Sep 3, 2010

Watercolor Painting Demonstration by Barbara Fox - " Dreamy Pinks"


Dreamy Pinks
watercolor  9 x 10"

Dreamy Pinks Painting Demonstration

Paints used for this painting: Winsor Newton and M. Graham, Holbein where noted.
Cadmium Lemon
New Gamboge
Sap Green
Hookers Green
Peacock Blue (Holbein)
Cobalt Blue
Prussian Blue
Dioxazine Purple
Permanent Rose
Opera (Holbein)
Quinacridone Red
Quinacridone Violet
Alizarin Crimson

Paper I use is Jack Richeson 300 lb cold press watercolor paper.


Here is the photograph I used for reference.

Oops, can't find it. I'll search, then put it in later.


Step 1 - pencil drawing on the paper.
For a complicated drawing like this, I usually do a tracing of my little photograph, then using my copy machine, I enlarge the image and copy this onto my watercolor paper. I hang the drawing on a big. sunny window, tape the wc paper over the drawing, then trace the image.

Step 2 -the color field
I paint in layers, so step one is painting the first layer. I call this my “base layer”, because I am painting the
color of the subject, albeit with some variety. This is done in sections, painting every other petal, for the rose. Let each section dry completely before painting the section next to it., otherwise the colors will run.


I let the colors blend with a wet-on-wet technique, either:
A. wetting an area with water, then touching the colors on it,

or
B. laying in a colored wash, then adding the second and sometimes third color.
 

I used both techniques in this painting. They give the same results.
Remember, the pigments flow with the water, so let the water do the work!

 

Slowly but surely, the roses are taking shape. I painted the petals using Hookers Green and Pthalo Blue, with Sap Green on the stem.
Don’t be afraid to use rich and/or dark colors in this first step.




When the rose is completely painted with the first layer, and dry, I paint the background, in this case a spotty color field, again painted wet-on-wet. I used Cadmium Lemon, Hookers Green, Peacock Blue, Prussian Blue, Permanent Rose, Opera, and Dioxazine Violet.



To get this washy effect, wet the entire background area, then drop the colors next to each other . Tilt the paper to let the colors mix, but don’t do too much brushwork.


Step 3 - Shadows
Once the first layer of color is laid down, I proceed to paint the shadows. Usually the shadows on a flower are the same colors I’ve been using, only darker, and sometimes with a bit of purple (to grey the color) or cobalt blue (to cool the color). These roses are a cool pink, however, the underside of the petals and the interior is very warm- yellows, corals, and oranges. So, for these flowers, I used Dioxazine Violet and Quinacridone Violet to paint the shadows on the outside of the petals, and Alizarin Crimson and Quinacridone Red for the interior of the blossom.
 
Just as I painted STEP 1, I paint the shadows wet-on-wet, letting the pigments mix on the page.

Step 4- deeper colors
 

Background: I painted another layer of the background, making it very dark, but with beautiful, rich colors.
I added drops of water onto the wet pigment here and there. The water pushes the pigment back and creates this out-of-focus mottled effect.
This technique makes very different effects depending on how wet the paper is, so practice it a bit. Also, the pigments react differently, depending on their staining* quality.
*Many watercolor paints are divided into Staining or Granular colors. It is a whole other “science“ of watercolor painting that I don‘t get too involved in. There is probably more information on the Internet, if you’re interested.
When the background was dry, I went over it again with a rich mixture of Peacock Blue. This unifies all the colors and visually pushes back the bright pinks and yellows. We don’t want those competing for attention with the flowers.
Peacock Blue is one of those great colors that seems to layer beautifully over most other colors.

Step 5 -details, details
I use another layer of paint (the same colors) to enhance the colors in the darkest areas, still painting wet-on-wet.
I very lightly paint the veins on some of the petals.
Finally I add a small touch of Dioxazine Violet in the very darkest areas.
Voila! A lush and luminous pair of roses!

20 comments:

  1. I don't know which demo is the most beautiful. Thank you for so generously sharing these demos. I really am going to make an effort to give a least one of these a try.

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  2. Wonderful work Barbara and I really appreciate how you share your consummate skill so generously. Thank you.

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  3. You are a great artist! Greetings from Russia. Bravo! I'm going to draw flowers.

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  4. Thank you for such a great lesson. I would like to translate it on Russian language, would you mind?

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    1. Ann, I wouldn't mind, but someone else did it already. Please email me: bfoxart@yahoo.com

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  5. You were brilliant in explaining the whole thing.
    Loved the post and the painting!

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  6. Gorgeous! I've painted in watercolor for years, but it is always good to learn something new and be re-inspired.

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  7. I LOVE the roses! Absolutely gorgeous! Would you explain a bit about the background please? While it is lovely, it seems to detract from the roses....Much thanks, Sue

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  8. What a wonderfully accomplished and delightful piece of work. I just finished a similar subject today. Looking at this, I have a long way to go!

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  9. I'm always fascinated by others techniques. Thank you for sharing!

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  10. this is most beautiful, thanks for the tutorial, I must try this.

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  11. Such wonderful, rich colors. So beautiful.
    Thank you so much for sharing your talent.
    A Munton

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  12. Have you found the reference photo? I'd love to see it added to the tutorial if you have! Thanks!

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  13. You didn't mention masking out the flowers to paint the background - that must have been a task cutting around all the angles the petals made.

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  14. I am impressed with your methods and the results are lovely! Your strategy for lovely backgrounds works so well that I can't wait to try it. Thanks for your good advice........

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  15. Thank you for all the comments all in one day! A class assignment, me thinks?
    Unfortunately, I never did find the reference photo, but I am hoping I discover it in some odd file on my computer, and I will add it to the tutorial.
    I didn't mask the flowers in this painting. Painting wet on wet makes painting around objects much easier. In other paintings, I have masked foreground objects when I want a very smooth wash in the background.

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  16. i will follow your advise
    so beauti ful work

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  17. Absolutely beautiful!!!

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  18. Beautiful gift you have,it makes me want to get back to watercolours again.

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