Showing posts with label urban sketching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label urban sketching. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Cato's Ale House, Oakland

Lara at Cato's 
It was crowded at Cato's, although you wouldn't know it from my sketch. I got tired of drawing people from afar. It was more fun to talk with and draw the other sketchers who turned out that night.

It was our open sketch night (first Thursday of every month) when everyone's invited to come sketch with us. It was a sketch party!! We kept commandeering more and more tables. After a couple of hours, we shared our sketches on a big tabletop, shining phone flashlights down upon our drawings in the dimly lit room.




Yet One More Sketch from Looking Glass Photo

Lighting Equipment
Time, time, time.  Hoped I'd get to sketch some vintage camera equipment.  You know, like maybe an old large-format bellows camera on a wooden tripod? Right.

To the young photographers working at Looking Glass Photo, 'vintage' is a Nikon single lens reflex circa 1960's . . .  and me.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Spenger's Fresh Fish Grotto, Berkeley

Spengers: Taxidermy marlin in the dining room

A Berkeley institution, Spenger’s began as a clam stand in its current location in 1890. Legend has it that by the 1950s, Spenger’s served 3,500 pounds of fish daily, more than any other restaurant west of the Mississippi. Clark Gable, Joe DiMaggio, Marilyn Monroe and many less famous California patrons made Spenger’s one of the East Bay’s most popular eateries.

It remained a family-owned restaurant for three generations. Buddy Spenger Jr., last of the dynasty, managed Spenger’s for 58 years until its purchase by an Oregon corporation in 1998. Buddy died of natural causes at age 87 in the apartment where he was raised, above the restaurant.

All that remains of the legend is the decoration: the restaurant is still a teak-walled museum of nautical paraphernalia, model ships and taxidermy fish and mammals. I drew the giant taxidermy marlin in the dining room and an old wooden sign in the bar.