Nature Journaling Supplies

ss.jpg

I have recently reorganised my nature journaling supplies; I changed a couple of things, and replaced a couple of battered items. I thought it would be fun to share with you my current set up.

I have moved everything into this handy travel bag by Winsor & Newton, as the bag I was using previously was no longer working for me.

The travel bag comes with some supplies I don’t use, such as a Cotman palette, watercolour pad, and two brushes. This is a great set for someone new to nature journaling.

s1

Here is the bag when opened out. It also has another couple of storage sections on the reverse side. I love all the pockets! So useful.

In the left hand side mesh pocket, I keep the following items:

s2

An old muslin cloth from when the girls were babies. Very useful for wiping my brushes on!

A colour wheel. Something I always intend to use, but never end up doing! Helpful for colour mixing, or perhaps planning colour schemes for watercolour paintings.

Ruler. Useful for measuring specimens out in the field.

Birthday candle. Perfect for keeping white highlights in your watercolour, due to its resist properties.

Clips. Fantastic for keeping journal pages open on a windy day.

Penknife For cutting wee plant specimens.

Water brushes Great for painting on the go; the barrels are filled with water, which you squeeze to gradually release a supply of water into your paint, so no need to carry an additional water supply.

Kneadable Eraser. These are smashing! You can shape them to the smallest point to erase tiny details, or add highlights to a pencil sketch. Knead after use to avoid build up of colour from the pencil.

s4

The other side of the travel bag includes a water bottle and a genius, foldable pouch for pouring your water into (add a small, clean rock to the bottom when painting in the field, to avoid your water blowing away on windy days!)

Spray bottle I use an old, travel sized facial mist bottle, refilled with water to spray my watercolour paints to get them nice and juicy before I begin to paint.

s5

My current pens and pencils:

2B pencil that came with the travel case.

4B pencil 

Micron permanent ink pen

Pentel brush pen I have to say that I never actually use this. One day!

Platinum carbon ink pen My favourite pen! Oh, how I love this one! Reliable, waterproof, deep black in. Never lets me down.

White gel pen Perfect for adding small highlights to finished watercolours.

Derwent watercolour pencil in blue grey I have added a nice new one to my kit. Smashing for sketching, then painting over with watercolour. Gives a lovely effect.

Cross mechanical pencil (not quite the same as mine, but similar) Fantastic, as it never needs sharpening!

s3

Water colour palette. Mine is a Schmincke, to which I have added Winsor Newton & Daniel Smith paints. Look at the entry in my journal below for my current colours.

s8

Da Vinci 1503 size 8 watercolour brush A beautiful brush, with an exquisite point. Pretty much the only brush I use in my journal.

Versatil round pointed brush I rarely use it, but it does come in handy sometimes for fine details. A smashing, well-priced, synthetic brush.

s6

Field guide I am carrying this New Holland pond guide at the moment, as our two favourite places for nature study have ponds. Great little guide book.

Month -by-month Stargazing 2016 A concise guide to the northern-hemisphere night sky.

Nature Journal I currently have three journals on the go, so choose whichever is appropriate, and tuck it into my travel case as I head out of the door.

s7

My newest journal, a Stallman & Birn Alpha Sketchbook which I am using to practice new techniques and such. A smashing journal, the paper is wonderful; it takes a wet wash beautifully & has a nice tooth, but still works well when writing in ink. You can see here my current palette set up.

J3

My regular nature journal.  I am currently using the Leuchtturm 1917 sketchbook in medium (A5). The paper is a decent weight, and very smooth, however the paper is really too thin for watercolour, so I have found that once I have completed my painting & it is dry, I miss a page, & glue them together, so I get a double weight of paper.But I like the journal a lot, and am enjoying using it.

cal3

My Calendar of Firsts. A Moleskine diary, the paper is, as always with the Moleskines (except the specialist water colour book) not great for watercolour, but I am used to how the paper takes the wetness of the media & this book is doing exactly what I need it to do; record what is happening in nature in simple sketches. The fact that it is such a ‘casual’ book makes it easier for me to sketch in hasty sketches; I don’t feel bad about messing up!

Please share what is working for you, either in the comments below, or on the Exploring Nature With Children FaceBook page.

Happy exploring!

 

 

Calendar Of Firsts 7 ~ 13 March 2016

 

cal of firsts

c

My Calendar of Firsts this week:

  • A Magpie collecting twigs for his nest
  • Broken twigs all over the park lawns due to high winds
  • Frozen puddles
  • A squirrel sitting on a small tree stump, eating nuts

My ‘colours’ for the week, along the top left hand page, are the moody greys of the skies, with flashes of yellow and purple from the flowers in the park.

Charlotte Mason And Picture Study

d1.jpg

In our home we regularly study great works of art. Picture study is an integral part of a Charlotte Mason style education; it opens the child’s heart to the beautiful ideas that artists over the ages have expressed.

“Every child should leave school with at least a couple of hundred pictures by great masters hanging permanently in the halls of his imagination.” Charlotte Mason

The idea is to look at the picture very closely, and for the child to give a narration .The following questions may be helpful discussion-starters:

• What is happening in this picture?

• How is this picture different from real life?

• How would you describe the colours?

• How do you think the artist felt when they painted this picture?

This morning Rose and I had been studying a beautiful work of art by Albrecht Durer:

Wing Of A Blue Roller

After discussing the painting, we found this video on YouTube, which shows of the amazing colours of this beautiful bird.

 

In the afternoon we spent a few moments seeing which colours from the painting we could recreate with our own watercolours. I printed out a photograph of the painting for us to add to our journals for reference at a later date. Our time was short but sweet, however as the lure of the sunshine was too great for Rose, who declared she needed to go looking for frogs in the garden!

d3.jpg

 

d2

Happy exploring!

 

 

Vernal Equinox Week ~ Exploring Nature With Chilren

f11

This is Vernal Equinox week in Exploring Nature with Children, Sunday being the actual day. In anticipation of this event, the frogs are coming out of hiding in the garden.

Rose found this wee fellow this morning, and we spent time observing him, and then sketched him in our journals.

f1

We added venn diagrams to show information about frogs and toads.

fr1.jpg

fr2.jpg

Afterward, we watched this short video about Glass frogs, that were discovered this time last year.

Such a gloriously sun-shiny day! Spring is almost here!

 

 

 

Nesting Birds ~ Exploring Nature With Children

cropped-cover-photo-1.png

We are technically a week behind with Exploring Nature With Children, our focus this week having been our local bird life.  Rose did find two rather lovely frogs in our pond this morning, so she spent time observing them, whilst I worked with the big girls on their IGCSE Biology prep.

We had a smashing nature walk earlier in the week; there is so much going on in the natural world. Unfortunately, whilst I had taken my camera along, the battery was dead, and I had managed to run over my own mobile phone with my car, so no camera there, either!

Rose & I set off bright and early; around 7am. On entering the park, we noticed lots of twigs all over the lawns, caused by the high winds in our locality earlier in the week.

Rose was soon greeted by her pigeon friends, hungry for their food, with the ducks and geese waddling along after.

The puddles of water left behind after the huge amounts of rainfall we have also experienced were frozen on this chilly, beautiful morning.

Some of the Mallards, and some of the Canada geese were busy pairing up with a mate. The pigeons were too hungry to bother with all that! Rose was covered in pigeons as usual, and she spotted one of the squirrels perched on a tree stump eating a nut. “He looks like he is doing yoga!”

We spotted both a Magpie & a Crow breaking twigs from trees to build their nests. They were so fascinating to watch!

We came home and worked in our respective journals.

Rose recorded the Magpie.

n2

I sketched the gorgeous Mallard we saw the previous week.

b10

nj1.jpg

Happy exploring!

Calendar Of Firsts 29 ~ 6 March 2016

cal of firsts

c1

My Calendar of Firsts this week:

  • Geese honking overhead.
  • Swathes of Daffodils in the park.
  • Snow! It came down hard, but was short-lived.
  • Rosie’s grasshopper Jerry died on Sunday.

My ‘colours’ for the week, along the top left hand page, are the moody greys and pinks of the skies this week.