JESSICA DE JESUS FINE ART
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Musings

Packing for Adventure

10/31/2025

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Over the last five months, I’ve had the opportunity to do more road trips that have taken me to bucket list places like Glacier National Park and Pacific Rim National Park.  Plus, every summer, my husband and I try to get out to backpack in the vast wilderness of the Sierra Nevada.  Needless to say, that along with both these opportunities, came countless views and inspirations to paint (when time permitted, of course).  

One of the questions I get most often is “What art supplies do you pack?” So, I thought I’d share my lists for two different scenarios at opposite ends of the spectrum: 1. My lightweight, minimalist go kit for backpacking, and 2. My plein air car kit. I also included the brands I use since that’s usually the next question!

When every ounce counts

When I’m packing for a 3+ day backpacking adventure and I’m carrying my sleeping gear, food, water, clothing, etc., I need to go light. This is what I typically bring:
  • Sketch Book (Hahnemuhle Zig Zag A6)
  • Mini pocket palette (ArtTool Kit) with primary colors plus a couple extras (Daniel Smith)
  • One travel brush (Rosemary)
  • Small collapsible water container
  • An orange watercolor pencil cut in half
  • One piece of paper towel (blue shop towel)

All of this weighs less than one pound and fits in a ziplock bag. Yes, I could have gone lighter with a water brush but  I really detest them and found it was worth the weight for me to have a real brush. The thing I love most about this mini go-kit is its simplicity and ease of a limited palette and just one brush – details be damned!

When I’m by the car

When weight isn’t an issue and I can “bring it all,” I find that things can get far more complicated with too many options.  To keep things at bay, I limit what I bring to what can fit in one small plastic bin and one daypack (if I want to walk a little ways).  And, more often than not, I’ll paint with gouache rather than watercolor. 
  • Easel attachments and tripod:
    • For surfaces 8” x 10” or smaller, I’ll bring my small u.go pochade box, otherwise I’ll bring my larger Daybreak panel holder and palette; both work with the same tripod (u.go).
    • I attach my tripod carrying case to my easel as a weight in case of wind.  I either fill it with some rocks that are usually nearby or with my water container.
  • Umbrella that hooks to my tripod (Soho Urban UV)
  • A couple substrates to choose from, ideally prepped with an underpainting 
  • A sketchbook for quick studies
  • Paint box of acrylic gouache tubes (including an oversized tube of titanium white!) and brushes
    • An alternative to acrylic gouache is “Designer Gouache” which I’ll carry in an air-tight container (Transon) + a tube of Permanent White.  Designer gouache can be reconstituted when dry, so it can be squeezed out ahead of time and put into a sealable palette, unlike acrylic gouache!  But, white is best used straight from the tube for max opacity, even for designer gouache. (Designer v. acrylic gouache is a whole other article!)
  • Water container
  • Old juice bottle full of water, plus an empty one to pack out dirty water
  • Small spray bottle to slow dry time for the paint on the palette 
  • Disposable gray paper palette sheets
  • Blue shop towels
  • Large binder clips to hold things down when it gets windy
  • Large hat, sunglasses (for in between painting when my eyes need a break), cell phone, sunscreen, lipbalm, snacks, and a portable chair.

​Whether painting from a mountaintop or a parking-lot, I’m focused on capturing the light, mood, and joy of the moment! ​
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* This article will appear in the November 2025 newsletter for the California Watercolor Association.
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Redpointing a Painting

10/31/2025

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*This article appeared in the June 2025 newsletter for the California Watercolor Association.
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There is nothing like getting a painting right the first time around but we all know that’s just not how it goes. (This is especially true if I’m planning to enter a painting into a show when stakes are high and brushstrokes become tight!) If you’re like me you have stacks upon stacks of “failed” paintings just waiting to be gessoed over.

In rock climbing, the term “redpoint” means to successfully climb a route after multiple attempts, with no falls or rests on the rope. A good friend of mine, and fellow CWA member often tells me how I’m “so good at redpointing a painting”: that I can just keep painting the same thing over and over again until I feel like I get it just right.  I couldn’t help but laugh at the analogy – but she’s right! Redpointing a painting is definitely part of my process.  I have attempted some studio paintings three, maybe four times before I’ve landed on “the one.”

At first glance, repeating a painting might feel redundant—or even like a step backward. Shouldn’t every artwork be a fresh, new challenge? But for me, painting the same subject more than once is one of the ways I learn: I can test colors, techniques, and even mediums – often times, I’ll try a painting in watercolor and then in gouache! I also find that I’m able to refine my technique with practice, allowing me to apply paint more quickly and with confidence because I know exactly what I want to do and when the time is right, especially with watercolor. More importantly, with each attempt, I deepen my understanding of what’s important and what details I can leave out.

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