After Sunrise, Lyme Regis - Oil on Lino

Super excited about going to Lyme again next week!

Little sunrise painting from half term…

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Towards Seaton from the Cobb, Oil Sketch on Plywood

Trying to get my landscape head back on before the big trip!

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Drawing stormy waves - when I was there in October I videoed the waves to draw

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Large A1 piece work in progress building up layers using charcoal, liquid pencil and oil pastels

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Good afternoon, Francis & thank you. Like you, we've just had a real down-pour with our gutters overflowing! Here's one that I hope might brighten your day. This is "Lyme Regis" by John Cooper from c.1935. https://t.co/CjOtNPaKaF

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More from project quick sketches

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10 minute sketch planning for a big painting

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Beautiful sky after the rain today

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Years since I’ve been to these are sketches I did years and years ago - I’m looking forward to developing my drawing degree memory project returning to a beautiful place with lovely memories

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in 1804 wrote to her sister from father, a carpenter, was asked to repair some furniture in their rented house. The Austens thought his estimate of 5 shillings was excessive, 'beyond the value of all the furniture in the room together'.

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I thought I'd start today with a view that was always exciting for me as a child when we went on day-trips to the Dorset coast. It was the first view of the sea as we arrived! This is "Lyme Regis by John Cooper from c.1935.

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in 1824 geologist Charles Lyell wrote to Gideon Mantell about his recent visit to in where he saw 'the discovery of a superb skeleton of Ichthyosaurus by Miss Anning. It was perfect, save the tail which a cart-wheel had passed over. It was 2 feet long'

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in 1844, physician and naturalist Carl Gustav Carus, accompanying the King of Saxony on an informal tour, called at en route from Weymouth to Exmouth. Visiting shop, Carus was impressed by the fossils for sale, and by her reasonable prices. 1/2

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Good morning Tony & thank you. As you say, that one is a lovely way to start any Here's one that I hope you'll like. This is "Lyme Regis" by John Cooper from c.1935. https://t.co/AKpxQs2YOV

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In these days of and check out the latest issue of Earth Sciences History for the story of the first ever such reconstruction, Henry De la Beche's 1829–30 Duria antiquior, its various issues, and its links with of

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in 1830, Charles Lyell wrote to Gideon Mantell about a visit by William Buckland to 'there is something in the wind...a paper on the new beast perhaps, that fish-like concern which wants to make a grand wonder of, and the Dr a memoir, I suppose'. 1/2

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