We're in the midst of a record breaking heat wave... Seven
continuous days with temperatures above 90 degrees was the past record for June
days in this area. We've already more than doubled that, and there is no end in
sight. Several days last week broke the old record for highest temperatures on
record. With what is called "the heat index factor" (which means humidity,
heavy air pressure, and lack of clouds), mid-day feels about 10 degrees hotter
than what the thermometer is reading. Nights aren't much better. About the
lowest it has dropped to is 80 at night. Thank goodness for AC. Well
almost.... ours went out for several days last week.
"So
how does one survive one of the worst heat waves on record without AC?", you
ask.
My answer: Seal of as much of the outside heat as possible, eat
fresh (no cooking) , drink lots of fluids, stay in the coolest rooms, do
minimal movement, and have lots of fans blowing into the room you are using.
The other trick is to do something that takes your mind off of the
temperatures. In my case, I painted beach scenes.... lots of them. You can
see a one of them below. The rest will show up on my website as soon as I can
get them loaded..
One
of the projects on my list of to-dos this year was to paint a series of small
format paintings that I could take to local sidewalk shows. I also had been
wanting to experiment with a minimalist and almost abstract approach . I decided
to work upon a series of big skies with clouds reflecting onto the wet beach.
I guess all of that water and cool colors seemed the right thing to think about
when it was really hot. I got eight 8"x 8" canvases painted while the AC was
out (about two a day).
Only one of the five days we were
without an AC, did I find it too hot too work in the studio. I had been painting
near a window so I wouldn't warm up the studio with artificial lighting. When
the temperature reached 98 outside the heat radiating
in through the blinds on the window was overwhelming me. I retreated into my
husbands office and sketched out a 16" x 20" beach scene to scale to paint on
another day.
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