Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

VIRUS DIARY: Always learning from 'happy little accidents'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Sep, 2020 09:16 PM
  • VIRUS DIARY: Always learning from 'happy little accidents'

I'm not alone in confessing that I have always enjoyed those Bob Ross instructional painting programs that ran on PBS for many years. Perhaps it was his soothing voice as a tree appeared like magic on a lake with the flick of his wrist. Maybe it was his Mr. Rogers-like guidance that there were no mistakes, “just happy little accidents.”

Bob died 25 years ago. But his legacy lives on, thanks to YouTube videos, books, even a collection of T-shirts.

Sometime in March or April (who can remember anymore?), as it became clear that the coronavirus pandemic was going to be keeping us out of movie theatres, restaurants, concert halls and ballparks, we came across a Bob Ross video as we searched through our obscene number of cable channels and streaming services.

“Did you know, I used to enjoy doing paint-by-numbers when I was a kid,” I said to my sweetheart, the person destined to share our couch for more hours than we had ever contemplated. “You should do it again,” she said. “You're getting ready to retire, and this might be something you would enjoy. Besides, what else do you have to do?”

In an instant, she was searching the internet for paint-by-numbers kits. Turns out that craft supplies, like many things in the pandemic's early days, were hard to come by. We finally came across a modestly priced painting of the Beatles' “Abbey Road” cover that could be obtained in a week to 10 days.

“Sure, order it,” I said almost dismissively. “I'll give it a try."

Before long, a 16x20 blank canvas with John, Paul, George and Ringo had arrived with two dozen tiny paint containers, each embossed with a number to guide you down the long and winding road. I learned quickly that this was not going to come together in the half hour that old Bob Ross took to create one of his babbling brook masterpieces. But where was I going, anyway?

Little by little, the No. 2 black filled in Paul's pants legs, No. 12 yellow brought the Volkswagen parked up the street to life, and Nos. 12, 16, 18 and 19 of various shades of green helped the trees frame the Fab Four on their stroll across the legendary London crosswalk. With daily encouragement from my muse, it was finished. She ordered a wooden frame to give the work a proper place in our alcove.

I was hooked.

Soon, we found an online paint-by-numbers company that had more products ready to ship. Next: a bucolic scene of an old red barn adorned with a faded American flag and a rusting old farm truck sitting in a field nearby. I was on my way. Streaks of reddish brown came down the barn; tiny birds found themselves flying across a blue sky filled with puffy white clouds.

Then, as I was nearly finished, disaster struck. I had put some of the dark blue paint for the truck on a paper plate and laid it on a corner of the painting. It seeped through the plate, leaving a streak of navy blue running through the clouds and into some trees. I was distraught.

Then I remembered Bob Ross. I got out some very fine sandpaper, gently sanded away the blue, then took some white and painted two coats over the scar. After it dried, I restored the sky without numbers to guide me. The trees came back to life with a little freehand technique I had seen on those shows.

When I was finished, no one would know how close I came to tossing the picture, and the hobby, in the trash. But I was inspired by the rescue and am now working on more masterpieces.

No mistakes. Just “happy little accidents.”

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Sacked For An 'Accidental Period Leak' In Office, Woman Sues Ex-Employer – Read

Sacked For An 'Accidental Period Leak' In Office, Woman Sues Ex-Employer – Read
Menstruation is natural body function that women all over the world face on a monthly basis after they hit puberty.  

Sacked For An 'Accidental Period Leak' In Office, Woman Sues Ex-Employer – Read

B.C. Premier, Forests Minister, To Tour Several Wildfires, Including Kelowna

Horgan and Donaldson will visit Kamloops, Cache Creek, Ashcroft and Kelowna, where a wildfire that broke out Thursday was keeping hundreds of residents out of their homes.

B.C. Premier, Forests Minister, To Tour Several Wildfires, Including Kelowna

No Ice Cream For You: Uber Says Promotion In Vancouver Exceeded Demand

No Ice Cream For You: Uber Says Promotion In Vancouver Exceeded Demand
Some Uber users in Vancouver are expressing disappointment, and in some cases outrage, after they say the ride-share app's free ice cream promotion in the city apparently melted down.

No Ice Cream For You: Uber Says Promotion In Vancouver Exceeded Demand

Cocktail Queen: Vancouver's Kaitlyn Stewart Wins Competition For The World's Best Bartender

Cocktail Queen: Vancouver's Kaitlyn Stewart Wins Competition For The World's Best Bartender
Kaitlyn Stewart took top honours at the World Class Bartender of the Year competition in Mexico City this week.

Cocktail Queen: Vancouver's Kaitlyn Stewart Wins Competition For The World's Best Bartender

Virgin Airlines Staff Spills Boiling Water On 5-Year-Old, Leads To Second-Degree Burns

Virgin Airlines Staff Spills Boiling Water On 5-Year-Old, Leads To Second-Degree Burns
  The mother also complained that the flight attendants did not have any age appropriate pain killers or basic burn gels for his 5-year-old.

Virgin Airlines Staff Spills Boiling Water On 5-Year-Old, Leads To Second-Degree Burns

After Sex Robots, Japan Introduces Robot Priest ‘Pepper’ to Perform Buddhist Funeral Rites

After Sex Robots, Japan Introduces Robot Priest ‘Pepper’ to Perform Buddhist Funeral Rites
While the human priests demand more than 240,000 yen, Pepper will be available to perform the rites for less than 50000 yen.

After Sex Robots, Japan Introduces Robot Priest ‘Pepper’ to Perform Buddhist Funeral Rites