Now, this is the time when you get to peep behind the curtain, and see how creativity really works, instead of the, "yes, one-neat-product-appears-every-week," version of events into which this blog might (accidentally) have lulled you before now.
"Wisteria Bench" Work in Progress Digital Watercolour Sketch in Rebelle 5, by Clare Walker |
First up, there's a park/garden bench sketch. I drew it mostly to celebrate humble-but-wonderful benches in the sun, and a vague idea that, when finished, it might one day join what I might (in a grandiose moment) call the "garden art series,"...The start of which is in my Society6 shop, at least for now.
"Roses on a Pole" Digital Watercolour sketch in Rebelle 5, by Clare Walker |
Next there's these roses-on-a-pole. The start of a wedding design? Maybe. Something for May Day? It could happen. But they got created because they were fun and reminded me of summer on a rainy day. Which is much more in line with how creativity really works than the "uploading-on-a-schedule," online world might suggest.
And then there's this post itself. For a perfect Easter post, in a world of productivity-over-creativity, there should be bouncing bunnies or similar. (And yes, it's with some relief that I can announce that there'll be a more "correctly" seasonal post (if you want to call it that) *next* week.
Those Two Unexpected Visitors...
But if I had gone along with that particular script this week, then some real life inspiration which landed in the window box, three feet away from my keyboard, wouldn't have got a look-in, almost literally.
Let me introduce you to the first of them. Both these photos were taken by my husband, so massive thanks to him (a.k.a. often on this blog as, "The Computer Man").
Round Robin-Photo by Jim Fernbank |
Yes, it's a robin. That most famous of Christmas birds (in the UK, anyway), gracing us with his presence (like the snow of a couple of weeks ago) much closer to Easter.
I had a vague memory from childhood that robins like to eat tiny pieces of cheese.
That turned out to be the understatement of the century. He clearly *adored* cheese. And soon had us trained to leave out cheese for him in response to loud and disappointed squeaks each morning.
But the cheese kept disappearing *so* quickly, that we became suspicious. And sure enough, a second, sleeker robin is also dining at the window-box buffet.
Sleek Robin- Photo by Jim Fernbank |
Which, combined with the fairly recent memory of snow, now meant that a snowy Christmas design just had to be begun, at least, even though you might not see a final, end result, "on" something, for months.
Red Robin Sketch Work in progress digital watercolour by Clare Walker |
(And yes, I know that my robin sketch features a red bird, and these robins are distinctly orange. But I'll save that debate (and the huge, bizarre, difference in popularity between robin designs in each colour) for a post nearer Christmas.
It's *all* OK...
Thanks for reading down this far. This post has rather wandered and wound its way round, a bit like how creativity itself seems to work. Am hoping that it's been fun to read, and that it might explain why things don't or can't always seem to appear, "When they *should*".
Most of all, I hope that it may have inspired you to follow through on creative ideas, whenever and however they appear for you. It's all *OK,* and you, I, or anyone else, all have permission to follow those inner-and outer-promptings, as they happen.
Even if that does mean that you draw robins at Easter :-) .
That's all for now. But my current plan is to be back a little sooner next week, with some genuinely spring-like or Eastery treats.
More soon.
__________________________