Saturday, February 21, 2026

The Saturday Morning Post: Use All Of The Tools You Have To Create


I sincerely hope that someone looks at this self-portrait and thinks - shouts - "I could do better than that." You probably can and you will only ever know if you try. 

Come paint with me. I will show you how I did this one. 

It started as an attempt to print out a selfie I had taken with my phone. Everything went wrong, it printed on plain paper instead of photo paper, and a couple of ink cartridges had dried up or gone empty, so the print was washed out, more of an outline than a photo. The essential elements of shape. 

I have never taken the time, to develop what little drawing skill I have. I am likely to say, I can't draw, but I also have never worked at developing what skill I might have. 

With this print, I had a start. Lingering on the floor behind my desk chair is a light-box, it was used as a slide sorter back in the day of 35mm slides. I just couldn't bring myself to toss it when we stopped using slides. I plugged it in, put the attempted print on it, put a piece of paper on top, took a dark fine point marker and created a sketch, an outline of my face. 

My original thought was that this would be a good linocut image. And I have started to explore linocut for the first time in about 45 years, but the image was complex and the wrong size. Hmm what to do? 

I painted a base color on a 12 by 12 canvas. Used tracing paper, basically carbon paper (who knew they still sell that?) and traced over the line drawing transferring the outline onto the canvas. I filled in a few lines here and there, then started painting. 

A few days later my Sweetie Bear looked at it and said, "it's you!" 

Can you do better, probably, a few of you I know for sure that you can. But it is me, trying. Using all of the tools I can to create something I don't know how to do. I am happy with it, it is in the community Arts Show of Portraits and Self-Portraits that opened today. 

17 comments:

  1. Aside from the strange expression in the mouth, I think it is a great effort, and inspired by using blue.

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  2. I love it. It’s got a playful charm.

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  3. This is fun, playful, whimsical, charming and I love the process you used to create your self-portrait.

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  4. I absolutely LOVE your self-portrait! The glasses and hair cowlick just BURST with personality!

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    1. I even got my beady little eyes.

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    2. And they're such cute little beady eyes... 😘

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  5. Actually, you CAN draw and this self-portrait proves it.
    I love it!

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    1. I am adjusting my attitude, I can develop my ability to draw if I work at it.

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  6. I think you did a great job. There is no way I could do better. I was just trying to draw something yesterday and the finished product looked pretty awful. I may try again later today.

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    1. We learn by doing, and doing, and doing.

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  7. Ellen I like it too, it captures the kindness

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  8. Every art journal I do self portrait, and they are all different. Bryan Lewis Saunders is a person who does a daily self portrait. There some interesting you tube video on him.

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