Working on a little book, GLIMPSE. Hoping to publish one way or another. Here are some pages.
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Some of the drawings were done a few weeks ago, some, a few years, some are very recent. I’ve gone back onto prior work to add letting and additional drawing. They are a palimpsest of layers from printed ledger grids, handwriting, drawing, stamp letting. Various inks are being/have been used, I.e. ballpoint, he’ll pens, fountain pen inks, printing inks, markers, pigmented pens. The drawings were done on various papers then dry mounted into a small sketchbook. Halfway done. I’ll post the rest here as I finish.
While in Vancouver BC, I set about town with filmmaker Ryan Mund and his wee GoPro. Gear used in this video: a Moleskine landscape format watercolour sketchbook, Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Brush Pens, and a Faber-Castell Basic Black Leather fountain pen, Platinum Carbon ink.
Oops, this got posted as if It was done in the Northwest. It wasn’t. It’s a northwest based corporate coffee shop, which, is just 2 blocks from my Midwest residence.Â
Land this was the flight home.
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N Center NU at lunch (l) Evanston PO (r)
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At the CSO, Mozart & Strauss conductor Haitink. Both pieces great, but the Strauss Alpine Symphony just bowled me over.
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Dude sketching the transit passengers in 30th Street St. Above him is conductor Josh of Amtrak.
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So, I arrived in Philadelphia by Amtrak to the beautious 30th Street Station, one of my favorite public transit centers in the country, and had time to kill so down I sat to grab a sketch of the Bronze statue dedicated to Railroad employees who died serving in the armed forces during WWII. The statue was by Walter Hancock who taught at the Pennsyvania Academy of Fine Arts and during WWIi, was one of the” Monuments Men” whose exploits and mission was made famous in the George Clooney film of the same name. The actor John Goodman’s character was based on Walter Hancock. The drawing on the right was posted earlier and is a memorial sculpture to the fallen Canadian Rail workers from both WW I and II, copies of which can be seen in a number of Canadian cities, Vancouver being home to this one.
Drawn in  Rhodia unlined sketchbook, and a Tomoe River Paper sketchbook using Pitt Artist Brush Pens and various ni sizes of the Pitt Pens. Also fountain pens, Pelikan M215, and Faber-Castell Basic Black Leather fountain pen filled with Platinum Carbon ink.
Once again, I made it to the terrific Flight Museum in Seattle. Above you see a 6 bladed propeller on a reconnaissance plane from the Vietnam Nam War. An early model using “Stealth” technology of the day.
WW II era flight suit for gunners. Some fountain pen, and the rest rest in various Pitt Artist Brush Pens in a Rhodia unlined sketchbook.
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Above you’d see the drawing kit do one of Boeing’s chief engineers and later executives. It was nice to see the celebrated engineers and designers all drew, some very regularly as children.