Sunday, August 31, 2008

Oil Paint Tube Storage Drawer

I made some custom dividers at a 45 degree angle, to keep all the paints happy and easy to find.

Ball bearing drawer slides

I hate cheesy drawers, so I used 14" heavy duty "ball bearing" drawer slides.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Oil painting work station

With the work station almost completed, all that was left to do was build a drawer.
Using 3/4" x 3 1/2" boards I made a 14"x 23 3/4"drawer.
I'm not sure what kind of a joint this is, but I made a mistake and cut something wrong....And this is how I fixed it......!
I'm sure if its an inferior joint, my brother will let me know!!

Artist Work Station Wheels

The hot rims are from Home Depot !

Custom Built Artists Work Station

Sorry but I misplaced my camera battery during the building of this thing ( a common problem as I get older, misplacing things that is)..... so I can’t show you the construction process, but take my word for it.... It was a pain in the ass.
The dimensions are 29 1/2" high x 35 1/2" long x 14" deep. I used all solid 3/4" oak and no laminate. Home Depot didn’t sell solid 3/4" oak in 14"widths so I glued two 7" pieces together using biscuits and avoided using oak laminate for the top and the bottom.
The side sections are a simple frame made with 3 1/2" and 2 ½" planks held together with biscuits. I used rabbet joints to hold the top, bottom and sides together.


Wet Brush Holder

On the left side I made a wet brush holder. To make one of these things. First draw a center line down the length of a 1" piece of wood. Put the wood in a vise and use a wood drill bit to drill several holes on the center line down the length of the wood. ( I used a few different size drill bits to accommodate a few large and small brushes.) Then take your wood with all the holes in it to the table saw a cut it down the center line and there you have it ....two wet brush holders.

Oil Painting Brush washer

I then cut a hole in the top right of the work station to recessed my brush washer, I added support underneath to hold the unit at just the right height. This Idea works well and assures that the brush washer is secure and won’t get knocked over

Artists Work Station


As if the easel I built wasn’t big enough. Believe it or not I still needed more space to work and additional storage space for my art supplies.
I looked at some artist workstations on line and for about five hundred bucks and up, I could have ordered a piece of crap made out of beach wood or oak laminate. You know the kind of cheap furniture with plastic wheels that suck and flimsy drawer slides that break after a few months of use.
Well after putting all that time and work into the easel, I just couldn’t go buy put a piece of junk . So I went back to the drawing board and designed a artists work station that would fit my needs.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Sad Angel


This painting was inspired by a cemetery angel that caught my eye while visiting family at the North Arlington Cemetery.

There’s something about cemetery angels, they give me the feeling of peace and hope, like someone is watching over our lost love ones.

It seems wherever I go these days I’m looking for something to paint. I must have painted a thousand paintings in my head, the hard part is getting them onto the canvas.

After a resent visit to the Arlington Cemetery in Washing DC. I reflected on the endless sea of white tomb stones for the service men and women who gave there lives for our country and freedom.

I couldn’t help but feel that the angels are suffering also. And that’s what I’m trying to express in this painting.

I don’t usually paint as expressive, contemporary and I guess sloppy as this, but it felt good getting the emotion onto the canvas.






Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Still Life Practice


Here is a still life of some old garden tools I rounded up.

Still Life Practice



Here’s an old bottle I found at a flea market with some flowers from the yard. I used a limited palette while painting loose and quickly.

Painting from Life Practice


After building the easel, I started using my old drawing desk as a still life table. I simply added a back to the table with a piece of plywood and threw a table cloth over it.
After setting up my subject, I turn off the light in the room and use a clamp on light with a 100 watt bulb to add strong shadow drama to the subject. I clamp the light to the back of the easel and move it around till I get just the right shadow I’m looking for.