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My practice: go outside and draw something I see every day. I’m not being purist; if it’s pouring, or I wait too long and it’s dark, I draw inside, and in a pinch, from a photo I’ve taken. It has been a very rainy start to the year, and once I sat in our enclosed entryway while the rain fell on the poppy leaves just outside.

Fern in our yard
Palm, Balboa Park, SF
Pine cone
Oceano dunes (from photo taken last summer)
California poppy leaves
I hungrily watched the golden-hour light on the trees along Market Street as I was donating blood, hoping I would be done before the sun went behind the buildings so I could draw that light and the shadows it cast. But by the time I was released to the canteen, the light was flat, and as I ate my snack, I drew this tree’s outline instead.
Downtown building, SF, from a photo taken last summer
Lichens on our tree
Leaves of an unidentified shrub in Opera Square, Van Ness Ave,  SF
Pine cone
Blueberries, from photo taken in our yard
Leaf of Chilapa x tashkentensis
Luna

After the first day, I have drawn with a gel ink pen. I might return to graphite pencil at some point, but right now, given my tendency to get fiddly, I’m enjoying the constraint of having only black to work with. These are all 5″×8″ or smaller, the size of my current sketchbook.

Several years ago, inspired by my friend Janet and her daily butterfly practice, I drew a leaf of a California tree every day for the entire year, mostly from photos. I really enjoyed it and stuck with it, which is rare for me for a daily practice. So I am doing something similar this year, combining two spiritual practices: I will go outside and draw something I see there.

I’m not going to be a purist about it; if it’s pouring rain, I’ll draw indoors (ideally, drawing something outside from indoors). I thought I might have to do that today, but the rain let up and I went out to our back garden and drew a fern there. I’ll post my drawings now and then with the tag, “Drawing outside every day.”

Weeds, mostly dandelions, in the cracks between concrete paving slabs on a terrace in Tuntorp, Brastad, Lysekil Municipality, Sweden. Photo by W.carter, CC BY-SA 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Getting outdoors and making art are also both good for my mental health, even if I only do them for a few minutes. I’m prone to anxiety, and various studies show that spending time outdoors and drawing both reduce anxiety–certainly for people like me, who enjoy them. I don’t need to go to a big natural expanse, though I am very much looking forward to pulling over now and then on my commute through Marin and Sonoma Counties and drawing some of the more scenic stretches. Even spending attentive time with a weed growing through a crack in the sidewalk is an experience of awe and beauty.

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