Spoonbill, Hornbill and Duckbill Acrylic, by Mary Stebbins Taitt Click on this or any image to view all of them larger |
with their friend Hornbill
Rode a red wagon downhill
with glorious freewill
past the sawmill
and came to a standstill
at Frankie's doorsill.
Frankie is my grandson. One of four.
I can't find the paper with the "poem" on it, and I'm not sure I'm remembering it right.
Roseate Spoonbills envelope acrylic, Mary Stebbins Taitt |
Pumice Fish Acrylic, Mary Stebbins Taitt |
I never went to art school, so I have to learn everything by experimenting. I bought some pumice medium and played with it on the envelope for the first time ever (dumb, I know). It was so rough, like sandpaper,only worse, so, worried about the mail carriers and postal employees injuring their fingers, I put a couple layers of matte medium over it, but that made it look dull. :-( It has lots of texture! But less than before. (I also used a tiny but of the pumice medium on the rocks and on the road in the Spoonbill hornbill duckbill painting.)
In the Pocket:
Twin Poppies oil on Graham Cracker box treated with acrylics Mary Stebbisn Taitt |
Flute Practice oil and Arches Oil Paper Mary Stebbins Taitt |
Flute practice, side view showing topography of oils |
Cassandra Elise Lapwing revisited yet again (I'm probably still working on this):
5 comments:
I love the twin poppies.
Oh, and the Roseate Spoonbills envelope is fantastic.
Thanks so much, jo(e)! :-D
:-D
Of course I love the poppies. No surprise there, I'm sure! :-)
Thanks, Nadine!!!! :-D XOX
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