I set up in this tower overlooking Big Lagoon. On the left you can see Christina's yellow kayak as she crosses over to the beach. This was my first experience with the pochade box. The difference in the size of canvas and work space will be a big adjustment for me compared to the French easel. I have to be much more conscious of how I work because the footprint of everything is at most half of what I usually work with and often much less than half.
So, out of sheer perversity, I decided to do kind of a big scene on a small canvas, 9X12". It's a view overlooking two pavilions on the north shore of Big Lagoon. It was very windy when I started and so the initial lines were shaky and spotty. It was laid out very crudely because of the conditions and my unfamiliarity with the set up. I used a small bright brush for most of the work and once more produced a homogenous texture of strokes that looked like a timid Van Gogh knockoff. On the upside there was some level of freshness and emotion to it all.
From this point forward I began to work things as though I was operating on a much larger canvas, and so came much of the complication. It's called a pochade box because you should sketch on it. I think the lesson here would be to carry several canvases and toss off a small pile of them to work with later. Instead I toiled over this one for the afternoon, the following day, and a little bit this morning. As windy as it was, it also was very hot on this Sunday in the Florida panhandle. The next morning I did a little work on it outside the place we stayed in Pensacola.
Later, we went over to the National Seashore which makes up the south shore of Big Lagoon. Christina went swimming and beach combing while I worked from the passenger side of the truck, sheltered from the intense sun.
One adaptation due to a small palette surface was to pick up colors and mix them on the canvas. At times this didn't work, so I used the lid of the portable palette to do some mixing and then wiped it off. At this point I had moved beyond sketching to correcting the sketchy drawing and painting this in a traditional way. This may have been the best version of the sky. Wish I'd have kept it. I was able to work from the truck seat pretty well, at times taking the panel into my lap for some of the detail work. By the end of the day, here is what I had, balanced on the rear bumper of the truck.
This has a nice fresh look. When I got home, I added some details with a sharpie, reworked the curved boardwalk and added kayaks to the shore in the lower right. This brought me to this point. I'm in conflict over the sharpie details, as I like having the graphic quality to nail down some shapes and add detail, but it does seem overall to darken the image. I tend to like the last outdoor stage a little more.