Tag Archives: Welsh pony

After the Show …High Ho High Ho


Les straightening the pole-skirting.

The weekend flew by so fast as we flew back and both between Morrill and Augusta each day for the Equine Art Show at the Civic Center. I was so happy to have been included in this art show and for the chance to reconnect with old friends and clients…all the horse folks of Maine!! And I was so good… and did not spend any money on horse stuff…though I did lust over a few trailers there that would hold a pair of driving horses AND our carriage!!! I say that laughing because I need a bigger studio before I get a bigger trailer!!!

Today I finally got back into the tiny studio and to work on the driving painting that I am doing…24 x 48″ with casein. As snow fell over our farm, I stay cozy in the studio making headway on this small pony on a big canvas. There will be more to come…but this is where we are this afternoon.

©Copyright 2009 by Kathi Peters. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Day 2 Of Casein Of Pony


This is where this casein painting is at mid-day of day two. I will now let it sit and dry before I go back into it with more color. I usually do my casein paintings on a colored ground and leave a bit of that colored ground show here and there in a painting. I feel it give it a depth.

So now this afternoon, I am working on an oil….started with casein and am now painting over the dried casein under-painting. This is a carriage driving scene too, but with 4 white horses…not one little cute Welsh pony!
Back into the paint!

©Copyright 2009 by Kathi Peters. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Welsh Ponies


Yes,  I like to paint in my socks.  :)   Even when I am at my studio at Second April Art Galerie in order to settled down and get ready to paint, my shoes have to come off. You can see a portion of my current commission in its final stages in the photo above.  I’ve been scurrying to get these last couple commissions done in time for Christmas. I think I am in good shape and should wrap this one up maybe this week end.

I feel like I’ve been just a tad neglectful of this blog the last couple weeks.� I am working on getting a blog for the artists at my studio going so that people can get a feel for the variety of art and events that take place here. I eventually want to get it to where its a ‘day in the life’ kind of entry to talk about the fun things that happen with a group of artists.  You can see what I’ve started here.

Above you can see the welsh ponies I am painting. I also included a recent abstart horse painting.  To see finished art please visit http://www.suesteiner.com/ or stop by my studio.

Take care,
Sue Steiner
equine and animal artist
pet portraits in oil
Sue Steiner,

Animal and Equine artist
Pet Portraits in Oil
White Horse Studios
324 Cleveland Ave. NW
Canton, Ohio 44702

http://www.suesteiner.com

http;//www.secondapril.org
pet portraits, horses in art, studio or online sales, commissions

©Copyright 2009 by Sue Steiner. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Pony and Snow Revisited

This is an 8 x 10″ mixed media painting on board that I have done before in casein, but felt a need to “revisit”again as a mixed media. This time I used casein, acrylic and ink to get the effect that I was looking for.This winter painting is available on my website.

‘Frolic” the pony in this work, came into our lives when we lived in North Pownal. At the point we had 6 horses and Frolic became our granddaughter’s first pony. He was a great guy…very well behaved and knew how to take care of a new rider. But not only did he know riders, he was a great driving pony who once was part of a handsome pair. A handsome Welsh pony….the kind that every little girl dreams of and for a while he was part of our Jackie’s life.

©Copyright 2009 by Kathi Peters. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Bring it all Together…. Welsh Pony Painting

Yesterday was a fun painting session.� I’ve been sharing with you my latest horse commission which is a rather large 36 x 36 painting of a mare and her foals.� Over the years this family has had 5 foals with this beautiful mare and this portrait is of her (in the center) surrounded by her offspring.�

I painted the underpainting in acrylics– to get the ‘bones’� of the painting down and to keep it moving along.� since there were so many faces I didn’t want to get hung up on one face and then have the whole thing out of balance.� This has proven to be a good strategy because I put the finishing touches on the horses in oil (my preferred medium) and I was very pleased as I could see it coming together the way�I had hoped.

My client has a preference for a more realistic painting�so I was working toward that end in mind but in the process I fell in love with the horse on the top right corner.� I will be painting over the underpainting so it fits in with the others in style but I do plan on doing more horse paintings in that style to have in my studio.� I liked the looseness and movement in it so will use that as a jumping off point to play with this style in between commissions.�

I am posting a close up of the two completed ponies and the painting as a whole.� Stay tuned for the finished product!� I do encourage you to stop by my studio if you are local to the Canton area since the photos don’t do justice.� This week we have lots of events going on at the Gallery including First Friday.� I’ve started a new blog for the Studio and Annex artists to give people an idea of what else is offered under the roof od Second April Art Galerie.� I am in suite�#207 so stop by anytime during regular�gallery hours.�

Thanks for stopping by!

Sue Steiner
equine and animal artist
pet and horse portraits, �
e-mail� Sue Steiner,

Animal and Equine artist
Pet Portraits in Oil
White Horse Studios
324 Cleveland Ave. NW
Canton, Ohio 44702

http://www.suesteiner.com

http;//www.secondapril.org
pet portraits, horses in art, studio or online sales, commissions

©Copyright 2009 by Sue Steiner. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Cocker Spaniel Painting Completed!


Cocker Spaniel Oil Painting
Lucy and Rosie, owned and loved by Kathie

The buff and chocolate cocker spaniel pair that I have been working on is now officially completed.�

Now on to the next one… a 6 horse commission of a mare and her 5 offspring.� What you see here is the underpainting in acrylics.� I will go over this with oils and refine it.� I am enjoying their beautiful profiles and sculptured heads, throat latch, neck and shoulders.� So fun to paint these beautiful horses!


An Equine Family Affaire!

To see finished animal paintings please visit my web site at http://www.suesteiner.com/

thank you!
Sue Steiner
wildlife, pet, horse, farm animal painter

Sue Steiner,

Animal and Equine artist
Pet Portraits in Oil
White Horse Studios
324 Cleveland Ave. NW
Canton, Ohio 44702

http://www.suesteiner.com

http;//www.secondapril.org
pet portraits, horses in art, studio or online sales, commissions

©Copyright 2009 by Sue Steiner. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

New Multi Horse Painting


New Horse Painting Work in Progress

Welsh Ponies, Mare and Offspring

This is a large canvas 36 x 36 gallery wrapped canvas and will feature an elegant grey Welsh Pony mare and her 5 offspring.� What you see her is the initial drawings and the beginnings of an under painting.� I’ve chosen a warm sand as the base coat and have picked out a delicious palette of cool blue/greens and purples.� I’ll be painting some darker horses too so I wanted to pick up those beautiful burnt sienna browns and russets in their coats.�� I love the beautiful, expressive eyes on all of these horses and their chiseled, refined faces and necks.� I am really looking forward to painting these beautiful horses.�

Cocker Spaniels

I am at a resting point with the above buff and chocolate colored Cocker spaniel dogs.� I need to do some glazing to even out some of the tones (such as on the chocolate dogs tongue) and highlight some areas but need it to be good and dry.�

I have another�commission I will be beginning soon of a beloved black lab and an ornery but oh so lovable terrier.� This is a busy season but am enjoying the variety and opportunity to paint these beautiful animals!�

Take care and stop back to check on my progress!

Sue Steiner
equine and animal artist
pet portraits in oil

Sue Steiner, Animal and Equine artist
White Horse Studios
324 Cleveland Ave. NW
Canton, Ohio 44702

http://www.suesteiner.com

http;//www.secondapril.org
pet portraits, horses in art, studio or online sales, commissions

©Copyright 2009 by Sue Steiner. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

To be continued

Apparently winter is to be continued here, doubtless for the next several months at least. Totally unreasonable and irrational to expect anything else, given that I’ve lived here all my life (getting on for quite a while now) and it’s always been the same. I did give some thought to a little intermission from the whole thing in this week’s blog, but have decided to continue to share the grey bleakness, snow, and cold at least for now. That’s not to say I mightn’t flee to some of the summer garden and flower shots from my archives for a future post. We’ll see how I hold up!

We did actually get a two day respite over the weekend (back to minus 20s and more snow today). Miracle that it happened at all, and more so that it hit on a weekend. Mind you, in my life one day is much like another, weekend or no, as I set my own agenda most of the time. I’m always torn between describing my lifestyle as “never working” or “working all the time”. It can be interpreted either way. But back to the weekend. We got into single digits!! Sill single digits below zero but when you’ve been suffering through minus 20s and 30s with a wind, getting up to minus 8 is a big thrill. This being the case, I was happy it was on the weekend so all those poor 9 to 5 weekday workers could enjoy it as well.

Since it snowed much of the weekend as well, I had to hie myself out to add to my ongoing “horse herd in snowfall” series. First shoot I’ve had out there (of many so far this season) where my hands actually stayed in the comfort zone the whole time. I even had to remove my head covering as I was overheating! The only negative was that the snow was so heavy at some points that the camera was getting pretty wet and the large densely falling flakes confused the focus sensor so it couldn’t focus on the horses beyond the flakes much of the time. I did get some shots I am fairly happy with, though, which I will post at some future date. I wish it could snow in that pretty fashion and still have slightly more ambient light for better exposures. I’ve figured out a few ways to get around that problem, but I think I need to spend more time working on it. Or learn to accept that when it’s snowing around here it’s generally coming out of low very dark clouds and that’s just the way it is, but it’s not my way to accept that sort of reality. I always feel I can do better if I could just figure out the right settings, and oddly enough, I often can.

First shot today is Eclipse, a little Welsh pony who is continuing his training and learning of life-skills at Ebon. He is wonderfully furry and hairy in general, and I love his little ears. I had hoped to get some full body shots of him, but he’s wearing a cozy new warm winter blanket these days (he lives outdoors in the pony pen), so not a whole lot of him was showing. He is a project pony for one of the young women who has been at Ebon a number of years. She amazed us a year or so back by selling her big jumper to purchase this pony, who came with pretty well no instruction manual. He couldn’t even be caught for the first months, never mind haltered or led, but with time and patient work much can be accomplished, and he’s now working under saddle and continuing with his learning program of how to be a well-behaved riding pony. It’s always entertaining and endlessly interesting to observe the progress of both the young untrained horses and their handlers.

Shot two shows the halters near the school horse turnout, ready for use when required. The bright colors caught my attention, countered as they are by the dim lighting of the mid-afternoon’s snowfall, and the snow itself. You can see a couple of the school horses lurking in the background. When the weather is as extreme as it has been for the past few weeks, the school horses don’t get much work as it is too hard on their systems to be brought in from the cold, worked in the relatively warm indoor ring, then turned out again, even after very careful and long cooling out. They have shelters and good heavy coats (especially this year) so are well equipped to handle the cold if left to their own devices. A good school horse is a valuable and well appreciated commodity at any training stable, and they are treated accordingly.

Shot three is a shelter of a different sort. This is the “brush pile” that we have established against our back yard fence, which serves as shelter and habitat for whatever little creatures need to make use of it. In truth, it’s mostly for the birds as the main other creatures here in the city would be mice, and nature friendly as we are, we tend to draw the line at mice and rats. We’ve been chucking branches and odd bits of debris on this for a couple of years and it is well used by the local sparrows, who are usually scattered throughout the depths of the interior. The pile faces west so it catches the sun much of the afternoon which makes it even nicer for them. We cut the branches off our Christmas tree and added them to the top to make a little roof to keep the snow out a bit better. There are no sparrows in the photo as they had all just been scattered to the winds by Mickey who roared out ahead of me when I went to get this shot. Mickey has always had a bit of an obsession with chasing birds, so he never misses an opportunity to do a bird run when he gets the chance. Once he actually did catch a slow-moving sparrow in one of these hunts, and that just reinforced his optimism about the whole process.

Shot four shows Mickey himself, having finished his brief foray and giving me the “well what are you waiting for? Good heavens, it’s cold, let me in” look. Can’t really blame him for that as it was about minus 25 and Boxers are definitely not built to handle cold. Oscar (his brother) wouldn’t even come to the door when we went out to the yard, never mind actually join us. Oscar is a dog who looks out for his own comfort and welfare above all else.

Shot five shows the “greeting” gargoyle in our front yard, as decked out for winter as he’s going to get. Once it got cold and snowy I felt he needed *something* so I gave him a scarf to get him through the season. I know, I’m odd. Seeing this shot reminds me I was going to antique him to make him a little more interesting and less gray. Maybe next summer I’ll remember to do that.

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

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