Last week's Perpetual Plant Journal entry presented difficulties due to high winds and frigid air ... in April! After doing a very quick and fairly careless pencil sketch en plein air. When I returned to my garden the next day, the wind storm had all but destroyed the plant. I completed the Bleeding Heart at my drafting table using my Ipad for reference. My sketching carelessness became apparent immediately and I decided to redraw the blossoms. They weren't drooping in the beautiful way that Bleeding Heart droops. I'm working in a Stillman & Birn, Zeta Series sketchbook. In a few weeks I will have completed my first year working in this two volume sketchbook set that I've designated as my Perpetual Plant Journal. I began the journal last May. All of the text will have already been designed on the pages. The upcoming challenge will be to place new entries in a way that works well with the previous year(s) entries. The plan is for this to be a three-year collection of plant illustrations. I used a limited palette of opera, alizarin crimson, hansa yellow light, Joe's Blue, Ultramarine Blue , a touch of viridian and a touch of cadmium orange. I decided to handle the leaves and the smaller cluster of blossoms loosely so that the focus was on the main cluster. I painted the entire illustration with a #8 round brush. The text was was drawn first in pencil using rulered guidelines. I then inked the letters using a Platinum Carbon ink fountain pen. #chriscarterart #chriscarterartist #explorewithchriscarter #perpetualjournal #botanicalillustration #bleedingheart #watercolorflowers #watercolor_painting (at Lebanon Township, New Jersey) https://www.instagram.com/p/B_N4pyYnXAc/?igshid=1hunxodmi5dci