Beverly Shipko, Artist
  • Paintings
    • Bakery Displays
    • Cakes, Pies & Tarts
    • Vending
    • Cookies, Cupcakes & Ice Cream
    • Additional Desserts
    • Egg-centric
  • Drawings & Prints
  • Art Exhibits
    • Solo
    • Group
    • Photos
  • About the Artist
    • Statement
    • Resume
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
  •  Blog
  • Daily Paintings Challenge
    • January 2015
    • September 2015
    • January 2017
  • Contact

#sarasotaclassiccarmuseum

Day 24. Glass Hood Ornament

January 24, 2017 by Beverly

How many people do you know who went to the Sarasota Classic Car Museum in Florida on spring vacation? Most people probably opt for the beach or Ringling Museum. Under protest from Jay, we squeezed in a quick trip to the car museum before Bonnie arrived. And I was rewarded with the inspiration for this painting.

The subject might come as a surprise to new readers, but I’m a native Detroiter so it makes sense to me. As Bonnie said, you can take a girl out of the Motor City, but you can’t take the Motor City out of the girl.

During my first Challenge, I discovered that I enjoy painting details of cars when I painted my first metal hood ornament from a vintage Chevy. Next came the  Mustang decal, and finally the Jetson-like fins and lights from a classic Dodge.

Tomorrow I’ll call the museum and find out what car this horse hood ornament belongs to. It must be rare because I can’t find it anywhere on the internet. FYI, Jay perked up during the visit when he found a car owned by one of the Beatles.

Unfortunately I was so engrossed in this painting that I forgot to take pictures until the very end. You can see the photo that I started with.

Early on I thought maybe I made a mistake by not darkening the background. However, once I started painting the horse and car, there was no going back.

After laying down the background color, I used a large (2 inch) brush to smooth out the paint. The good news is that the surface looks beautiful. The bad news is that it’s impossible to touch up.

I decided to focus on the dark car for contrast, and added alizaron crimson to the palette hoping it would positively impact the background – and it did. Also, it made it easier to anchor the bottom of the horse head.

This was an ambitious painting, which is why I saved it for the last week of the Challenge. After 3 weeks of painting every day, I’m painting better from all the practice. I’m more willing to push myself and try new things such as Glass Hood Ornament.

Painting just seemed to happen today, even with all the details. I’m sure there are spots without white paint on it, but that’s ok. It’s the Challenge after all.

Thanks for stopping by. See you tomorrow.

Posted in: Daily Paintings Challenge 3, Paintings, Uncategorized Tagged: #30paintingsin30days, #horsehoodornament, #sarasotaclassiccarmuseum, bevsbites

WELCOME

`

This is a website about art, food and life - with dash of art history.

In my blog, I focus on the process of making art in general and creating dessert paintings specifically, while sharing my ongoing quest for new bites of life.

Search

Subscribe to My Blog

Follow Us!

Follow Us on FacebookFollow Us on TwitterFollow Us on InstagramFollow Us on Pinterest

FACEBOOK MINIFEED

This message is only visible to admins.
Problem displaying Facebook posts.
Click to show error
Error: No posts available for this Facebook ID

Recent Blog Posts

  • Cake Painting’s Thrilling Debut on Allegra Goodman’s “This Is Not About Us!”
  • It’s important: Subscribe to The Rivertowns Dispatch!
  • Come to Beverly’s Exciting Open Studio 2025: Food, Flowers & Fun!
  • Watch My Talk: Discover A Magnificent Menagerie in Art
  • Explore Exciting Animals in Art: Join My Upcoming Talk
  • My Bundt Cake Painting Featured on Allegra Goodman’s New Book
  • Join us for my Happy Spring “Flowers & Art” Talk!
  • Plan your unforgettable arts weekend with this RiverArts Studio Tour map!
  • You’re invited to Beverly’s Open Studio 2024
  • Take a Byte out of my YouTube Channel – Watch my Bite-Size Food Art Talk

Copyright © 2026 Beverly Shipko, Artist.

Mobile WordPress Theme by themehall.com