On my return to San Diego, I flew north to San Francisco with a plan of driving down Big Sur in glorious sunshine.
What I didn't realise is that when it's very hot inland California tends to get a maritime inversion along the coastline. This is what happens when cold marine air underlies warmer air and gets trapped. So my memories of Northern California mainly involved grey skies and not very warm weather! (Not very warm being relative when when you've been living with 100+ degrees Fahrenheit for quite some time!)
Maritime Inversion, Bixby Bridge, Big Sur
8" x 12", coloured pencils on Arches HP
copyright Katherine Tyrrell
The inversion produces fog and I think there was nearly as much moisture in the air as there was in the water in the Pacific Ocean way down below. Trying to draw fog is a bit of a challenge!
7 comments:
So lovely, Katherine.
annie
Thanks Annie
I remember this image from your trip. Oh yes, the weather between inland and the shore can be so very different.
You have the fog down well in this, never an easy task.
beautifully atmospheric, in more ways than one!
lovely evocation of the weather and mystery of fog
Many thanks - I actually loved doing the fog and was thinking of trying to find some more projects for foggy drawings
I can well undrstand why they attracted Monet!
Beautiful Katherine...and congratulations on capturing that fog so magnificently!
Ronelle
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