Today, there was no Pinterest-cruising and no reference book cheating, just straight to the studio to fiddle around with ideas for the painting of Great Grandfather Ross. Once again, the shadows cast from the window to the back of the painting provided inspiration (although the lines are all in a different place), so I quickly traced them before the sun moved much.
Today's studio lesson was all about printer abuse and neglect. A couple of years ago, I spent too much money on a fancy Epson Stylus R1900 printer because an artist and author I admire uses one for printing her art. Hoping one day I would also generate art worthy of printing, I bought the same printer. It's very rude and overly sensitive. Apparently, one must use up the expensive ink faster than I do, or it just dries up and the printer thinks it needs to be fed. I don't think I've used this printer in two years, in part because it was packed up when we were moving and then I just didn't get around to making much art. Today I fired up the beast at which time it told me that I needed to replace four cartridges. Ugh. At least I had those four. Then I went online and bought a replacement for each colour since they're nearly impossible to find in an actual brick-and-mortar store. At least it seems to be happy and working well. I prefer a simple printer that remembers settings and does the same old thing every time unless you tell it something different. This one seems fussier, assuming you are printing something large and fancy and glossy at all times. I'm pretty tech savvy and have read the manual and clearly need to spend more time finding it's secret tricks.
With my husband out of town and nothing but time on my hands, I need to remember that I can work after dark. For some reason, I always feel that I have to stop working as the sun is setting. It must be my mindset from the days of having kids at home to feed and knowing I'd get the, "I'm on my way and will be home in an hour" call from my husband. It's hard to get used to all of this free time. Now I have to make good use of it.