This is a great Victorian era building on Front Street in Toronto. When it was built it was the first street up from the port of Toronto. Now, due to infilling, there are about 6 blocks to the water’s edge.
This Queen Street East Fish and Chips joint closed a week after I sketched it. It was a favorite Leslieville spot for families and lunchtime gatherings for decades. I like that it wasn’t yuppified. We used to call it “un-Reliable Fish and Chips” because its hours were a little unpredictable.
A Leslieville favorite, I first visited this cafe after it had moved a couple of blocks and it didn’t have a sign up. I remember that they told me that this sign was “temporary”. It was more than 10 years ago.
Watercolour, microliner and pencil crayon sketch of my art workspace and office. My worktable is a stainless steel table top placed on mismatched file cabinets. I warped the perspective to show my trusty 1893 treadle sewing machine, very useful for mixed media art. The space doubles as a workspace for my web design/communications business.
I did this drawing as a part of a Domestika course led by Lapin in Barcelona. He had turned his usual interest in urban sketching to botanicals during the pandemic lockdown.
This greenhouse is in a park a few blocks from my home in Toronto. It opened for a few weeks to the public and then Omicron closed it down again. I had sketched a few of the plants in December, but it wasn’t open on this day in January.
I really enjoyed taking the Domestika course Botanical Sketchbooking: A Meditative Approach with Lapin. Drawing with a microliner with no preliminary pencil sketch was a bit scarey and frustrating at first.