for dogs, but they enjoyed the excitement of visitors and being greatly admired and fussed over in the process.
Since the dog show was continuing today, I offered to meet Josie and Maureen at the venue and get some shots of their dogs. I hadn’t met either of Josie’s current show dogs, so it was a treat to see them in real life. Maureen has a lovely little female Cavalier King Charles spaniel, who gets on wonderfully with the Boxers and provides quite a contrast in size, shape, and haircoat.
Today’s shots are of the various Boxers, with a nice flower shot thrown in for those of you who get tired of the relentless parade of Boxer photos. Trust me, I could be showing a lot more!!
The first shot shows the “visiting relatives” in the form of Gigi and her dad, Mr. Spock. Gigi is a beautiful and sensible young lady, only nine months old and showing great promise. Spock is a veteran of the show ring at age five, and a father many times over. He is a nephew to my boys, having been sired by the incomparable Dash, who was a littermate to Oscar and Mickey, and who sadly died of a rare and devastating cancer only a week or so after their (and his) third birthday. I can see a fair amount of Dash in Spock, particularly in some of the profile head shots I took of him.
Second photo is of my boys on their eighth birthday, taken this evening. Oscar has the natural (floppy) ears, and Mickey has the upright ones. They both look kind of chunky in the body in this shot, partly I think from the way they are sitting. They are big solid boys, but not quite as tank-like in reality. They are extremely fond of garden vegetables (one of the reasons we had to fence our backyard garden) so they were rewarded for posing by getting a nice treat of fresh-picked pole beans. Whenever I go to pick beans these days, the boys lurk around the perimeter of the vegetable garden fence, staring at me and drooling until I chuck a few beans in their direction to placate them. If the time ever came that they had to forage for their own food, I think they’d do just fine.
The final shot is of one of the container gladioli I grew this year. I didn’t get very many to plant this spring, and for some reason I got a combination of green and white flowering ones. The green flowers were kind of interesting but I really am not sure what I was thinking when I bought them, as by this time of year I am generally getting a little tired of being surrounded by green, so another colour for the flowers likely would have been a good idea. The white ones came into bloom a bit later than the green and I was very relieved to see that not all the ones I had planted were green. I tend to like the bright reds, oranges and yellows in flowers, but in the past few years I have started coming round to whites and appreciating the subtle beauty that they offer.
©Copyright 2008 by Judy Wood. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Judy Wood’s website.
The Italian Grayhound breed fascinates me. These dogs are like high fashion models ..all lines and curves. This little ‘Italiano’ greeted me at our local tack shop….I asked if I could photograph the little one and this is one of the shots that interested me….the shadow and lines and curves again.
This is a small casein on canvas on board. [5 x 7"] A joy to paint.
This Labor Day is a glorious day weather wise for us here in Morrill, Maine…we are blessed. My thoughts have been with all the folks…and animals .. affected by Gustav as he pushs his way into their lives today. God bless them all.
©Copyright 2008 by Kathi Peters. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Kathi Peters’s website.
So how does a commission happen? The usual procedure is that I’m approached by someone who has seen my work online, and they have a desire to have a painting done in my “style”, yet with their animals in the composition.
This two-dog commission came to me that way, after handing my postcard-business card out along the way. The pile of photos to the left are the requested imagery I need to create a composite image of what the client wants. I seldom have a “perfect” image from which to work, and one of my strengths is design–the ability to create a good composition from a multitude of source material. It is a worthy skill to acquire, and skill it is…. anyone can get it with enough practice!
The initial sketch on the canvas is below. I’ve placed the two dogs with the characteristic pose that the client wants, and I’ve quickly drawn in with a brush the placement. I did do a small thumbnail sketch to define the negative space around the dogs–again, designing the composition. The client hasn’t seen this yet. This stage would only confuse, with no value contrast to help the non-artist “see” the direction I’m going.
The shadow in the image on the top is my easel. More tomorrow!
On another note, one of my two panels is in place on the Mural Mosaic of the Horse, in process. I had panels 216 and 136, but although they have both, only one is viewable in the assemblage.
The official unveiling of the completed mural will be on September 3. You can see the almost finished mural–a combination of over 300 equine artists’ collaboration at this link:
http://www.muralmosaic.com/Cadeau.html
And my entire blog here.
If you need to email me directly, please click here.
©Copyright 2008 by Elin Pendleton. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Elin Pendleton’s website.
©Copyright 2008 by Heather Anderson. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Heather Anderson’s website.
This has been, for lack of a better term, a very “interesting” summer. The spring was too wet and we survived flooding all over the state. The crops were late getting in and we had ankle high corn by the fourth of July instead of the intended knee high. Usually, these days with the hybrids, we have head high plus corn by July. Not this year.
I have been getting gobs done though, even if part of the gob is not keeping up with the blogging. Gob Blogging. Wonder if there is a market for that?
I have been taking photos almost everyday and I have a great backlog of things to use to illustrate the blog clear through to the autumn months and beyond.
For today’s subject, we took the puppies to the pond a few weeks ago, and Bella, the swim master, part otter dog, taught everyone the fine art of swimming. The “beaglador” Lab/Beagle mix was the only one who sat the first session out and refused to get her feet wet.
“What am I doing wrong, mom?”
“Teach me, oh Bella, wise dog of the water.”
“First you must focus outside of your fears. Find a goal. Like that stick. Become one with the water.”
“Success, grasshopper!”
©Copyright 2008 by Bethany Caskey. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Bethany Caskey’s website.
©Copyright 2008 by Sheona Hamilton Grant. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Sheona Hamilton Grant’s website.