the silverton / durango train while waiting on the train. the cowboy font was quite interesting.
jayrohrer-art.com
jayrohrer.blogspot.com
November Theme Challenge! The contents of a trashcan
latest 'skines
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2009Aug 300 -
2009Aug 30 -
2009Aug 30 -
tags: abstract | leaves | Line Work | Stationary2009Aug 30 -
tags: Pen and photoshop2009Aug 29 -
2009Aug 29tags: Saint-Jean-de-Luz | urban | watercolorPort port of the town of Saint-Jean-de-Luz, in the french Basque Country (Pyrénées-Atlantiques department ). I’ve visited this lovely coastal town several times but this summer I finally took along a sketchbook. Watercolor and pen.
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2009Aug 29Contribution #2 to skineart.com
I’ve been a graphic artist/retoucher by trade for some 20 years, and more recently I’ve been making a concerted effort to increase my output of actual art.
Pigma Micron, DecoColor acrylic paint marker
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2009Aug 29tags: Micron pensi found this little puppy abandoned in the woods 15 years ago. he was my best friend for 13 years. i’ve been thinking a lot about getting a new dog…
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2009Aug 29tags: clouds | RudatBands of summer clouds. http://susanrudat.blogspot.com/
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2009Aug 29tags: treesTrees near Edinburgh Airport – Ink/Watercolour in a Watercolour Moleskine
Started sketching this while out on a recent cycle run. It was finished, later, at home. These beeches are heavy with leaf and more come down in windy weather, at this time of year, than at any other. Experts say its because the dense foliage creates a barrier to weather. Because of this ability to provide shelter beeches were planted as “nursery trees” around estates and forests. These ones are next to Gogarburn Golf Course, opposite Edinburgh Airport. The golf course was once was a large private estate with a huge range of different trees from around the world. In our folklore, they are known as “The Mother of the Forest” and its thought that a 30 foot specimen can provide a windbreak of up to 3 times that distance. Using this knowledge, one school pupil once wrote that a 30 foot beech tree can break wind for 90 feet – a frightening thought!





















