John Lawrence
Active member
October and that means Hunting season around my home. Ducks come in around here on the 15th along with Grouse and Woodcock. Pheasants come in on the 22nd. Throw in a possible weekend Salmon trip to upstate New York later this month and the fact that I'm on vacation for two weeks starting on the 15th makes for one great month to be outdoors.
Easton is six weeks away and preparation for that show is taking up most of my time at the bench. As I've stated before I see Easton as the benchmark for where the collector's interests lie, so this is an important show for me. I've had a lot of success the last couple of years with mallards and as a result have been making several for next month. The first decoy have to show you this month is the Toronto Mallard drake that I had started on last month's thread. I wanted to change directions with my paint somewhat so I took a lot of time with this one while I was figuring things out. As usual I painted to a theme and the two words that I wrote down were "Dark" and "Vibrant". What I was looking for was the look of a well aged out decoy and the mellowness that develops in oil paint over time. Here it is finished.
View attachment PA010141.jpg.
View attachment PA010143.jpg.
When I see a mallard drake I often get the impression of squareness. So while looking for new directions in my paint I also tried to incorporate that theme of square into the shape of the decoy mainly by having a more abrupt termination of the breast line and the rump. This decoy took a lot more time than I had anticipated because it didn't fit my normal style. After many adjustments to the shape I got to one that I'm comfortable with. My plan is to put a similar paint scheme on this one as the Toronto mallard.
View attachment PA010144.jpg.
I wanted to use a sleek low head to contrast the squareness of the body, I'm not quite sure it works so we'll have to wait until after he's painted to find out.
View attachment PA010145.jpg.
And last to start of this thread for this month I have the finished hen Toronto mallard ready to be painted. Since I broke away from my normal paint scheme on the drake I'm planning on something different for the hen also. These three decoys are all hollowed cedar and are very light.
View attachment PA010146.jpg.
I'm also working on several redheads, Labradors and I'm still painting that hen black duck, so there is quite a few pieces on my workbench this month.
What's on your Workbench this October?
Easton is six weeks away and preparation for that show is taking up most of my time at the bench. As I've stated before I see Easton as the benchmark for where the collector's interests lie, so this is an important show for me. I've had a lot of success the last couple of years with mallards and as a result have been making several for next month. The first decoy have to show you this month is the Toronto Mallard drake that I had started on last month's thread. I wanted to change directions with my paint somewhat so I took a lot of time with this one while I was figuring things out. As usual I painted to a theme and the two words that I wrote down were "Dark" and "Vibrant". What I was looking for was the look of a well aged out decoy and the mellowness that develops in oil paint over time. Here it is finished.
View attachment PA010141.jpg.
View attachment PA010143.jpg.
When I see a mallard drake I often get the impression of squareness. So while looking for new directions in my paint I also tried to incorporate that theme of square into the shape of the decoy mainly by having a more abrupt termination of the breast line and the rump. This decoy took a lot more time than I had anticipated because it didn't fit my normal style. After many adjustments to the shape I got to one that I'm comfortable with. My plan is to put a similar paint scheme on this one as the Toronto mallard.
View attachment PA010144.jpg.
I wanted to use a sleek low head to contrast the squareness of the body, I'm not quite sure it works so we'll have to wait until after he's painted to find out.
View attachment PA010145.jpg.
And last to start of this thread for this month I have the finished hen Toronto mallard ready to be painted. Since I broke away from my normal paint scheme on the drake I'm planning on something different for the hen also. These three decoys are all hollowed cedar and are very light.
View attachment PA010146.jpg.
I'm also working on several redheads, Labradors and I'm still painting that hen black duck, so there is quite a few pieces on my workbench this month.
What's on your Workbench this October?