I appreciate you saying this, Jo! As someone unfamiliar with this, I think I was a little intimidated by the number of comments. I posted kind of late in, and it seemed a little much to try to touch on everyone's work.It's been a fun Hunt. I hope all y'all aren't intimidated by the comments. It is definitely not required, we like to see sketches, practice, new styles and info .. mainly sketches.
I hope to get another done ...

Love the sketches of your dogs! Great sketching!ams - Nice lines on your glass, and I like the pencil shading for the mirror. Glad you're enjoying using up your sketchbooks, and had a go and drawing your hand - great result!
Joy - You sound really frustrated with what's a good sketch. Maybe you'll not learn to love the Canson paper you're using, but you can still have some fun experimenting on it - perhaps it's a great paper for trying simple direct colour instead of using glazes? I work on awful paper a lot, and having lower expectations definitely does help!
Mary - Love your mirror & breakfast sketches! Such fun work with the brushes, colours, and composition. Really creative stuff - I'm enjoying seeing these.
Joan - Beautiful work on the colours with both sketches, and fun to see inside your mobile studio. Clever sub with the crossing sign, and I love the road markings, too.
Joe1 - Nice, energetic drawing for both sketches, and I like the line quality.
Joe - Don't tempt me about the lumber crayons - I'm trying to reduce my stash of sketching stuff! I like the strong ink look, and the lines on the glass work particularly well (love seeing a bit of scribble creeping into the submarine insignia shading, too!).
Jo - Love the heavy texture quality of the line in the first sketch, and then the more relaxed look for the bowls - great drawing in both.
Terri - Fab shading on the mug, love the texture and the heavy darks (cool mug, too!). Really happy you had a try at drawing your cat - she looks very interested in whatever's outside, and you caught a great pose! Definitely no obligation to try to keep up with everything here - but it's a success if the threads inspire you to do an extra bit of drawing/painting - glad you could join in!
#7 - My two Not-Cats. Dog1 - XL graphite, A3 sketchbook. Dog2 - Nitram charcoal & ArtGraf white, A3 kraft paper.
View attachment 13221
View attachment 13222
Well need to work on photos some!!!Under sink, out window, shoe, in closet
I love the sketches of your pups. That kraft paper looks great, I really like it!
These look great!
This is crazy, but I've made a recent discovery that might work for you. I think it's my new "favorite" paper for not taking myself too seriously. (Also most of my "art sales" are digital images, so I'm not too worried about lightfastness/permanency for much of my work.) I picked up a Strathmore Paint Pad, 100 series/Youth at Walmart very inexpensively. (I didn't look at where you are in the world; not sure if US but you can probably find it.) I haven't yet used it extensively, but early experiments are quite promising. The paper doesn't seem to disintegrate with rough handling. I'm sure it wouldn't be appropriate for lifting watercolor, but it does seem to tolerate heavy scrubbing. Not in a sketchbook, but I paid about $4 US for 20 9x12 inch sheets. It's cheap enough that I feel like I can experiment with abandon and not worry about how much paper I'm going through, and it's easy to get.Can anyone offer advice on how to paint on paper that lifts easily in a sketchbook? Or suggestions for good, sturdy sketchbook paper types? Hahnemuhle seems to be mentioned in other sites I have visited. Any experience with this paper?
Did you figure it out, use the photo loader at the top of the post, works good.Well need to work on photos some!!!