tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7078907614736747203.post5765230669615001816..comments2010-07-04T17:57:53.618+02:00Comments on painting, learning and living: Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7078907614736747203.post-23792734541070696232009-06-01T11:58:05.810+02:002009-06-01T11:58:05.810+02:00Hi Tanza - Your work is getting better and better ...Hi Tanza - Your work is getting better and better - I can't wait to see the finished still-life because the underpainting itself is beautiful. And I can't get over your little stair garden. Am I right that that used to be the abandoned little area you could see from the road down towards the medieval public gardens? I used to pass it each day on my run thinking how wonderful it would be when someone took care of it - and ir is! Sarahsarah meredithhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12442276754468996416noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7078907614736747203.post-90334450816926794502009-05-31T22:07:08.024+02:002009-05-31T22:07:08.024+02:00Gosh, Tanza, your work looks astonishing! Your stu...Gosh, Tanza, your work looks astonishing! Your studies and dedication are really paying off...<br />And the love-in-a-most (Nigella, your final photograph, has always been one of my favourites. Once the flower has faded, the seedpod, too, is a miracle of symmetry and beauty.<br />Emd of a long, hot day here, with a fantastic swim in a choppy sea with Mary, followed by an hour or two in the garden, trying to train my unruly grapevines! The garden is HUGE compared to what I am used to, and I am tackling it one bit at a time so as not to feel overwhelmed.<br />Much love as ever,<br />x ElspethAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com