
Plein air on a recent visit to the Oregon Coast. I was fortunate to have a great view of the sunset from my balcony.

Plein air on a recent visit to the Oregon Coast. I was fortunate to have a great view of the sunset from my balcony.

I took a few days of dowtime on the Oregon coast to paint and reflect. Time well-spent, but I was missing a certain specific experience that I often indulge when I go camping in milder weather (this trip was a hotel stay, with a lovely view of Siletz Bay) – hours sitting by a campfire, just staring into the embers and listening to the flames crackle. I had it on my mind, and it proved to be sufficiently inspiring to try to capture that yearned-for moment in pastel.
A look back a piece from 2019.

This piece still gives me a feeling of peace and hope. It relies on a lot of glow, and one prominent “googly eye”.


Inspired by a year of stress, this piece is the first abstract work I’ve done in pastel. Small, because honestly stress doesn’t need a boost to feel huge.

I sat down to paint, feeling the lingering fatigue of a busy week, and a little low, generally. My heart felt heavy with the weight of unexpressed concerns, mostly fairly abstract and unresolvable. This painting is inspired both by my heavy heart, and also by the awareness that a new day will dawn. I could have titled it “This Too Will Pass” and conveyed similar sentiment.
This piece is painted entirely with Blue Earth pastels, and on Clairefontaine Pastelmat, taking advantage of a new tabletop easel. It’s been awhile since I worked from an easel, and in pastel there are some definite advantages, one being that loose pastel dust falls away from the work immediately, reducing the risk of smudging it into the work in spots where it doesn’t belong.
Some folks – maybe a lot of people – are hurting right now. Feeling angry. Feeling devalued. Feeling that their voice doesn’t matter. Feeling powerless. Hard times are… hard. Hard times make great art. Always have.
…The world feels like it’s on fire, and there is war and destruction everywhere…
When I came home from Desert Storm, my painting style had changed (rather a lot), and the things on my mind began to percolate up through my art. I painted the war. I painted the chaos. I painted the things I didn’t have words for. I’ve used art to give voice to the things I don’t have words for “all along” – at least for the whole time I’ve been an artist.

Shortly after I returned from the war, I gave up oil painting entirely, in favor of acrylic and pursued an abiding fascination with abstraction, and the use of nontraditional pigments and mixed-media elements in my work.
… And events just kept delivering hard times and trauma to reflect in art…

Hard times come and go. Trauma is inflicted and endured, and trauma heals. The art remains.
I guess I’m just saying inspiration comes in many forms. Sometimes a beautiful sunrise on a favorite trailhead is enough. Sometimes events and circumstances provide inspiration of a different sort. I don’t know what to expect of my work from here, I only know I’ll keep feeling – and painting.


I take a lot of early morning hikes. I see a lot of sunrises. No suprise then that I also paint a lot of sunrises. This view is a favorite one, from “my” parking place at a favorite trail. I see the sun rise from this vantage point often. This colorful sunrise, a view seen in September (as I recall) was quite a splendid one, and I did my humble best to capture it, although there is no universe in which art could accurately convey the beauty of the colors I saw that morning. I’ll keep trying. I’ll keep wondering at those beautiful sunrises.

A pot of autumn chrysanthemums on a table inspired this piece. I enjoy using the bright hues of yellow, orange, and red pastels. There’s something fun and freeing about painting flowers, and an innocence and simplicity the riot of bright colors. Flowers seem somehow undemanding and joyful, and of all the pieces I’ve recently painted, my eyes keep coming back to this one.
I chose my first soft pastels with care, but also with limited experience (and I’m still quite new to pastels as I write this). I’ll admit, too, that one detail important for me personally was not related to the look or feel of using the pastels, nor to do with the pastels themselves, directly; the history of the brand. The legacy. The way they have withstood the test of time, and the other artists who have used them. No surprise, then, that two French brands stood out for me, and ended up being early choices for me in this medium, eh? Sennelier and Henri Roché.
It was Henri Roché, as a brand, that inspired me to try pastels at all. (Probably not my most cost-effective source of inspiration, not gonna lie. lol) This brand has serious history, though. Here’s a good video about it. Here’s another.
Sennelier has been around awhile, too, and is a definite “workhorse” of a soft pastel brand that many many artists of note have used. There’s a sense of continuity in using them, beyond their good general quality. They’re also pretty commonly available at art supply stores.
I like both of these brands, not only for their history, but also for how they feel, and the look of them on the page. The colors have good durability, and lay down well. They feel soft and smooth in my hand without falling apart easily, with some specific pigments in each brand having some variance (sometimes a bit gritty, other times a tad dusty, and it seems more to do with the specific pigments being used and less about either brand generally). I love the colors.
One thing about both these brands, though, is that they’re made in France. By itself this isn’t a problem at all, it just comes with a catch; it’s not always easy to find or obtain some specific individual color quickly, and I’m not always looking for a set. There are occasions when I’m not willing to sacrifice inspiration in the moment to wait on a package to arrive. These can be costly, too (and let’s be frank, the Henri Roché pastels are the Lambo of soft pastels – they have the price to prove it – and everything else that seems “expensive” is quite reasonable by comparison). I’m not really giving price much thought, here, I’m just making a point to identify this as a potential concern for most artists.
I do want to talk about how these compare to an American brand of very similar reputed quality. I’m trying this brand for the first time; Blue Earth pastels. There’s not much history here (made since 2012), so “legacy” details aren’t a factor, but I’d heard they’re very good quality and couldn’t find a direct comparison between the Henri Roché pastels and these. I’ll be comparing these three brands for my own benefit, and deciding whether to continue to use all three, or pare things down to two favorites over time (it’s a personal preference; I don’t prefer to have a wild random assortment of different brands in the medium I use). There don’t seem to be many comparisons of these brands to each other, so I’m sharing my thoughts.
I’m hoping to make a decision which brand will form the foundation of my palette long-term, versus being relegated mostly to accents, highlights, fun stuff, and specific projects or unique colors. (I did say I’m not focused on price, but… I’m also not made out of money. lol)
Here’s what I’ll be comparing:
Shall we get started?
This is my current selection of Henri Roché pastels:

I don’t have many of these; I buy them “as a treat” now and then or for a particular project that just wants that special something. There are currently 1958 available colors, total (wow!). I purchased these as small half-stick assortments, (and there are several really nice ones to choose from), and selected a small custom assortment of full size sticks in green hues which use pigments I favor (cobalt, chromium, and cadmium). I purchased them directly from the manufacturer’s website, but they are also available from a US vendor online, here.

This is my current selection of Sennelier, (mostly purchased as a set):

There are currently 525 shades listed available on their website. My original set was a set of half-sticks, but new colors have been purchased from their open stock full sticks. These are very easy to come by, and even the larger sets are quite affordable and available online and in local art stores. The paper wrappers on the full sticks are a pain in the ass to remove.
Here’s the new selection of Blue Earth pastels, to consider:

The “full set” of colors available on the website includes 336 colors, but does not include the 21 darks that are also available (so, 357 in the line, total, as of writing this). The individual sticks are square, with precise “sharp” edges when they arrive, very flat sides and about “half stick” sized. These have less availability, but are easy to order online, although several of the assortments are often on back order.
This comparison is more difficult than I expected, when I consider my goal of settling on a preferred brand for my pastels, generally. I find myself yearning to embrace Henri Roché with a “cost no object!” battle cry, and having to admit that may be unrealistic. I haven’t yet used the Blue Earth pastels enough to be certain whether I could ever replace the Sennelier pastels with those, although I find myself considering it because the manufacturing quality stick-by-stick is clearly better. I think I want to spend more time painting with them before I decide – but that’s the direction I’m leaning.
I give some thought, too, to making a decision from a “use case” perspective, meaning to say perhaps I could relegate the conveniently square, compact, Blue Earth pigments to an assortment intended specifically for travel or plein air painting, and tuck them into a French easel drawer with that in mind? They are quite lovely. I’ve quite a lot to think about.


Hopefully putting my thoughts and observations into words is helpful for you in some way, as you consider your options from among the many choices of soft pastels available to you. Thanks for reading!
December 23, 2024 Update:
I’ve been continuing to paint with my combination of Henri Roche, Sennelier, and Blue Earth* pastels, and it seems like a good time to make an update. *The TL;dr is simply this – I don’t find find myself reaching for the Blue Earth pastels very often. Hardly at all, actually. It seems worth saying so.
I want to be very clear that art being what it is, some of the choices an artist makes are purely preference. There’s nothing “wrong with” the Blue Earth pastels at all. Great pigments, and they lay down well. They feel good in my fingers when I’m using them. I just don’t reach for them, even though they are right there in my Roz Box with my Sennelier pastels, conveniently within reach any time. I don’t choose them. Now and then I sort of “make myself use them”, and I’ve committed myself to going ahead and “using them up” to make room in my box for more Sennelier sticks, which I definitey reach for again and again (my HR pastels are in their own Roz Box). I’ll go out of my way to grab a particular Henri Roche color. I rely on my Sennelier pastels day-to-day. Somehow, for some reason, in my particular practice of pastel painting, I just don’t put the Blue Earth pastels to use very often.
I don’t have much insight to offer. It could be the shape? It could be the extra soft softness of using them. It could be the additional dust. I just don’t know. I don’t use them with the comfort and ease with which I use the Henri Roche and Sennelier pastels. It is what it is. They’re lovely, and some other artist may adore them – with good reason. That artist isn’t me.
I spent some hours recently thinking over which additional hues I want to add to my palette – and in every case those will be Henri Roche pastels. I’m not so fortunate as to be able to casually drop thousands of dollars on pastels (very few artists are), so the Sennelier pastels help fill in a lot of my palette with “day-to-day” hues. These are the pastels I use. I’m okay with that.
Choose what works for you. 😀

The hikes are different as the seasons change. The autumn foliage takes on hues of gold, rusty reds, and hints of orange. The skies are grayer and the chilly breeze directs the migrating birds to warmer climates.