Used Gamblin Artist Colors Cold Wax (not affiliate) to varnish my finished chrysanthemum. It did not smear. Supposedly, this can be used instead of glass so I could mount and hang this like a canvas painting.
Palette Management
I’ve started using erasable markers on my palettes so that I remember what’s what. Assuming each painting takes at least two weeks, this system has been really valuable.
Paper matters
Practicing softening edges
If I’m being really neatnicky, I should test this technique with every paper and paint color.
What I learned: it’s more challenging to do with darker colors — meaning more pigment.
Brush Inventory
What I learned:
- I have a lot of crap brushes. lol but I’m not going to use that excuse not to paint right now.
- My favorites: for washes are the ink pens and detail the #6 Van Gogh (in the round brush pic)
Brush selection
Prepping to paint the next stage of the Louise de Masi’s chrysanthemum. For adding detail, I’m testing out my #2, #4 in the ink brushes, plus the #5, vg6. Also trying which technique works best… wet on wet or wet on dry. For these small spaces, I could go with the wet on dry for the ink brushes because I don’t like the ragged edges that are happening with the w/w. But the vg6 brush seems to work well for both.
I wonder if I’m just not waiting long enough for the water to soak in or if it’s because I’m using cheap paper. Actually, I tried massaging to water into the paper in the largest purple shape here and that seeemed to work pretty well.
Watercolor study: chrysanthemum
I powered through the leaves in one evening. Painting the bigger areas was both intimidating and fun. What was most important to me was getting the contrast right between the leaves and the petals. I wanted the leaf on the right to be really dark.
What I learned:
- water control: I’m not great yet but practice makes better.
- on the leaves: using the side of the brush is great for making the edge smooth
- I want to do more of these small pieces just to keep working with watercolor
- I want to try 100% cotton paper
Woo! Hoo! Two weeks later, I finished the petals. I started on September 12.
What I learned:
- Mistakes are not dealkillers. I used to think watercolor was really unforgiving compared to oil. But I’m amazed at how much I was able to correct things I wasn’t happy with — the way you correct them is just different than oils. So phew, that makes the medium a lot less frightening!
- I learned how to take my time. I didn’t rush the process. Just an hour every day, slow and steady. That’s another thing I really liked about watercolor: I could stop and come back to it a day later or a week later and that was probably even better than trying to finish it in one fell swoop.
- I liked how “effortless” it was — the brush is light, the board is light, the paper is light, there’s not much paint. Again, there’s something about oils as much as I love it, it’s so arduous and big and heavy.
- I noticed how much tension I was holding in my hands/fingers and when I let loose of my grip, my strokes actually came out better, like just “brushing” the surface, literally.
- I re-learned how to “see” again — how to look really closely and notice how light and shadows make edges. That was fun.
Okay, moving on to leaves….
I’m using this project as a warm up and brush control exercise before I work on a personal piece. This process seems to be working. I think I’ll keep doing that — keep two projects going at the same time.
I’m also pondering size. I want to work bigger than this but this 8.5 x 11 size is really manageable — I can turn the board really easily when I need to for controlling edges and water. But as far as finished pieces, I’d like to get comfortable with up to 24 x 36. I’m getting ahead of myself tho. Focus.
Adding the deeper values on the right side is helping “shape” the flower. This assignment like a puzzle. I’m hyper focused on rendering each petal to match the image. It’s only when I step back to see the overall form that it starts to come together. Whereas if I were painting in oil, I would be focusing on the large shapes first before diving deep into the details. Hmmmm. Is that the medium or is it because I’m not making the big decisions for this assignment — just rendering or is it this particular approach to watercolor?
I think with oil I can keep painting over forever so that helps. And the transparency of watercolor means I’m layering up from light to dark so it’s totally different. It’s kind of like a print in that I have to flip the way I’m planning a piece. Some people just totally go with it though and don’t plan.
What I learned:
- It’s hard to get the dark parts down and have them blend. I end up pushing pigment around and it gets splotchy.
- I wet the paint to get a damp enough brush to paint smoothly but then it’s not dark enough. I guess I can just glaze but if I glaze on top of a really saturated area, it re-wets it and then that pigment gets pushed around too. Hmmm.
What I’m discovering:
- It’s easy to fall back into habits of going back into wet areas to adjust things.
- I don’t have the exact colors that are prescribed in the class. I’m missing that bright bright pink.
- It would make easier on myself if I didn’t skimp on the drawing.
- I have a tendency to pass the buck down the line. For example, “I can’t figure that part out. I’ll deal with it in the painting stage.” And that makes the painting stage trickier.
What I learned:
I couldn’t protect the highlights in the center. Even if I kept it dry and did the softening edges technique with the damp brush, it eventually spread to the center. If I had to do it over, I might use the masking fluid.
Here’s where the rubber meets the road, where color mixing + water control + brush handling = actual painting! I’m learning so much, where to even begin?
I don’t want to think about drawing, composition, etc. yet so I’m following along with Louise de Masi’s Master Watercolor Techniques class on Skillshare so I can focus on painting technique.
Notes to self: I’m using Fluid hot press 140 lb. paper. Louise recommends a lot more brushes but I found that I could get into the teeniest corners as well as cover a whole petal with my #8. I used the flat bristle brush as she instructs, to clean up edges and mop up paint for highlights.
What I learned with the first wash:
- I need to learn exactly how wet to get the paper before applying a wash. This does depend on the paper.
- If the water is puddling on top then it’s more likely that the edges will be feathery because the water will move outside of where I applied it so I’ll have to clean up the edges.
- I can use a damp stiff flat brush to clean up edges.
- I can control the softness of an edge in different ways — I experimented with all sorts of techniques in this first stage
- I can extend the drying time by “massaging” the water (Maria Raczynska) into the paper.
Water control #2
I’m enjoying doing these exercises more and more and they serve as a nice warm up to a painting session.
Decided to use them not just as warm up but also see how different colors in my palette look in different concentrations. #1 is 708 and #2 is 533. Using scraps from sketchbooks to conserve paper.
Note for self: these were all done wet on dry.
I already see an improvement from my first set.
What I learned:
- Brush size matters a lot
- Mixing up the right amount of paint beforehand helps (assessing the size of the area I want to fill to determine the amount).
- Keep the size of “the wet edge” manageable. For example, for the glazed value exercises moving along crosswise instead of lengthwise. Even though I can cover a wide surface with the size 8 brush on it’s side in one stroke, I risk parts of the edge drying too much and causing blooms.
Brushes
I bought this set of ink brushes a few years back. When I was working with gouache, I hated them. They were not stiff enough to control the paint because duh, that’s not what they’re for.
What I learned:
- Yes, brushes matter but I don’t have to get all fancy
- The range of stroke sizes and control is amazing in this set
- Each brush holds an amazing amount of paint (compare to Silver Brush Black Velvet).
Water control
What I learned:
- Each pigment behaves differently in a gradient wash
- The right brush size makes all the difference
- Some colors, like #662, tend to “bronze” at full strength — you can actually see that in the picture I took above.
- Warm ups really help — I want to start with warm ups before doing any “real” (not sketch) paintings from now on.
Secondary colors
What I learned:
- Again, I can mix up 66 secondary colors just from the 12-color split primary palette, all pretty bright (as opposed to the neutral range I worked with yesterday).
- These are roughly 50-50 blend of each primary color so if I wanted to do percentages, I could have 560+ colors!
Color Theory 101
Just doing a lesson every day…
What I learned:
- the range of neutrals I can create with just the 12 colors in my split primary palette
- I don’t actually have the “correct” complementaries since none of them actually cancel out to absolutely neutral gray but I don’t care about that as much as knowing what I have available
- when rendering shadows, I can select and mix up the perfect shade from this reference palette
Watercolor: setting a baseline
Here’s a study I did in 2016. It’s fine. I watered down gouache to make this illustration. It’s fine. But whyyyyyy?
Back to school
It’s been a minute.
I’ve continued with my daily at practice, although a lot hasn’t happened in a sketchbook. I designed a garden, renovated a house, learned how to bake sourdough (like the rest of North America). My house is in a constant state of being painted. Finally, I got the itch to get back to making personal art. And when I did, I found myself butting up against my abilities.
What does that mean? For a long, long time I felt at a loss for subject matter — what I wanted to address or focus on through my art. Finally, I have a lot to “say” but can’t capture it the way I want because I don’t have enough mastery of my tools. So I’m putting myself through DIY art school.
I’ve been painting forever but mostly in oils. In actual art school, I focused on printmaking. But for many reasons, watercolor feels like the best medium for me right now. Problem is, I’ve taking exactly ONE watercolor workshop in my whole life.
It’s fun being a beginner. Anything is possible! It’s that whole new-backpack-fresh-new-notebook-back-to-school feeling. 🙂 I’m just going to post here along the way, (really) to document this journey for myself. I could keep an actual notebook but I’m “traveling light” these days.
What I learned:
- what colors I have ready-to-go, along with their specifications (gradients, transparency, granulation, etc.)
- the essential 12-color palette
Portrait study: Quaranteam
I liked it better at the glowy stage. Not sure what happened between then and now.
Happy with the sleeves and dark areas but struggled with the middle. Not sure if it’s salvageable.
- Fixed the eye and neck
- Need to fix the slices of couch behind the figure
- And the paws
- Still lots of work to do on the shirt
- Still need to do the eyebrows
Reflections:
I really like the idea of stylizing the work overall. It’s not photorealism like Rance Jones. There are aspects of my style that have been consistent for 30 years (see Siesta drawing from 1993).
But there’s a more graphic quality to it now. I can see the design influence for sure. The more formal qualities, the shapes on the face are the same as on the fabric. I like that. It’s almost like… yes, it’s all paint. And the rendering is so much more controlled after taking Louise de Masi’s one class. I’m going to do more because there’s no pressure there. I can keep focusing on technique.
I’m very pleased with this composition. That is also a style thing. All my paintings have really strong angles. I like using the angles to create focal points. I like the limited color palette. And the values that lighten as you go up but then the contrast in and around the face.
When I’m happy with the painting part, I want to scan it in and see what I can do with the background — what if I put it on a solid yellow background or what if I render the background in illustrator as flat shapes?
I kind of love the colors in this stage – so glowy!
- the spot above the right eye and shape of the lips
- fill in the couch color in between dog’s legs
Assessment: Good start. Love the color choices — the limited palette, the hues in the shirt and the greens in the background. The composition rocks — the strong angles, the weirdness of having the dog upside down with her eye right on the edge, the strong lines on the shirt, thelines in the windows. Love the splashes in the background
Water control sucks. Used the wrong brushes, especially in the shirt. The dog’s face is all messed up — couldn’t figure out the actual drawing.
Consider “melting” the curtain more into the background
Feb 5: The Verdict
I don’t need this fancy pants phone. Over the last few weeks, I’ve managed to ween myself down to So much so that I’m going to buy a “dumb phone” this weekend.
It’s kind of freeing. What am I saying, it’s TOTALLY freeing! 😀
I just don’t know if I realized that without really thinking about it, I’ve wasted hours upon hours of time doing stuff that DOES NOT BRING ME JOY just because it was there. A friend reminded me that I was one of the early adopters, that I was on social platforms before they hit critical mass. Perhaps that’s why… I’m also now OVER IT.
So taking notes from the latest KonMari craze… thank you, next!
Maybe I’ll blog more. Probably not. I’m still keeping all of you on the inside posted, so there’s that. And I’m making art, and hanging out with my neighbors and friends. And having spontaneous lunch dates. And all of those things, BRING ME JOY!!!!
Jan 17: Happiness
- Get outside, move around, take a walk.
- Get more happiness for your money. Buy experiences instead of things and spend your money on others.
- Carve out time to be happy, then give it away. Thirty minutes helping others is more rewarding and actually leaves us feeling empowered to tackle the next project, helping us feel more in control of our lives and even less pressed for time. This translates to higher levels of happiness and satisfaction.
- Delay the positive, dispatch the negative. Anticipation itself is pleasurable, and looking forward to an enjoyable experience can make it all that much sweeter.
- Enjoy the ride. People who focus more on process than outcome tend to remain motivated in the face of setbacks.
- Embrace failure. How we think about failure determines whether it makes us happy or sad.
- Sweet dreams. Get a full night’s sleep on a regular basis.
- Strengthen your willpower muscles. Exercising willpower muscles in small, everyday behaviors strengthens our ability to stay focused at work.
- Introduce variety into your day-to-day activities.
- Stop comparing yourself to others.
- Reach out and connect with someone.
- Limit time on social media.
- Use your phone in the way phones were originally intended.
- Practice gratitude.
The list above is from a story someone in my office sent me: Realistic Ways to Achieve Happiness: An Interview with Tim Bono
Jan 16: Fail
It’s snowy. St. Louis City has no snow plows. I’ve been taking the bus. I NEED Google Maps.
Jan 15: iMessage
Because of last Friday’s fiasco, I decided to start using iMessage on my desktop. I’ve always balked at this because who really needs your text messages popping up on your screen… DURING PRESENTATIONS! But I must say, this was a game-changer. I can leave my phone in a drawer all day now!
Jan 14: +14%
So all that time I gave up on Instagram, I apparently made up on… Pinterest!!! lol