Tag: river

  • Sells Mill: Late Winter Light

    Sells Mill: Late Winter Light

    here is a brief window at the end of winter where the landscape feels entirely transitional. The trees are still bare, but the light changes, catching the water and the earth differently. This study of Sells Mill was an attempt to record that specific, shifting energy.

    Technically, Iโ€™ve continued to explore the boundaries of my mixed-media approach on cold press paper. I used a combination of Faber-Castell Pitt pens, acrylic pens, and Sakura pens to build the scene layer by layer.

    The process is a deliberate balance between structured architecture and organic chaos. I used the fine precision of the Sakura and Pitt pens to draft the rigid lines of the historic mill and the dense, tangled thicket of branches in the foreground. For the sky, the water, and the stone faรงade, I leaned heavily into a pointillist technique. By applying thousands of individual dots of ink and acrylic, the surface begins to vibrateโ€”allowing the cool blues of the late winter sky and the rushing stream to catch a sense of movement.

    The paperโ€™s tooth works as a quiet partner here, holding the pigments exactly where they land but allowing the sheer volume of marks to optically blend. Itโ€™s a slow, rhythmic way to work that captures the texture of a place without forcing it into a sterile, perfect drawing.


  • Helen Bridge

    Helen Bridge

    This piece focuses on the bridge crossing the Chattahoochee. I was drawn to the composition hereโ€”how the gnarled tree on the left acts as a natural frame for the stone arch and the Germanic architecture beyond. Itโ€™s a study in the intersection of nature and the unique character of this Alpine village.

    Technical Details:

    • 6×9 140lb cold press
    • Sakura Pigma pens
    • Acrylic swipe

  • Mountain Stream and Masonry

    Mountain Stream and Masonry

    There is a quiet permanence in a stone bridge that I find endlessly compelling, especially against the backdrop of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Unlike the shifting water beneath it or the skeletal branches of the trees above, the bridge stands as a testament to craftsmanship and time.

    In this piece, I wanted to capture that contrast. The challenge was in the sheer variety of textures found in this mountain landscape: the jagged, individual faces of the foreground rocks, the weathered masonry of the bridge, and the delicate, almost ethereal network of the winter trees.

    Working in this monochromatic style allows me to focus entirely on the โ€œarchitectureโ€ of the sceneโ€”how light hits a rough surface versus how it filters through a dense thicket. Itโ€™s a meditative process of building layers to find the true weight of the place.

    Technical Details:

    • Mitsubishi graphite pencils
    • 9ร—12 140lb cold press

  • Cedar Creek โ€“ Broken Worn Stones

    Cedar Creek โ€“ Broken Worn Stones

    Date taken: 08/08/2012
    Camera: Nikon D5000
    ISO 400 | F/5.6 | 1/160 -.3
    Nikon 18 – 55mm | 18mm Focal length