Why I Sketch
Travel Sketching: A Secret Tool for Authentic Travel Writing
Sketching is a way to experience and capture moments, emotions and a location.

Over a decade ago, I packed a sketchbook for my first trip to Europe, knowing I’d be traveling part of the time with a friend who paints. The experience and results of sketching in a garden, on a balcony with coffee and croissants, and on a bench in a crowded plazaturned out to be surprisingly pleasant.
I carry two books when I travel now: a slim journal for notes and a watercolor sketchbook. I return from trips with many photos and few sketches, truly enjoying both. For me, photography often becomes more about framing the next shot than connecting with the place itself. Sketching is slower, immersing in the shapes, shadows, sounds, and people.
Since that trip, my sketchbook and art supplies have become travel essentials–even if I am running errands.My purse holds a tiny watercolor palette, blank watercolor postcards, and favorite pens. There’s a compact art kit tucked in my car console, and a few more ready to slip into a tote on my way out the door.
So, why keep art supplies at the ready?

Sitting still in a space is time to truly observe. While drawing a scene, I am in that space.I notice sounds, overhear conversations, and witness how people use a space and what delights them. A sketchbook gives me a license to be there, to be looking at everything.

I like getting up early in the morning, when commuters are coming into work in a city or people are searching for shells on the beach, when only the coffee shops and breakfast places are open on the town square. Sketching is a quietness at the beginning of the day, a moment of meditation. It’s even better with a cup of coffee.

I often travel and dine alone. Sketching is a way to fill time while waiting for dinner or resting on a bench. Sometimes I impress myself. Sometimes I absolutely cringe when I look at a sketch. They all stay in the sketchbook. Even the bad sketches (and some are soooo bad) teach me something and give me time to observe the space.
I love to talk with people AND I can get to the point where I need solitude to recharge. I love to talk with people AND I hesitate to start conversations. Finding a quiet corner to sketch is a way to find a bit of solitude when I need it, have a legit reason to back away from the crowd, and bring people to me to start conversations. Sounds weird, but these don’t contradict to me. I seem to get the results I need.
I don’t have to commit a huge block of time. If I sit for 10 minutes and get the main lines and notes down, I can take a photo and finish or add color later. My sketchbook –my rules.

I have always gotten a happy text after mailing a postcard to a friend, which is why a few stamps stay in my art kits. Everyone loves a note in their mailbox. Even the craziest quick sketches get apositive response. PHOTO: Notes from Wichita, KS-Sketches and notes are useful resources when writing about a destination.

Dipping a paintbrush in a creek or fountain can help bring the space onto the page, as do writing notes about the experience, a ticket stub, part of a brochure, etc. -Sketching proves I have been there. There are travel posts written by AI or people who never visited in person, and the ethics and accuracy are subjects of rants and debates. But my sketches are obviously mine –my style, my notes, my focus on that day. Including sketches on posts and socials over time adds a personal touch that is only me –imperfect, reflecting my interests.

Compliments! People feel about sketching the way I feel about singing. If you have a bit of talent and the courage to do it in public, you have my respect. Graciously accept sketching compliments with a smile –they are sincere.
I hope this encourages you to pack a sketchbook and a few pens and find a moment to sketch on your next trip, even if that trip is to the farmer’s market. Add a few notes to your sketches and this book becomes a keepsake or, even better, a part of your life. It will be imperfect. You will have sketches that don’t work out. Even those create valuable experiences.

All the sketches in this post are mine. Well, almost. Curious,I asked ChatGPT to “create a sketchbook page with handwritten notes for Botanica, in Wichita, KS, looking like it is in a portrait A5 sketchbook and adding a bit of watercolor and an urban sketching style for interest.” Here is the result. AI will get better and better. But it will never be me. It will never be you.


