Some things I think
are invaluable, and a few that I don’t.
Do you have a beginner artist on your list? A good place to start is with a gouache kit and a spiral-bound field sketchbook. This is an inexpensive way to start learning about painting.
Do you have a beginner artist on your list? A good place to start is with a gouache kit and a spiral-bound field sketchbook. This is an inexpensive way to start learning about painting.
Every year, a million knock-off French box easels appear
nestled under aspiring artists’ Christmas trees. Don’t buy one if you really
love the recipient: they’re heavy, cumbersome, and discouraging. I'd rather see a painter start with a $15 tripod easel and a folding table than with a box easel. I did.
For the watercolor plein
air artist, something with a swivel head is the best option. Poppy Balser paints with a Soltek
easel; I use a Mabef
field easel. En Plein Air also makes a very lightweight sketch easel.
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A compass is a good stocking stuffer for the field artist. |
For oil painters, a pochade box and tripod is a
better option. Guerrilla
Painter boxes have flooded the market. If you buy one, keep it small; my
large one is too heavy for serious field work. Open M boxes are
beautifully-made and very expensive. Good with your hands? Here’s a pochade
box I built for under $50; it serves me well and it can be paired with
a less-expensive tripod.
If what your artist really needs is a studio easel, I think
aluminum mast easels provide good value for money. I use Testrite
aluminum mast easels in my teaching studio. If your artist likes to
work big, go with their hinged
professional model. I’ve had one for decades, and it takes work up to 60”
square without complaining. It’s been more reliable than wooden easels in the
same price range.
These Panel-Raks are a devilishly clever idea. I should get some for myself and stop using Bobbi's. |
Every field artist can use a few extra wet-panel carriers. I
like PanelPak
wet canvas carriers and Ray-Mar’s Wet
Painting Carriers, which are made of corrugated plastic. An inexpensive but
invaluable product for the traveling artist is a wet-drying rack. I
find myself using Bobbi Heath’s when
we travel together.
An invaluable accessory for oil painters is a stainless
steel brush tank with a leak-proof lid. Yes, artists can use glass
jars with tightly-screwed lids, but they make a mess in the field. Get a small
one for the plein air painter.
Cared for properly, it will last a lifetime.
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A painter might appreciate the parts to make his or her own watercolor field kit. See below. |
Artists never have enough brushes. Watercolor painters would
love new brushes by Rosemary & Co.
Although a British-based company, they ship fast and reasonably in the United
States. I normally buy Robert
Simmons Signet Chungking bristle brushes for oils.
If your pastel artist is still juggling loose boxes of
pastels, why not splurge and get him a traveling box? I have an earlier version
of the Dakota
Traveler, which I love. The Roz
Box has its fans as well. Silicone Colour
Shapers out-perform tortillons and stumps for blending.
In our house, Santa doesn’t bring presents, but he does fill
stockings. He always remembers sketch books. I like Strathmore’s
Visual Journals with smooth Bristol paper and #2 mechanical pencils,
but you can scale that up or down as your budget requires. You might add micron pens if
your list includes teenagers.
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Artists love to experiment. How about a set of sumi-e brushes and some ink? |
I have a Winsor
Newton Cotman watercolor pan set for when I’m traveling pared-down.
Dedicated watercolorists love to create their own pan sets. Anyone would be
thrilled to get this Schmincke
empty palette set, but if your painter is young and hip, get him just the
empty half-pans, some double-sided tape and a few tins of Altoids. Pair this
with a watercolor
field book, and he will entertain himself for the rest of the year. If you
want to include pigments, here’s my guide
to watercolor paints.
A navigational
compass and a cheap (because it will get dirty) business
card holder are both useful field tools.
Artists are always trying to figure out new techniques for
mark-making. Why not get your artist some sumi-e
ink, brushes
or bamboo pens to
really mix it up?
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Art lessons are always good. Here I'm demoing a few years ago in beautiful Belfast, ME. |
And, of course, art lessons are always good. Check at your
local art center or museum. Or, send your loved one on my Age of Sail
workshop aboard the schooner American Eagle in June, or
my Sea &
Sky workshop at Acadia
National Park in August.
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