Tag Archives: English Shepherd

Falling Leaves

Cheerio, my English Shepherd, is going to turn two years old this coming Thursday, and I thought I would celebrate her birthday by posting a recent picture here. We have a wonderful old maple tree in the side yard. I don’t know exactly what kind of maple it is, but it has smaller leaves than some of the others, and they make a particularly lovely carpet around the trunk when they fall off the tree. The color just sets off Cheerio’s coat beautifully.

Although she is nearly two and her “off switch” is much closer to being fully functioning, she still just loves to play, and our favorite game is to throw the jolly ball into the middle of a pile of leaves and watch her dive into the middle of the pile. She would emerge, leaves sticking out of the sides of her mouth with the jolly ball, reminding me of Linus jumping into the leaves with a wet sucker.

I’ve been spending all my painting time working on a large commissioned portrait, that I won’t be able to post here until it’s finished, and other studio time is being occupied by computer work. However, today was for more leaf raking. And what a day it was for working outside. It is so warm, I can’t believe it’s November. There is a small window of time to get the leaves raked before it snows. And I would rather not have to clean them all up in the spring. Growing up at my parents’ house, on their small wooded lot, the leaves would be ankle deep, and you could easily accumulate a pile four feet high from raking a small area. We would haul the leaves on a big piece of plastic sheeting and dump them at the curb and wait for the city truck to come and suck them all up. Our yard now, with it’s scattered mature trees, means I have a much bigger area to cover, and we tend to rake it in sections, depending on which trees drop their leaves first. At least our hauling method is the same, except there is no city truck to collect them. We just compost them ourselves along with the horse manure.

The big excitement of the day? Bluebirds! I saw a flock of five or six Eastern bluebirds in the yard this morning. I sure wish they would use the house I built for them, but I’m happy just to see them around once in a while.

And this last picture is my Morgan mare, Unique, looking cute wearing her fall “jewelry”. I found someone selling these at Equine Affaire last year, and I thought it was a wonderful alternative to the big, clunky hunter-beware bell that clips onto the saddle (that is, if your saddle has d-rings, which mine doesn’t, and those leather ties just don’t hold it securely.) So now Unique is fashionable on her fall trail rides.

©Copyright 2008 by Alecia Underhill. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Alecia Underhill’s website.

Cheerio, Run!

Painting of an English Shepherd dog copyright Alecia Underhill, all rights reserved.

Cheerio, Run!
oil on canvas, 48 x 24 in.

I had a great time photographing Cheerio running around in the springtime, chasing her tennis ball, and this painting was the result. An English Shepherd in full stride, her glossy coat flying in the wind–it describes my dog so perfectly. I had planned to send this painting to a gallery, but I just couldn’t do it–it fit so perfectly on the bedroom wall, right above where Cheerio’s crate sits. This one is a keeper.

Quick update on the kitten: Status: Adopted! Yay! We’re back to a reasonable number of pets in the house.

I’m on vacation this week, and it’s been a week of getting outside, getting the horse exercised, the dog exercised, and the kid exercised. We’ve been bicycling, hiking, and I’ve been riding! The bugs are not that bad here this August, so I’ve been out on the trail. We even fit in a trip to Six Flags, where I am proud to say that I rode a rollercoaster three times! Okay, so it wasn’t the Superman coaster, or the Batman coaster, or even the Mind Eraser. It was Catwoman’s Whip, which is pretty comparable to the Goofy’s Barnstormer kid-coaster at Disneyworld. But I loved it! It was just enough of a thrill to me! My son, on the other hand, at eight years old, was just tall enough to ride all the big coasters and seems to enjoy being twisted and turned and plunged and flung upside down at very high speeds. I’m glad he doesn’t have my stomach! It’s a lucky thing that my husband is willing to ride with him on these things, because if I rode one, they would be carrying my body out on a stretcher, after I had a heart attack!

I have managed to fit in some painting time, and my latest project on the easel is an ambitious one. It’s a 30 x 40 in. vertical canvas divided into a grid of 80 3×5 in. rectangles. In each rectangle is a horse’s head, viewed pretty much head-on, but there is some variation to the angles and expressions of the horses. The horses are all individual personalities, but the concept behind this grid is to show the spectrum of horse colors, starting at the bottom with the blacks and dark bays, and as it goes up, there will be lighter bays and liver chestnuts and light chestnuts, buckskins, palominos and greys. It’s unusual for me to work a canvas from one end to the other–I’m usually painting all over the whole thing–but this is a very different sort of a painting, and so far, I have almost 30 heads painted. The image below was shot with a digital camera with indoor lighting conditions, and shows a portion of the heads. I think after all the heads are in there, I’m going to want to go back into some of them and tighten up a few details, but for now, I’m painting the heads fairly quickly. There aren’t a lot of layers of color on each horse–each one is painted within about a half hour. I solicited pictures of my friends’ horses, and fellow equine artist’s horses, and dug deep into my own photo bank, and I’m hoping that the result will be that everyone that sees this painting will see “their” horse somewhere in there. At least a horse that looks somewhat like their horse. It may take me the rest of this year to finish this, but it’s well underway.

WIP in progress of horse heads copyright Alecia Underhill, all rights reserved.

©Copyright 2008 by Alecia Underhill. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Alecia Underhill’s website.

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