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Sunlight and shadows – a dry sclerophyll forest portrait

Sunlight and shadows – a dry sclerophyll forest portrait

by Paula Peeters | Aug 11, 2015 | Forest portraits, Wildlife illustration

  The most widespread and abundant forest type in Australia is probably dry sclerophyll forest – the tallest trees are eucalypts and their relatives (Corymbia, Angophora, Lophostemon), and below them are sparse shrubs, heath and/or grasses and herbs. This...
Blackbutt beasties, and forest portrait number two

Blackbutt beasties, and forest portrait number two

by Paula Peeters | Jul 26, 2015 | Forest portraits, Tales of science, Wildlife illustration

Many beautiful beasties live in wet sclerophyll forest, including those that dwell or nest in the hollows of venerable old trees. Gliding possums that eat leaves, blossoms or trees sap; owls, tree-creepers and parrots; bats, snakes and antechinuses¹.  As I started...
How to draw a forest (Part 2) – my first forest portrait

How to draw a forest (Part 2) – my first forest portrait

by Paula Peeters | Jul 15, 2015 | Forest portraits, Wildlife illustration, Writing

When it comes to doing art I’m largely self taught, so I always hesitate to call myself an artist. But I do like a challenge. Trying to draw forest portraits would require me to brush up on everything I had ever learnt about colour and tone and whatever else goes into...
How to draw a forest (Part 1) – or seeing the wood for the trees

How to draw a forest (Part 1) – or seeing the wood for the trees

by Paula Peeters | Jul 8, 2015 | Forest portraits, Tales of science, Wildlife illustration, Writing

Look for depictions of forests in art and you won’t find many. Sure, there are plenty of landscapes with trees. But look closer and you’ll notice there are only a few trees, probably to one side of the picture, and the rest is open country. Or it is a parkland, some...
Why are Australian swans black?

Why are Australian swans black?

by Paula Peeters | Jun 6, 2015 | Tales of science, Wildlife illustration, Writing

Australian swans are black, while most swans are white. Why should this be? When I was a child, growing up in Australia, the only swans I saw were black. At Lake Wendouree in Ballarat, or in the Botanic Gardens of Melbourne, the swans were slightly menacing in their...
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