Posts Tagged ‘Chickens’

Two New Floorcloths Are Ready

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

These two floorcloths are my newest and they are also smaller than the other examples shown in my blog. They are both painted on primed floorcloth canvas and I used acrylics as my painting medium.

The first one I titled “Fish and Chicks”. I got the inspiration from my own chickens that like to stand in a small plastic children’s pool in the yard near their coop. I think they look so comical standing in the water. The second floor cloth is called “Toucans”. I think toucans are fascinating to look at not just because of their wonderfully colorful bills, but also because of the size of the bill in relation to the body.

These floorcloths are available at La Maison d’Elodie, Inc., in Pensacola, Florida or visit the antiques, wine and art link under shopping.

Fish and Chicks

Fish and Chicks

Toucans

Toucans

Drawing Chickens In Bathing Suits

Friday, April 10th, 2009
Hens in swim suits

Hens in swim suits

When our chickens went through their molting period they looked so pitiful. Pompy’s tail all but disappeared except for one long curved feather. Mater, our Plymouth Rock hen, had a bare spot on her back where Pompy had pulled some feathers out. When it rained the looked even worse.

Watching them walk around in their semi-featherless state made me wonder what they would look like in clothing. I began to picture them in all sorts of attire and accessories.

We have a small plastic water filled child’s pool that the chickens like to stand in. The water is usually about 3″ deep. They look so comical standing in the water with water hyacinths surrounding them. The site of them standing in the water had me wondering what they would look like at the beach?

Draw the chickens according to previous instructions and then add bathing suits, umbrellas and hats.

Drawing Chickens In A Gumball Tree

Friday, January 9th, 2009
Snowflake is a young rooster

Snowflake is a young rooster

Philly in the tree

Philly in the tree

One of our hens, Little Black, loves to sit on the nest and has hatched three roosters and two hens for us. She, the eggs and chicks all stay out in the movable coop. That is the coop I showed you how to draw in the last post. Then when the chicks are old enough everybody moves to the big coop. Well, two of the young roosters and one hen decided they prefer to sleep on limbs up in the trees. During the summer they roosted in the cypress tree in the backyard. Then when winter came the leaves fell off of the trees leaving the limbs bare. The cypress tree is on the edge of the yard close to a field and woods where deer, opossum and other critters wander. So, the three moved to a gum ball tree off of the patio and closer to the big chicken coop.

The big chicken coop

The big chicken coop

I have taken pictures of the coop from the front. Through the door you can see a white shelf that the older hens use as a nesting box. Try to draw a picture of the coop at one end of your paper and at the other end of the paper draw a tree with a lot of limbs radiating out from the trunk. On the limbs draw the hen and roosters.

When you begin drawing think about the shapes you will use. For example the coop is very geometric consisting of a square and several rectangles. The trees on the other hand are very curvy. Also notice that the limbs get smaller the farther away from the tree trunk they grow. And when you draw the poultry the shapes are mostly ovals. The view of the hen and roosters in my photos are from below. I was standing under the tree aiming the camera up at the hen and roosters. Silly Philly is the orange colored one and he is a Polish Buff. The larger white one we call snowflake and he is also a rooster. The smallest white one is a hen and when old enough she will lay eggs. Her name is Domino because she has a couple of black spots on her back. When you draw the picture of the coop and trees together draw your trees as if you were standing next to them and not under them. If you would prefer to do just the chicken in the tree that is fine too. The most important thing is to have fun.chicksntreeclosupchickupcloseonlimbchicsindrwntree

How To Draw A Rooster

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008
Pompy casts a shadow

Pompy casts a shadow

I would like to introduce you to Pompy our rooster. Pompy is a Polish Buff rooster and is about a year old. Instead of having a big red comb on top of his head he has long skinny feathers that hang down over his eyes.

Pompy has what are called spurs at his ankles that are used for defense. Look also at the color of his legs. They are a silver or gray which is different from Red and Mater’s yellow legs. Now I want you to look at Pompy’s body feathers and notice how the direction in which the feathers grow changes. On the neck they grow down and the feathers on his body grown down and toward the tail. Look at the photo and look at Pompy’s tail feathers. They are longer and much more fancy than the hen’s tail feathers. Notice how some of the feathers start at the back of the body and curve into an arch while others point to the sky.

In the photo observe or look at how Pompy has one foot raised and his head is even with his back. This is how he looks when he is walking along looking for food. Also, notice that one foot is raised.

Before you start the drawing activity take one more look at the photo, but this time look at the ground around Pompy. I too this photo at about 10 o’clock in the morning before the sun was high in the sky. Do you see his shadow on the ground? Pompy’s shadow is in an area of the photo called the foreground and that just means the shadow is on our, the viewer, side of Pompy. Everything behind Pompy is the background. The same idea works in drawing. So, this drawing activity will include Pompy’s shadow.

Steps to drawing Pompy

Steps to drawing Pompy

Okay, the first step is to draw the egg shape for the body. At the small pointy end of the body draw a triangle with the flat side slightly overlapping the body and pointing to three o’clock or to the right. Then draw a circle around the tip of the triangle. At the opposite end of the body add the longest tail feather. It looks like an upside down hook. The longest curved feather starts at the top of the back end of the body.

At the back end of the body below the first feather add the letter “V”. One side of the “V” must touch the end of the body. Okay, the next step is to draw two diagonal lines like you would draw for the top of a triangle. Where the tow diagonal lines start must be the same width as the open top of the letter ”V”. By combining those lines together you have created a shape called a diamond.

In the middle of the bottom of the belly add a small triangle that is pointing to the ground. At the tip of the triangle add Pompy’s leg using two diagonal straight lines. To add Pompy’s raised foot draw a short straight line to the right and below that add the letter “W”. You have drawn two of Pompy’s toes. By adding the other tow to the right of the “W” you will draw the raised foot.

Now to me the fun part of drawing is adding some details. Feathers can be drawn using curved and straight lines. First look at the photo again at Pompy’s head feathers. Then look at the drawing activity sheet. I used the letter “v” again, but this time it is smaller and not in the position it would be for reading. I have flipped and rotated the “v” around a dot on Pompy’s head that will be his eye.  Before you start drawing your small “vs” erase the tip of the triangle that is inside the circle. Put a dot in the circle and then draw the feathers using the letter “v”.  At the bottom of the circle add a “W” for the beak.

The next area you will be adding feathers to the inside of the triangle attached to the body that represents the neck. To draw the feathers is as easy as drawing straight lines from the head to the body. If you look at the drawing activity sheet I used a zig zag line to draw the ends of the feathers that go across and down the body. You can make a zig zag line by repeating the letter “W” over and over. They must touch to create the zig zag line.

On the back of the body by the tail draw a large “W” and “V” touching each other. The points need to point down. This combination will make the big feathers at the back of the body. Now on the tail inside the diamond repeat the last step. Take one more look at the drawing activity sheet. You will see that inside the diamond I drew straight lines that travel from the top of the diamond back to the body. At the top end of the diamond feathers I added the letter “m” two times.

The last step is to draw Pompy’s shadow. The easiest way is to draw a skinny and long oval the same length as Pompy from his head to his tail. You can add the beak at the head end of the shadow, but since a shadow is like a reflection in some ways the beak should point to Pompy’s head. Shadows almost always touch what is casting the shadow so, be sure your oval is touching Pompy’s leg.

There, you have done it again. If you have been following along you should have several drawings of hens and now a rooster. If you are a first time participant, to the drawing activitiy, congratulations on drawing Pompy and his shadow. One thing to remember when you are learning to express yourself through art and these drawing activities is there are no mistakes. Instead there are opportunities for discovery. Until next time, have fun on your adventure of discovery.

How To Draw A Chicken In Different Positions

Monday, August 4th, 2008
Red and Mater

Red and Mater

Red scratching in the yard

Red scratching in the yard

Hello again and I am glad to have you back. In my last blog I showed you how to draw a chicken by first drawing an egg and by combining other different shapes. The finished outline drawing of our Rhode Island Red hen named Red, is her profile. In today’s blog I will show you how to look for and add gesture to your drawing. Gesture in drawing represents the combination of all of the characteristics of your subject whether still or moving. The characteristics are things that make one person or animal recognizable from another. So, by rearranging or slightly changing some of the same shapes I have already used, I can draw Red so that her head is turned and she is looking over her back or she is leaning down to eat.

The best way to understand gesture is to watch your subject. Observe how your subject looks at rest, walking or running. Gesture can be big movement like jumping or running or gesture can be small movement like a turn of the head. When our hens and rooster run their legs spread farther apart and they sometimes will also spread their wings. I know I have said it before, but I think running poultry is quite comical looking. They seem to roll from one side to the other as the weight is shifted from one leg to the other.

When Red is moving around slowly I have noticed that as she picks up one foot the toes droop and then open back up and stiffen as her lifted foot gets closer to being placed back on the ground and her weight shifts to that leg. So, today I have included a couple more photos and a step-by-step drawn example of how to add gesture. Be sure to look at the photos. Look at how the legs are different in the two photos. See how much lower Red’s head is in one photo than the other.

hw2drwchickndifpstn067screnTo begin you should again draw the egg shape for the body. The second step is to add a triangle overlapping the base of the triangle to the egg at the pointy end of the egg. Place the triangle closer to the top of the egg instead of just at the end. If you think of the egg as a clock, place the triangle at about one or two o’clock. The third step is to add the head by drawing a circle around the tip of the triangle. Then add a small triangle to the left side of the circle. The small triangle represents the beak. Now you can add the comb on top of her head and the waddle below the beak, oh, and don’t forget her eye. To add Red’s tail draw a triangle overlapping the bottom of the triangle onto the egg. You can add a wing on the side of her body. To draw legs add a “w” at the belly of her body and then draw the two diagonal lines for each leg. Remember that Red’s legs bend toward her tail, not her head. For her feet you will need to draw one short line for a toe at the back and three lines for toes at the front of the foot. Great job. Red is looking back over her tail.

To draw Red eating again draw the egg for her body. The triangle for her neck should be drawn below the three o’clock position on the pointy end of the egg. Then add the circle around the tip of the triangle. Next add the triangle for the beak so that the triangle is like the letter “V”. By drawing the shapes in this position her head is closer to the ground and her beak is pointing at the ground. Add her features and her eye. Her tail triangle should be drawn pointing more to nine o’clock than up as I drew it in the last demonstration. The “W” on the belly for the legs will be opened up and spread wider across the belly. The leg closest to the tail should be drawn straight, short and down. The leg closest to the front should be drawn down with a very short straight line and at the end of that line draw a diagonal line toward the beak. Now that the legs are drawn you should add the toes and wing.

Take another look at the photos, but this time look at the feathers and how they sit on the body or how the bigger feathers point to the end of the tail. Also look at the area around the chicken. What surrounds her, is she in the grass, is it daytime, are all of the leaves around her the same size and shape? These are all things I will begin adding to the drawings as I continue to draw. I will also begin adding other chickens, the coops and maybe even the cats that hang around. So, until the next time keep your pencil moving.