Andre Jute’s
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(group member since Apr 16, 2011)
Andre Jute’s
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Compare sonnettomaniac n.
. . . .
Great enthusiasm for sonnets; extreme fondness for the sonnet as a literary form.."
To me it sounds like someone who falls asleep and snores at poetry readings. Sorry about that. Not very poetic, I know.

*For our American friends, a queue is British English for a waiting line, not a bullfighter's badge of office.

All the same, not wanting to offer John an explanation that starts, "My cat and I..." in the tones of Her Majesty's Yule tidings from herself and her Corgis, I was glad when he published another inspiring photograph, albeit from another hemisphere and a different continent.
John's first photo and my discarded painting are of the Karroo at Prince Albert in South Africa, the Karroo being a semi-desert area though John's friends live in a charming green spot on a river. John's second photograph is of the Bay of Quinte in Ontario, Canada, an entirely different milieu. Not that either painting is representational, because I can't be bothered with those when a superior camera fits in your shirt pocket and adds only a few grammes to your cycling paraphernalia.
As you can see, it's the inspiration that counts, with the two images serendipitously influencing the final outcome.

Andre Jute: Early morning mist over Bay of Quinte, watercolour and gouache on grey Ingres paper, A4, 2017
[b]A few technical notes:[/b]
The paper is Fabriano's Tiziano, which has a substantial cotton content but is all the same intended for pastel work. I don't work in pastels often but I like this 160gsm paper for binding sketchbooks because you get in quite a few pages without making the book too clumsily thick and heavy, and it lends itself to watercolor work by flattening well after moderate buckling. Water media in some form or another accounts for possibly three-quarters of what I do in my custom sketchbooks so paper which buckles permanently under water is papyrus non grata.

Though I generally don't do a pencil sketch before I start work with the brush, in this instance the division of the area into large blocks was so critical to the outcome that I made a rough pencil division. The 5.6mm clutch pencil I used belongs to a small pen and pencil kit carried with A6 (say 6x4in) sketchbooks; it is a Koh-i-Noor 5311, a recreation of a vintage clutch pencil. It's a favorite of mine though my brush cases each includes a perfectly good 2mm clutch pencil.

The palette chosen consisted of the watercolors Cerulean Blue PB35, Ultramarine Finest PB29, Perylene Green PBk31, Dioxazine Violet PV23, the latter two for the mixes to a greenish near-black since I don't normally have a "real" black in most of my go-to paint boxes, plus the gouache Permanent White PW6, all from Winsor & Newton except the Ultramarine which is from Schmincke. You can see the sort of palette that I choose from in the photo of the box of paints after I'd already taken out the gouache white, as that one was obvious.

Here the gouache white lies on the brush case for this size of watercolor with the first obvious brush already taken out of the elastic. Generally speaking, I usually manage to complete any A4/Imperial Octavo (11x7.5in) painting or smaller with one to infrequently as many as five brushes selected only from this case.

The brushes selected consisted of a cheap supermarket synthetic for mixing paints and scrubbing on the surface if required (not required, in this instance done by local blotting with a folded sheet of kitchen roll, included on far right of photo, and overpainting by gouache, but you never know when you need a scrubber), a 5/8" Handover Kolinsky Sable Oval Wash brush with a keen edge with which I did the main work, including some dry brushing that may appear to have been done by the specialty brushes mentioned next, a Red Sable Fan branded by Jackson's, my London art materials pushers, and*for painting the grasses and leaves a Taklon Filbert Comb from Royal's Soft Grip line, from which line of several series I have quite a few brushes in various sizes and shapes.

rheology |rɪˈɒlədʒi|
noun [ mass noun ]
the branch of physics that deals with the deformation and flow of matter, especially the non-Newtonian flow of liquids and the plastic flow of solids.
DERIVATIVES
rheological |-əˈlɒdʒɪk(ə)l| adjective,
rheologist noun
ORIGIN 1920s: from Greek rheos ‘stream’ + -logy.
Mar 10, 2017 04:04PM

nimble-chops, n.
. . . .
A talkative person. Used chiefly as a form of address.
. . . .
1763 I. Bickerstaff Love in Village ii. ii. 30 Who bid you speak Mrs. Nim..."
Nimble Chops sounds like a fat little girl gymnast, surprisingly good and fast... Just saying.


Click on the card to be taken to my blog, where you can see my latest books. Complimentary copies available from info at coolmainpress dot com.

. . . .
A mythical animal depicted as a hare."
A rabbit-sized miniature goat, good for single-serving roasts!

One who contemplates or meditates upon one's navel; one who engages in omphaloscopy.
Adjective
omphaloskeptic (not comparable)
Likely to, prone to, or engaged in contemplating or meditating upon one's navel.
Usage notes
Both the noun and adjective are often used in a derogative fashion, to indicate that a person is not in tune with reality.
Comment
I'll say!

I think the intention is to reduce the number of positions overall, rather than just job substitution, which has hidden traps.

Where's the evidence of this?

2 million are GS positions, the rest are contract positions.
That's gonna help the economy...NOT."
It'll help your taxes, and it will help create jobs in the private sector. A job in the government sector is very rarely a productive job outside of frontline teachers and medical staff (in properly socialized national health systems, not the mess Obama is leaving behind); most are merely positions to interfere in the work of productive members of society. Government jobs are a cost on society, very often an end in themselves, without a corresponding benefit, simply a huge pork barrel.

The Force is neutral. It is what you do with it. Bannon is at least more interesting than the standard apparatchiks.

Kench."
Yup. Confucius say: "Survivors interpret Chinese wisdom as 'someone else's interesting times.'"

An excellent word for those who write period pieces.

JUST A REMINDER:
ROBUST IS A SPACE WHERE YOU CAN SAY WHATEVER YOU LIKE. IT IS NOT A SAFE SPACE. THERE ARE MODERATORS HERE ONLY BECAUSE GOODREADS DEMANDS THE NAME OF WHOEVER IS RESPONSIBLE. WE DON'T MODERATE ANYTHING, WE DON'T PROTECT ANYONE, WE DON'T ENFORCE ANY VIEWPOINT. SAY WHATEVER YOU PLEASE. IT'S ALL GRIST TO THE MILL. OF COURSE, THE REVERSE ALSO APPLIES. IF YOU SAY SOMETHING STUPID AND GET SAVAGED FOR IT, YOU'RE ON YOUR OWN. YOU CAN SAY WHATEVER YOU WANT, BUT YOU MUST OWN WHAT YOU SAY. CAN'T SAY FAIRER.