First Fruits

mug

Testing out my new Lamy nexx M fountain pen with the De Atramentis Brown ink, I drew the Habitat mug on the coffee table in front of me, then rounded up the available fruit: this time a lemon and two Royal Gala apples. The apples are British and in these days of tense Brexit negotiations, I’m pleased to say that they are flying the Union Jack the right way up on the label, I’ve just checked.
You can see that there’s no problem with the ink running when I add the watercolour wash. Compared with my first drawing of my feet yesterday, the pen is settling in and producing finer lines, which is what I want.

fruit

Bananas don’t survive long in this house but here are some that I drew at the beginning of the month, resisting the urge to add colour in this case. These were drawn with a Lamy Safari loaded with De Atramentis Document Black ink.

bananas

You might be wondering how my attempts to improve my handwriting are going. Not too impressive so far, but showing slow improvement. These long and short downstrokes improved as I got down the page. In the next exercise, I get to practice real letterforms, ‘hb’ and ‘hp’, as the authors of Improve Your Handwriting point out, these are ‘closely related letters that share the same lines and arches’.

writing exercise

Royal Gala

Royal Gala
king

“Uneasy lies the head that wears the throne.”

W. C. Seller & R. J. Yeatman, 1066 and All That

Another fruity character, this time a Royal Gala, so I’ve gone for an apple-shaped monarch suffering the after-effects of a Tudor banquet. This was as far as I got with him, as he didn’t have the same a-peel (see what I did there?) as Cavendish the banana-inspired butler.

Three Fruits

fruit

This was all the fruit that I could muster for my still life. Unlike the vegetables I’ve been drawing, this time I felt that I had to add colour.

The apple is a British-grown Royal Gala, originally a hybrid bred from Golden Delicious and Gala. According to Wikipedia, ‘it now accounts for about 20% of the total volume of the commercial production of eating apples in the UK.’