Ink and watercolor in Moleskine large watercolor sketchbook
Click here for enlarged view
This is the Patterson House at Ardenwood Farms, an historical, working Victorian farm in Fremont, California. They have a blacksmith shop and people dressed in period costumes using the tools of the time to cook, churn butter, wash clothes, and other chores; a horse drawn train, farm animals and historic farm equipment. We’d planned to go sketch all the sights and activities on Thursday but when I phoned Ardenwood they told me there would be 250 campers there that day and the next. She recommended we come today when there were no groups scheduled so we did. Unfortunately she didn’t mention that everything was shut down on Wednesdays–no docents in Victorian clothes, no activities, nothing. The only thing to see was the house and a few farm animals.
Michelle and I wandered the property, noting where things would have been happening if they weren’t closed. We decided to draw the house, which was very enjoyable. I drew directly in ink and then added watercolor. Then we visited the barnyard animals, watched the funny goats, some mating bunnies, and drew this solitary bunny:
Ink in moleskine sketchbook
Tonight I went by myself to Ashkenaz Music Center since nobody else wanted to join me to hear the most amazing musical group, The Fishtank Ensemble. They are a unique and extremely talented group of musicians who play a combination of Gypsy, Eastern European, Klezmer and Jazz with some unusual instruments, including a Japanese Shamisen, a musical saw, several different violins and other string instruments, accordian, standup base and a female singer with an extraordinary operatic voice. It was fantastic! I’d heard them live on the radio on an NPR program a few weeks ago and had been trying to find their CD locally and was amazed when I drove by Ashkenaz and saw their name on the marquee for tonight. What a treat! And they had their CD for sale which I bought.
I think I’m finally getting into this vacation thing–going to a musical concert on a “school night” is great!
P.S. Does the picture of the house look overly contrasty or washed out on your monitor? I’m still having trouble getting my monitor to properly display the intensity of the color and contrast. I’m afraid I’m toning down the image in Photoshop to make it look right on my monitor which tends to mamke everything look very strongly colored. So then it looks good on my monitor but I have no idea how it looks on anyone else’s.


18 replies on “Patterson House at Ardenwood Farm”
i really like the colours and detail on that building. tres bien fait.
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Jana: I smiled when I read about the anxiety you get about “hoarding every minute” of vacation. I reall do that, too. (I even do that on Saturday morning, about weekends!) I’m glad you’re relaxing and envious of your sketching adventures. The tones on the house look great on my monitor – about how I would want them if they were actually in my sketchbook.
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Beautiful work, Jana! I love the detail on the Victorian building, and you rabbit looks like it ws done by Dürer. The house also looks perfect on my monitor.
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WOWWOW!! What a fabulous house! The detailing, the colors — and the wee bunny!! GRAND, Jana!! GREAT WORK! Vacation is definitely agreeing with you!
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I love your painting! Great colors and details.
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Looks wonderful on my laptop. These are my absolute favorite sketches – great Victorian architecture.
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the house is terrific, beautifully done in watercolors, love your colors
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Your Victorian looks exactly how I remember them to be while living in the bay area. I do so miss the daily eye candy. Your rabbit drawing is quite lovely. I am glad that you are enjoying some time away.
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I LOVE this house! What a gorgeous loose drawing and such free brush strokes – i wish I could learn to loosen up like that!
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great stuff! i love all the detail in the house drawing and how you captured the light and shades with the colors. and the rabbit is brilliant, he’s so alert!
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Hi, Jana. The colours seem realistic on my monitor;about what I’d coose for old stonework and summer-green leaves. But when I had to use the library computers I did notice that everything was much brighter.They must set their contrasts pretty high!
Wish I could have heard that concert!
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I love your drawing of the house. It doesn’t look washed out to me. Darn this tech. stuff. It can really drive a sane person nuts can’t it. I was doing fine with all my tech. stuff when today out of the blue my everyday printer is having a black streak on the BACK of what ever I print. Not good if it’s a card … that turns out to be the inside of the card…….. grrrrr. Enough of me…
I’m impressed with how much detail you’ve captured in the Victorian house … And done in pen … awesome. Lovely watercolor.
I agree, the bunny looks very … Dürer .
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It looks rather like cadmium yellow and paynes grey to me – too contrasty? No not a bit, those colours look glorious to me. And what a fabulous house – I want to move in! A gorgeous painting.
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This is gorgeous — and the colors are fine on my monitor. Isn’t it funny how monitors can make such a difference??
🙂
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Looks fine on my monitor, Jana. Very Victorian with realistic leaf color, and the only very bright places are the sunlit touches– which is as should be.
I’m so glad that the vacation really is behaving like a fullfilling vacation for you– also as it should be, but sometimes isn’t 🙂
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Wow your drawing of the house is just so amazing. So amazing.
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LOVE the house drawing! Great colour on my screen and the detail is fabulous, Jana ~
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I love Patterson House, your depiction of it.
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