Here is today’s work on this Western themed watercolor. I worked more on the clouds..again. The men, the horses bridles and the rocks in front of the Buckskin. Mostly picking now, at details with a tiny brush.
Inquiries about my art may come to my email debflood@debfloodart.com thank you. Gallery inquiries are welcome also. You can also visit my website at http://www.debfloodart.com Or the Child a day paintings.
Thank you for following along,
DebbieDebbie Flood, Artist. Equine, Wildlife, and the natural world.
http://www.debfloodart.com
©Copyright 2009 by Debbie Flood. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.
The random number generator has chosen #131 – Possible Impossibilities Studio. I nearly had it draw another number since I hate to count that high:)
A big thank you from the bottom of my heart♥, to everyone who entered. It was such a joy reading all the comments.
I hope to have another giveaway in the Spring, perhaps on my birthday month, March.
I’m really sorry I wasn’t able to get to every one’s blog and leave a comment but this week I’m dealing with a sick child and a sick cat that had to go to the vet. The kitty is on the mend but the kid is still sick.
Back to the painting table now. I am working on a side saddle holiday sign and a few more pendants for the Etsy shop. Just completed this lovely Overo Paint Horse jewelry box at the request of a customer. Thought I’d share a picture of it!
I have some huge news I hope to share next month. It’s eating me up inside but I have to keep it a secret!



©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.
6 X 8 Oil on linen panel $115
includes shipping and insurance in US
Lately I have been working on large canvases and have gotten away from the little ‘uns. But Dandy was SO pretty in the afternoon sun today, that I just couldn’t resist her. We have had a couple light frosts and the pasture grasses are all different, brilliant colors. Dandy has begun to put on her winter coat, and is a rich, dark purpley, brown, black color that is nearly impossible to describe (or paint).
She isn’t as big as I would have expected at 18 months, but she is still growing. My best guess is 13 1/2 hands (about 54 inches at the withers, for you non-horsey people). Momma PJ is right at 15 hands (60″) and had nearly reached that height by the time she was 18 months. BUT I figure, if she stays short, then that just puts the ground closer and offers less gravity influence on my old bones…
I have an old light barrel racing saddle that I plan to place on her back soon. I promise a video of that event. I really don’t expect a rodeo, but with horses, you can always expect the unexpected, so she might surprise us. I really think that she will simply turn around, look at it and give me her “Oh, well, what next?” look.
Stay tuned….
Genesis 1:25
God made the wild animals according to their kinds, the livestock according to their kinds, and all the creatures that move along the ground according to their kinds. And God saw that it was good.
©Copyright 2009 by Debbie Grayson Lincoln. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.
16 X 20 Oil on canvas $640
includes choice of frame
shipping and
insurance extra…ask for quote
I posted this painting a couple weeks ago and my friend Rick suggested I darken the area behind the Indian, and I agreed. I also changed the background color and warmed it up a bit.
I have a number of 16 X 20 frames that it looks pretty good in, too. and I’m showing 2 of those here. PRICE INCLUDES FRAME!!!
If you want a REALLY nice Christmas gift for that western art lover of yours, this may be it. It will need to dry at least 4 more weeks before I can varnish it. And then a couple more days after that before I can ship. AND I accept layaway (1/3, 1/3, 1/3)
Don’t let this one get away! It goes to the gallery next month.
1 Corinthians 15:52
in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed.
©Copyright 2009 by Debbie Grayson Lincoln. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.
12 X 16 Oil on stretched linen
$350 includes shipping and insurance
It’s early Autumn, and this Indian is guarding a pass along the Paluxy River. Somehow he has acquired a Confederate soldier’s jacket to warm him on those cool November mornings. His horse patiently waits.
This is the first linen canvas I have stretched in years and I forgot how wonderful (and expensive) they are to paint on. But I am definitely hooked and suppose I will have to give away all these blank cotton canvas I have stashed!
Jeremiah 17:3
My mountain in the land and your wealth and all your treasures I will give away as plunder, together with your high places, because of sin throughout your country.
Media: oil on stretched linen
Size: 16 in X 12 in (40.6 cm X 30.5 cm)
Price: $350 USD
How to Purchase:
Buy this painting on PayPal
Price: $350 USD
Or, send me an email

©Copyright 2009 by Debbie Grayson Lincoln. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.
12 X 16 Oil on Canvas
Contact Artist for Availability
Sometimes it’s hard for me to stop painting on a piece – especially when it’s one I really like, and I do really like this one. Often I “live” with them for a while – and I always notice a few more things that I can do – most of the changes quite tiny and probably unnoticed by anyone other than myself. Mike often has suggestions, too, and his are usually accurate and valid. He likes this one as is, though, so I’m declaring it finished.
I recently sold another painting that I have used as my signature piece on my business card. I may use this one next since it is so colorful and quite representative of the direction I have taken lately. AND it will fit the card!
He changes times and seasons; he sets up kings and deposes them. He gives wisdom to the wise and knowledge to the discerning.

©Copyright 2009 by Debbie Grayson Lincoln. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.
I want to make another garden today! Yeah, I know, April showers, blah, blah, blah.
I just got a tiller and I want to till! I have been wanting a rototiller since we bought our house and, well, new ones are too expensive and used ones go so quickly. Every time I would find one in the paper it would be sold by the time I called. So my dear, sweet mother has given me/loaned indefinitely her precious old John Deere. They have two large tractors to plow their monstrous garden and didn’t really need it. The poor old thing had been sitting in their shed unused for years. My step father took it out for me on Easter and had it running in about 30 minutes. Nothing runs like a Deere, right?
So I managed to double the size of my veggie garden yesterday. I think I’ll make a few smalled beds for cukes and pumpkins. I already have the hose out on the ground mapping my next flower bed and I have a bunch of plants lying around waiting to be planted… Scotch Broom, Lupine, Delphinium, foxglove, Siberian iris, heuchera, forsythia, blueberries, meadow rue…
Is it time to go to Longwood again? (I put a little Flickr Slideshow widget on the right hand side so you can go to Longwood too!)

I did manage to paint one sign over the weekend. A bay overo Paint horse. He’s currently on Ebay this week. I started a mini donkey foal today which I hope to have up on Ebay soon too. Haven’t had a chance to work on on oil yet.


©Copyright 2009 by Jennifer MacNeill-Traylor. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.


I was asked to do a second mural panel by the creators of the Cadeau du Cheval mural, and despite a tight deadline, I have managed to get it completed. I saw a white horse head in the middle of the panel, and was able to work it into a bald-faced paint horse. The setting is a county fair horse show, the Friday night horse show classes under the lights.
There are many more images added to the mural mosaic, check out the live grid at http://www.muralmosaic.com/Cadeau.html
It’s been a crazy summer here, so far. Every day has a chance of thunderstorms, so it’s difficult to get any riding in, for fear of being caught out in a lighting storm. It’s been a time to catch up with farm chores and simply enjoy the backyard. The month of June is the batty month for us. Our old timber framed barn has a healthy colony of brown bats that raise their young along the top rafter. The only trouble is, the baby bats don’t seem to be able to cling to the rafter very easily, and many of them fall three stories, only to dehydrate and perish on the barn floor. We rescue as many as we can, carefully using a stick to pick them up by the back legs, which eagerly grip onto anything they can. We sometimes place the babies on a board and move them as high up in the barn as we can, climbing into the loft and leaving the board with the bats on a high beam, hoping they can crawl back up to the colony. I have no idea how many of these bats actually make it, but we just can’t leave them on the floor of the barn to shrivel up. Having been through this routine for eight years now, I’ve gotten used to the bats, but I love to show visitors the brown lumps up along the rafter and explain what they are, and watch them back sloooowly out of the barn. Admittedly, it is rather disconcerting to reach for a piece of equipment and find a bat clinging to it. One day, when one of the geldings refused to eat his grain, I was worried, until I looked in his feed tub and found a bat in there with the grain. I love having them around, though. We have never had a big mosquito problem around here.
©Copyright 2008 by Alecia Underhill. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Alecia Underhill’s website.