Friday, September 4, 2015
Friday, August 14, 2015
Leather Tooled Belt
Thursday, July 23, 2015
Sunday, December 7, 2014
Rowing Scull Seat Restoration
Sunday, June 29, 2014
Ram
Saturday, March 1, 2014
Trout on Fabric
Monday, February 10, 2014
Convict Lake Rainbow Trout
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Spanish Floral Six-Gun Holster
Sunday, October 6, 2013
Delta Queen Riverboat
Saturday, August 17, 2013
Native American Indian Mask
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Monday, July 29, 2013
Chase Chambers--Murrieta Mesa Quarterback
Friday, July 26, 2013
Wine Bottle Cross #2
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| This is the second of my Wine Bottle Crosses. It is another "recycled art" project. My friend Larry helped with the wine bottles--and I thank him for his effort! My daughter, Caroline told me how to "stress" wood, so I tried that finish on it. I tried to show what it looks like with the light coming through it from behind. You can't see it in this photo, but there are five places on the cross with red paint. These are supposed to represent the wounds of Christ. |
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Rock Creek Rainbow
| "Rock Creek Rainbow" is a watercolor and ink painting I did for Mark, a friend who introduced me to Eastern Sierra fishing. Mark is a great fisherman and could probably catch fish in the gutter in front of your house. For the past few years, as soon as school gets out, we go up to Convict Lake and fish there and the surrounding lakes. One of the most beautiful is Rock Creek Lake. |
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Our Lady of Guadalupe
Friday, January 25, 2013
Wine Bottle Cross
| I have always wanted to do an art project with recycled materials. My son-in-law, Daniel, helped me perfect the technique of cutting the bottoms off wine bottles. He used the top part of the bottle to put over candles. I used the bottom part to make this cross. I was amazed that wine bottles have so many different diameters. I built a base for it so it could stand freely. I like the way the light shines through it when placed in front of a window. I gave this cross to my parents. They put it in front of a window in their dining room. The symbolism is that Christ's first public miracle was changing the water into wine and his last was that he rose from the dead after his crucifixtion on the cross. |
Monday, December 3, 2012
Mission San Luis Rey, Oceanside, California
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| This is a watercolor of the Mission San Luis Rey in Oceanside, California. The painting is supposed to be what the Mission looked like in the early part of the 1900's. That is why it looks a little different than it does today. It is now restored and is a beautiful place to visit. Click on the picture to see a larger version of it. |
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| I donated this painting to Mission San Luis Rey. They said that they would keep it in their Mission art collection and it would hang in their office. |
Monday, June 25, 2012
Green Bay's Lombardi
| This is a recent painting that I completed. It is special to me on several levels. First, as someone interested in football, Vince Lombardi is considered one of the all-time great football coaches in the NFL and one of my favorites. Second, I started doing this one as a pencil sketch, but on June 20, 2012, Leroy Neiman passed away. I have always admired his work and have mentioned him in the comments of another football painting on this blog. In a tribute to Neiman, I tried to do this one in my interpretation of Neiman's style. The title of this one is not "Green Bay's Lombardi". The title is, "Green Bay's LOMBARDI!" in the voice of NFL Films, John Facenda. He was the narrator on all the NFL Highlight films that I used to watch growing up. Many fans called him "The Voice of God" (My friend, Frank Gruber knows exactly what I am talking about.) So enjoy--"Green Bay's LOMBARDI!" |
Friday, June 8, 2012
"My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys"
Monday, May 28, 2012
"Louisiana Innocence"
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| This is a recent watercolor painting of a subject that I have wanted to do for quite some time. I wasn't able to find a photo to use as a model until Ed Jones, a friend of mine, sent me an email and one of the photos in it was just what I needed. My wife helped explain the details of the dress to me. It is supposed to show a little girl enjoying her new dress on a spring day along the Gulf Coast. |
Thursday, April 26, 2012
"Cowboy"
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| This watercolor was inspired by an oil painting by Dean St. Clair. This kind of reminds me of some of the artwork I would see at Knott's Berry Farm when I was a kid. I'm not happy about how it came out. The mountains in the background are too sharp and crisp. The wagon and the cowboy are too soft. It should have been the other way around. |
Sunday, April 22, 2012
"Whatsoever You Do..."
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| "Whatsoever You Do" is inspired by the Gospel quote in Mark 25:40. Each dot (and I don't know how many there are, I just know there are many) represents a child that goes hungry each day. Please support charities that fight hunger, both in our communities (like local food banks), the United States, and around the world (like UNICEF). Thank you. |
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Japanese Maple Bonsai Tree
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| This is a Japanese Maple that I "grew down" from a much taller tree. I think they are so beautiful with their delicate red leaves. This picture was taken in early spring. I have always had an interest in Bonsai Trees. It started with my high school football coach, Bruce Pickford. As tough and hard-nosed as he was, it amazed me that he was a Bonsai Master and had many beautiful specimens. He was also an officer in the Orange County Bonsai Society. He passed away a few years ago. Every time I work on my Bonsai trees, I think of him. |
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Derringer Holster
Wooden Flutes
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Moses
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| This is a charcoal crayon and ink sketch of Michelangelo's Moses. I did this for my Father as a companion piece to the Pieta, which I did for my Mother. It is rather large and hangs on a wall in their dining room. I don't know why I made it so large--it is the largest drawing or painting I have done. |
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
St. Emydius Catholic School
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A few years ago, my wife got me a Ted Crane print of Humboldt State University as a gift. Thinking I would do the same for her, I asked her if she wanted one from Cal State Fullerton where she graduated, or one from the several other colleges she attended. She said her favorite school was St. Emydius which she attended in Lynwood, California for 1st grade thru 8th grade. This is where she met her life-long friends, Rosalie and Barbara. I didn't think Ted Crane had done a print of St. Emydius, so one Sunday morning, I made up a story about going somewhere and drove up to Lynwood to take some photos of the school. I figured I'd try to do something for my wife, but if it didn't turn out, I could frame one of the photos. The school and church are both still very nice--I can see why this was my wife's favorite school. Anyway, I did a watercolor of the front of the school and my wife loves it. It is on the wall next to my print of Humboldt State.
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Indian Pueblo
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This watercolor was interesting to do, but didn't quite capture the feeling that I had hoped for. However, I like the way the colors work together. My wife's good friend Kathy liked the painting, so she gave it to her. I told Kathy that if people asked her where she got it, she was to say that she got it from her good friend who was, "sleeping with the artist." It sounds very salacious, but it is just my wife sleeping with me, her husband. It does make the picture seem more interesting though!
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Sunday, August 7, 2011
Blanket and Baskets
Following my interest in Native American Indians, I built a primitive loom and wove the blanket seen here. It was difficult getting the simple red stripe lines in it. I have no idea how the Indians wove the intricate and interesting patterns and designs into their blankets. I took a one-day extension class through University of California, Riverside on Indian Basket Weaving. I made the small basket on the lower right in that class. It is a two-sided (inside and outside) loop basket. We dipped the strands in water to make them pliable--thus fulfilling my Father's teasing about the classes I took in college. I was actually doing "underwater basket weaving". The basket on the top left is a rope-coil basket that my cousin, Judy Marquez, who is a high school art teacher, explained how to do. She is a great teacher because I think it came out pretty good. It is so tightly woven that it might hold water, but I have never tried it.
Saturday, August 6, 2011
Madonna Shrine
Major Powell's 1873 Expedition through the Canyons of the Colorado River
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You have to look closely for the boats on the river in the lower left corner of the picture (click on picture to enlarge). That gives you some idea of the scale of the canyons. Interesting note: I did this watercolor from a watercolor by an artist who was actually on the expedition, documenting what they saw. I wondered how the artist caught up with the rest of the party as he painted them floating away from him. Maybe they had a third boat. |
Humboldt Coast
Afternoon Lake Fog
Colt Revolver
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I did this sketch for a friend who I've gone hunting with a number of times. He is very knowledgeable about all kinds of firearms as well as football. His wife is Bridget, who does the Nickel & Dime Ranch blog. The difficult part of this sketch was the lettering on the barrel of the gun. I had to really plan to get it to come out the way I wanted it.
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Sitting Bull
Willie Nelson - "Red Headed Stranger"
Miami Dolphins Football Player - Larry Czonka
Cozy Cottage
Rams Football Player
Moss Point, Laguna Beach, California
UCLA Football Player - Matt Stevens
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Matt Stevens played quarterback for me when I was the Head Sophomore Coach at Fountain Valley H. S. He was a star player on the varsity at FVHS, then went on to be the starting quarterback at UCLA and took them to the 1986 Rose Bowl against the University of Iowa. I gave the original to him as a gift. |
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