Vicky L. Williamson
a journey towards the person God created me to be...
15 March 2026
bits of last week
09 March 2026
an old stone house
For the first few years after moving to Brenham, Texas, we often drove around the small communities nearby exploring. This sketch is from a photo taken 7 years ago in Belleville, where we found several old historic homes. Just around the corner from this native stone cottage is an original dogtrot log cabin, photo shown below. It is currently being used so doors have been modernized.
De Atramentis Document brown ink, watercolor, and colored pencil in a Seawhite Travel Journal.
07 March 2026
another early cuppa
It was very early in the morning, only me and the cats stirring. Butters, our corgi, actually gave me a dirty look when I turned on a small lamp as she moved from the couch to her darker kennel!
This time, I had a cup of my new favorite black tea, Taylor’s of Harrogate spiced Christmas tea. Drawn with an odd assortment of tools in my tiny 2” sketchbook.
04 March 2026
nothin’ but us chickens!
Yesterday we took our corgi to the vet’s for her yearly checkup and a vaccination. We must’ve been taken to the chicken exam room (yes, our vet has a chicken specialist on staff) judging by the chicken decor!
My Duke 209 fude fountain pen was still causing me problems, even after repeated cleanings and changing ink brands. Seemed like a good excuse to buy this Sailor fude de Mannen pen . . . Besides, it comes in BROWN! Perfect for using with brown ink. Like the navy version, this one has a 40° bend which I prefer over the bamboo green 55° degree nib. I found the pen at Jet Pens.
28 February 2026
sketchbook play
It began when I pulled my favorite fude nib pen (Duke 209) from the antique tool box where emptied & cleaned fountain pens sleep. I wondered how this very lightweight pen would work with the progressing tremor in my hands. I filled it with new-to-me Robert & Klingner Lotte Sketch Ink and drew some sketch tools.
My hand didn’t shake much, but the pen nib fought with me the whole time! I remember its lines as smooth and effortless, not skipping and dragging. Was the CP paper of the Seawhite Travel Journal to blame? Or the ink? I cleaned it and refilled with my old ink, De Atramentis Document Grey. Seems much smoother now, but I’ll try it on other papers to be sure.
As long as this mostly-gouache palette was out, I wondered if gouache could be used in ink & wash like watercolor. I had just baked another loaf of sourdough so I sketched it with the fude pen, then added thin layers of gouache over the dried ink. Seems to work fine.
We don’t actually eat that much bread, so I cut fresh loaves I bake in half and pop half in the freezer for later.
27 February 2026
no one to sketch
20 February 2026
camping at Cagle
15 February 2026
the gulf, revisited
11 February 2026
overworked
10 February 2026
tiny house, c. 1840s
This sketch didn’t turn out quite like I had planned, but I’m calling it done and moving on. It’s drawn from a photo I took in 2018. The cabin had a spindly live oak growing behind it with skinnier branches than normal.
The photo was in with others on my phone taken in Old Baylor Park but after I wrote the text, I’m not so sure if that’s where we saw it. It might have been in Round Top.
(watercolor & colored pencil)




















