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Recently having read that The Death of the Artist book, wherein a subchapter detailed at length not just the brutal gentrification process that artist presence in a neighbourhood is part of/causes/is a result of, but lays out how, in intentional urban neighbourhood design, the visible presence of artists is considered an amenity for middle class residents and sought as such (though apparently we are replaceable by small fun restaurants? feels great.)
It’s bleak, but it got me thinking again about ecosystem metaphors and how artists (and in the book it tries to use artists to mean an umbrella term that includes writing, film, music, etc., but I would argue that in the visible-as-neighbourhood-amenity sense, artists means visual artists, musicians and maybe sometimes filmmakers, depending on their visibility/indie-ness) are this sort of decorative scavenger presence that dramatically change an ecosystem, even so much as to make it uninhabitable for themselves.
And that got me thinking about whale falls, and how for very new, utterly unsuccessful artists, an urban presence in terms of occupied space is often only really possible in the liminal moments of transformation of the space – when one round of neighbourhood occupants has left and the other not yet moved in, as it were.
Pop-ups.
I got to be in a gallery pop-up for the third ever Nuit Blanche in Toronto. It was very new and very respectable at the time as an event and it also happened only in particularly artsy neighbourhoods still. I had graduated that May and so by September, myself and my fellow fine art grads had come to the realization that we were going to have to haul ourselves up into the fine art world by our bootstraps apparently, and we quickly formed a slightly incoherent collective, pooled our funds, and booked a small manufacturing warehouse in the Right Neighbourhood and pulled together a group show for Nuit Blanche.
This was not my first nor my last artist collective, but it met a similarly dispersed end. As far as I know, only one of the … eleven or twelve? of us? went on to become a gallery artist, and unfortunately I’m out of touch with everyone from that point in my life. You may have noticed I am a commercial artist now.
Anyways! A pop-up gallery by a bunch of 21-year-olds four months out of art school, smack dab in the middle of the biggest art walk event in our large and culturally illustrious city.
This was only even possible because the warehouse was empty at the time; and it was empty because it had been sold to a developer who would shortly gut it and build something much more expensive in its place. For Toronto locals, this was at Queen and Ossington, a neighbourhood I can’t afford to eat in regularly anymore, even with my commercial art career income, moretheless rent retail-adjacent commercial space for a full month.
These sorts of nearly-dead spaces in otherwise vibrant neighbourhoods undergoing the inevitable condoification are almost always filled by pop-ups – gallery pop-ups, small businesses, catering companies testing out restaurant life, tattoo studios designed to pack up quickly at the end of their temporary lease. These all still pay rent to the landlord, whether the original one or the future condo tower owner, I imagine it varies. They wring the last little bit of potential out of the space – they pick the bones, as it were.
All these lost art students and ambitious young chefs and body mod artists just spreading out over the urban abyssal plain, waiting for some decaying piece of property to become briefly accessible, and then lighting it up with culture and drama and foot traffic like a brief firework before it ultimately fully disappears into the grey sands of unaffordable rent.
Even the Starbucks that opened in that neighbourhood as a harbinger of the great Gentrification Construction Wave is gone now, by the way.
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For six months I had no nerve connection whatsoever to my lower right radial nerve. This meant that all of the muscles it powered were completely switched off, paralyzed, leaving me unable to uncurl my fingers, lift my wrist, tilt my wrist, or open my thumb, and leaving me much weaker at gripping, rotating my lower arm at the elbow, and bending my elbow. This had a waterfall effect – with less function, the arm as a whole gets used less, and the whole arm weakens and loses muscle mass, even in muscles still fully powered by healthy nerve connections. This meant my right arm actually became less useful over the course of those six months after surgery, in a bad but somewhat inevitable feedback loop.
I knew this was coming, and i had started to prepare before surgery by training myself to do a few things left-handed – writing and drawing were the big ones, but not the only ones.
I also have some leftover left handed skills from having carpal tunnel back in 2007 – it was easy enough to switch over my mousing hand, for example, as I’d done it before several times, whenever my right wrist flared up. Easy, as mentioned in prior posts, as assessed on the new difficulty curve of my life.
Left-handed writing was a very strange thing to tackle – firstly, it is definitely different than right-handed writing. We’ve designed our letterforms to work with a very specific biomechanical setup, and the left hand flips it all completely.
There’s three distinct hand positions folks use to write left-handed – keeping your hand above the line, alongside the line, or below the line of text. Smearing your lines by rubbing your hand along them as you progress from left to right is a real frustration, and the above-the-line and below-the-line hand positions are both responses to that concern; but the internet was very certain that the above the line, curled-wrist hand position was a recipe for carpal tunnel, so given my experience with that I wanted to avoid it. This really only left me the below-the-line hand position for writing, and the problem with that was just how different it felt from writing right-handed.
Apparently the above-the-line hand position’s main advantage is how much it allows a left-handed writer to mimic the motions and shapes of right-handed writing. From my reading, it’s implied that this was mostly a benefit to teachers, who didn’t have time to teach two totally different systems of writing – but people who get into calligraphy left-handed tend to write from below the line, which gives them more natural wrist positions and still a whole suite of beautiful curves and swoops available to build the letters. In fact, the calligraphers I’ve found all universally turn the paper a full 90° and write from top to bottom instead of from left to right. Despite respecting their expertise, I really couldn’t get my brain around that fullly rotated page, and ended up writing from underneath with a maybe 20° tilt the other way, to help balance the natural backwards lean of my left handed letters.
As a geriatric millennial, I learned cursive writing in grade school, and I’m much more comfortable and fast with it than printing; I like taking handwritten notes in meetings, doing my brainstorming on paper, and I worked hard to be able to write as fast as I think. So my first and biggest writing concern was getting myself to learn left-handed cursive.
Well, folks, with cursive writing being forgotten at large and left handed writing of any kind being a specialized concern, there were not a lot of good resources on the internet. Many of them taught the curled-wrist above-the-line hand position and then reproduced the same letterforms and line directions as right-handed writing. But it’s patently obvious to me that left-handed cursive needs to respond to left-handed biomechanics, and folks, it’s been a real pain to track anything like that down online, except in the world of calligraphy.
Which is why I spent six months getting deeeeeeep into calligraphy.
Shoutout to left handed calligraphers through the ages for approaching their craft so seriously and for sharing their methods so generously! From out of print books on the internet archive to real time demonstrations from Instagram calligraphy artists, the world of left-handed calligraphy was an extremely inspiring and amazingly professional scene to drop into for a while.
After relearning my usual cursive with my left hand, to keep things interesting I decided to learn a few other scripts as well. Once you’ve overthought the shape of the letter A for a day or two just to get to one comfortable iteration of it, it’s not a big leap to then start exploring other variations of it just for fun.
I hesitate to assign silver linings to this whole experience at this stage still, but I will admit that having to relearn how to write with my opposite hand has made me really relearn what writing is – what letters are, how they work, how we draw them, how we read them, what different scripts etc actually mean. I care more about letterforms and fonts and such than I ever did before, and it’s made writing a lot more interesting!
But don’t assume that meant any of this was easy, or particularly intuitive, or at all relaxing.

I did purchase some learn-to-write workbooks and tried just filling them out to measure my practice, but as you can see, it was both rough going and mind-numbingly boring. Initially my left hand couldn’t reliably make any particular marks whatsoever, whether straight, angled, round, etc. It never stopped requiring intense focus to write, and I usually have to sit and think about each individual letter I am recording to the page. This is not at all a replacement for how I used to write with my right hand – I really could move thoughts through my arm to the page without having to consciously translate them into letters at all, and my left hand, despite six months of complete immersion, never got anywhere close to that level of comfort.

By February I was starting to hold the pen in my braced right hand again, which was exciting, but not at all a return to easy comfort. Additionally, it was legit confusing! but more on that in a later post.

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After surgery, I had planned to take two weeks off of work. The actual surgery itself didn’t sound as intense as some prior ones I’ve had, but I had at least some sense that it would take some time to readjust.
In the end I took four weeks off, and I’m hugely grateful to my job and the team I work with for accomodating that so kindly. For those four weeks, I slept, recovered, panicked, vibed, walked in the park, researched accessibility aids, and screamed into pillows with the rage of a thousand suns.
I have never, in my adult life at least, felt so unrelentingly enragingly constantly frustrated as I did in those first four weeks. I fucked up everything I tried doing, and since almost all of the things I tried to do in that time were self care activities like drying my hair or texting with friends, that took a huge emotional toll.
Have you ever had a moment where clumsy mistakes chain together, and you drop something, stub your toe, bump your head, spill your drink, and fill a text window with typos when you try to tell someone about what just happened?
Some days it feels like I’ve been in that mode steadily since Oct 2023.
I spill food on myself. I miss my mouth when I drink from my water bottle. I drop things I’m holding; I click the wrong link while browsing; I whack everyone and everything with the padding on my arm brace.
It’s certainly at least a little better now, a year + later, partially because I’m getting less clumsy (less, not none), but definitely also because my frustration threshold has been forcably moved, a thing past me wouldn’t have believed could happen.
That first month was utterly enraging. Everything I tried to do the old way failed to work because I was doing it one-handed with the wrong hand; every new tool I tried that supposedly would improve my life turned out to have at minimum a big learning curve, and more often than not a whole range of capitalist cruft woven into it; and the whole time I was locked in a vicious internal battle against all the toxic independance and deepseated ableist shame that had been waiting for me in my head.

I’m maybe making light here, but the rage was exhausting. I took four full weeks off of work, and I am glad I did, because I was not in a state where I would have been a positive presence on my team.
The frustration is still there; the shame and toxic independance are still there.
I misclick with my left handed mouse and close the screen I was on without saving, and the red fog threatens to roll back in.
A friend lovingly jokes about the nonsense that a dictation tool made out of my attempt to text them, and the mental tornado siren starts to spin up.
I burn myself mildly on the airfryer trying to cook dinner solo, and every curseword I know lines up behind my tongue, promising catharsis.
I am, however, less overwhelmed by it, than I was that first month. That’s largely thanks to arsenal of management techniques I have built up: I step away, I take breaks, I made a catharsis playlist for when a big feeling starts camping out in me and I can’t dislodge it. I know that having eaten is the first key to patience. And I know that some days I am just going to have to label as “FUBAR” on the calendar and treat as throwaways. But yes. Recovery has been frustrating.
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When all this was ramping up, I tried to do a lot of research into what tools I would need to navigate the world with my left hand, and there were two things flooding my search results: things for parents to buy for their left-handed kindergarteners, and mensa nerds looking to minmax their IQ by becoming ambidextrous.
So, life seems, at least from dipping my toe in it, to be a liiitttle bit condescending to left-handed people still.
My parents’ generation were kids back when teachers would smack you if you tried to write with your left hand, and it does seem significantly good that we don’t do THAT anymore, but, goddamn. There are a LOT of apparently right-hand-specialized tools that don’t SEEM specialized at first glance.
Left-handed scissors were by FAR the best thing I purchased: without relearning how to use scissors, using right-handed scissors in my left hand is deeply annoying. Left handed scissors work instantly with no learning curve. They contain no software, they are available most places I see any scissors (tho, def not all), and they weren’t marked up hugely over the right-handed scissors I saw in the same stores.

Left-hand dominant folks I know can all use left or right-handed scissors; left-handed ones just change how they see what they’re cutting, and how ergonomic the pressure required to cut is. They make my day to day slightly easier and I appreciate them immensely.
Left-handed mice are a lot harder to find; while I don’t think hand dominance and mouse hand choice is usually connected for most folks, having no ability to extend (lift) my fingers on my right hand meant mousing with it was out of the question. Being able to mouse with both hands really helped me back in my carpal tunnel days and I was determined to find a gaming mouse for my left hand for this recovery period. In the end I found an ambidextrous Logitech – the Pro 2 Lightspeed: you can change which side has the extra buttons, which is a really great feature, and when I am mousing more with both hands I might enable the buttons on both sides and duplicate their function.
In the specialized realm of music and sports there are left-handed alternatives for string instruments, for golf clubs, baseball gloves, etc. That was no surprise.
As I dug into it, though, it seemed to spiral. Did you know kitchen knives are sharpened with right-handed use in mind? Can openers absolutely are designed for right-hand dominance. Corkscrews and screwdrivers and so forth are designed expecting the strongest force on them to be compatible with the strongest force capable in a right hand. None of this PREVENTS left-handed use! It just means that left-handed use is slightly (or significantly sometimes) less ergonomic.
Slightly less ergonomic might not be a big deal when you’re able bodied, and when you’ve spent your life learning to accomodate that slight hurdle. And, as my uncles tell me, it’s a lot better nowadays than when they’d come home with welts on the back of their left hands for writing with the wrong one in class. (They rarely use left-hand specific tools as there was no chance of those being available when they were learning things as kids.) But it DOES add a layer when you’re NOT ablebodied, or have anything else adding exhaustion to your day.
Anyways, left-handed-ness. The world seems more annoying for left-hand dominance than I had realized. Sorry for my prior ignorance!
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I’ve been thinking about how the sennelier oil pastels are so soft that you can get full on painting style soft and hard edges etc, and I picked up a few small canvas boards to see if they were a useful substrate for faking oil painting effects!
Unfortunately the sennelier pastels are so slippery that they really don’t grip the canvas at all, and it became hard to layer the way i wanted. but there is definitely still a painterliness to this that excites me! i think for my next try I’ll pay down a first pass with a much thicker, stickier oil pastel – haiyas or mungyos maybe – and see if that starts to fill in the weave and give the developers more to bond with when i get to that layer.
One of the challenges of oil pastels, at least for me, has been finding a medium with the right absorbency, texture, grip, etc. I haven’t been that big a fan of the pastelmat I’ve tried – even before i had softer oil pastels, things seemed to build up to an unmanageable amount of greasiness too quickly for me, due to the inabsorbency of the sanded paper.
Unprimed wood, heavy cotton bristol, and cotton rag printmaking paper have been the most successful for me so far. The wood gives me some texture while still having a little absorbency; the bristol is utterly smooth but again, the pastel does set a little on it as it absorbs the oil; and the heavy cotton rag paper seems to absorb an incredible amount of the oil from the pastels while usually still having a decent rough or cold press texture to offer my markmaking. if anything, because of how dry it renders my oil pastels, it’s been the least blendable by far.
So i should probably go back to the cotton rag soon and see what that level of control gets me with the sennelier oil pastels; but I’m intrigued by this canvas potential and I’ll probably do another still life on a canvas board first!
oh, technical note: these canvas boards are all pre-gessoed rough canvas, making them very unabsorbent and giving them a large resolution weave texture. Maybe it would be worth trying a linen canvas? or an unprimed canvas with more squish?
Also, going through my photo collection, i think i could paint still life strawberries every day for the rest of the winter and not run out of reference. Is this a good idea? is there any chance someone might want to own an oil pastel drawing of a strawberry someday? there’s only so many i can hang up in my own home…
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I got this set of Kuretake Gansai Tambi in the fall and day down to play with them in my etchr sketchbook this week. The 100% cotton paper that usually is my best friend, however, felt less useful with these than with my usual watercolours.
which isn’t to say i didn’t have fun! the colour range of the set is great and the vibrancy is *amazing*.

but i realized i really don’t know much about these paints besides the fact that they’re at least a little different from Western style watercolours; so i did some googling, and i thought I’d share some highlights:
a great breakdown of the actual chemical differences:
a great demo of how they can be pushed far beyond what you think in terms of layering and vibrancy:
They sound like a product related to traditional paint prep methods for nihonga, which is painted on washi paper :
Nihonga – Wikipediathis playlist is a very clear overview of nihonga materials:
Nihonga Tutorial Playlist
these days they seem very strongly associated with etagami, which I’m just starting to research:
In summary, no, they definitely don’t work like my Daniel Smith or Mijello or Holbein watercolours, but that’s because they’re very definitely not the same thing. I’m excited to play around with the paints in combo with different materials and see what they unlock for me!
Also, god, I’m already tempted to get more; they really do have a jewel-like quality, shining in those big flat pans….

(i did rearrange them into this colour wheel order to help me learn the palette, if you noticed the labels in the box no longer line up with the colours)
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new watercolour palette
posted:
updated:
posted to: arttagged: art supplies, art toolkit, colours, folio palette, palette, plein air, structure, watercolourTreated my birthday self to an Art Toolkit Folio Palette! It’s both big and small, with lots of mixing space, even though it packs up very slim and weighs very little; and it magnets to itself and to whatever I want to stick it to for painting. While the -14C snowy weather here in Southern Ontario is not going to have me doing much plein air this month, I think my future self will really enjoy taking this to the beach, the park, etc!

(I also picked up an extra mixing pan to swap out for two of the larger square pans; I already appreciate the extra space, as I am a messy, chaotic mixer.)
In good timing, I also finished swatching all my watercolours onto cards, so I used them to assemble myself a palette of tube paints to fill this with:

I went heavy on the granulating paints; if this is a plein air landscape and urban sketching palette, then it doesn’t need as much texture control as one I might take figure drawing. I got to include a few of my newer tubes, too, to really test run them in a more focused way:
- Lemon Yellow Deep (W&N)
- Perylene Scarlet (DS)
- Terre Verte (DS) (I picked this up because the Winsor & Newton terre verte I own is probably the palest, weakest paint I own and yet I adore the colour, so i was hoping for just a more powerful version thereof; sadly the Daniel Smith one is a totally different colour and pigment composition, but turns out I also love IT, so~)
- Olive Green (SH PWC)
- Mars Black (W&N)
The yellow, scarlet and black listed are all notably granulating versions of those colours, so I am excited to see what kind of unhinged texture I can lay out on the page with this palette!
I’ve started doing some sketchbook studies to test drive it and while I think I might have made a mistake omitting my perylene green, maybe that kind of challenge is good for me!

I will say, the mixing area on this palette is velvety and perfect. I have never had a palette be such a joy to mix on out of the box – the paint spreads usefully on it in a way I have enormous trouble conditioning my enameled metal or plastic palettes into achieving literally ever! It’s raised the bar for me and whoops, now I have higher standards.
What do you think of these colours? Do you have a beloved palette you have conditioned into perfection? Are you also dreaming of sitting under a tree and painting in a few months?
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Gansai tambi paints and neocolor iis; a very fun combo! I am often sad about the difficulty of making watercolours create rich even dark washes, but the gansai tambi paints excel at it. The only tragedy is how glossy they come out if you go thick with them.
Neocolors lay down beautifully on them though, glossy or not, and as a test case I think this is a great proof of concept!
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Drawn without water, on a 6 x 9″ grey blue cardstock, I think Strathmore brand. Drawn from life, from a lovely birthday bouquet.
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Astronomics! It’s out! You can play it! I’ve spoken a bit about this previously but this is my first published Art Direction credit and you can bet it means a lot to me! You should go look at the steam page and see how hecking charming this game turned out:
Also, you can take a look at the slick announcement trailer they made:
Important note: Hube & the team at Numizmatic have released the game as an early access game on steam, but don’t let that fool you – this is already a big game, with gameplay from start to finish available and an incredible number of possible asteroids to encounter, thanks to the wonderful procedural asteroid design! They’ve published a roadmap for the next updates and more info on how they’re approaching early access on the game’s website.
And in wonderful news, people are really enjoying it! There are MULTIPLE enthusiastic review videos, and folks on steam are really singing its praises!
I definitely want to talk more about the experience of designing this game right at the start of its life, but I’ll save that for a later blog post. Meanwhile, let me leave you with the three main characters, to whom I am disproportionately attached:




look at him! look at this little guy!


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