8 March 26
Graphic Reportage
In Making Nonfiction Comics, Eleri Harris and Shay Mirk talk about the power of reporting on events using comics. There are advantages: a loose sketch of someone is a screen to hide behind in case they fear investigation. But it also humanizes the whole process, and I’m glad I took a pen and brush along to yesterday’s gathering in Woodland.
There are so many things to make us upset and even despair about this administration’s recklessness in all areas of public life here and in disrupting the world, but doing something, anything, to stand up to it feels helpful.
1 March 26
Caterpillar In The Park
For today’s urban sketch I drew this much-loved sculpture of a caterpillar in Central Park in Davis.
28 February 26
Introduction to Anbur
I got a postcrossing card today from Russia. The sender includes this information on the back:
On the postcard you can see the ancient alphabet of the Komi people. It’s called Anbur. This alphabet was created by St. Stephen of Perm more than 600 years ago. The first books that were written in these letters were the Psalter and the Gospel.
This beautiful script is written with the nib held on the horizontal, about 5 nib widths high.
17 February 26
Delicata Squash
Sketched today before it got chopped up for our weekly soup. I drew it with ink and Neocolor II watercolor crayons.
16 February 26
Sketchcrawl in the Rain
Yesterday was our February Let’s Draw Davis outing, not quite beating the front that is going to deliver a lot of rain (and snow!) to northern California.
While I was sketching the band my friend Pete sketched me. We were under the awning at the Creator Space, so sheltered from the weather.
12 February 26
International Letter-Writing Month: A Zine
I’m kind of keeping up with a letter, or at least a card, every day in February. The recipient is almost random. This one’s for Richard, who has the sense of humor to appreciate it.
Zines are hard to photograph in their entirety…
10 February 26
Explaining a Cascading Metabolic Failure
Working on a drawing for a piece I’m writing… the trick is to be as clear as possible without being wordy. Not quite there…
9 February 26
A Cooperative Dove
While Pica was sketching yesterday at the Arboretum, I went on a little photo stroll, having packed both my macro lens and my long telephoto lens (an Olympus 75-300mm for micro four-thirds cameras). The macro lens is meant for Arboretum outings, with flowering shrubs everywhere, but I have always found the 75-300mm lens difficult to use, especially when photographing birds. The reach is there, but it is challenging to get sharp pictures.
I’ve resolved to practice more with this lens, and a mourning dove hanging around our backyard this afternoon gave me an opportunity. We often see one or two mourning doves in the backyard, not doing much other than pecking occasionally at the ground. I took a few photos, and was happy with the focus on several of them, including this one. I think the key is to have a fast shutter speed and small aperture — I settled on 1/800th of a second at f/8, with auto ISO. But even at f/8, there is not much depth of field to play with at this magnification, so one really has to nail the focus point (the eye and face is preferred).
8 February 26
Sketch Outing to Arboretum
We went to the Arboretum today. It was packed with people getting a quick walk in before the Superbowl, which we didn’t watch. I heard that the Seahawks have always been to the Superbowl the year a new pope is installed, which who knows, but here at least they were successful.

