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 Friday, November 20, 2009
Juicy Watercolors
Posted by jessica
Online Seminars | Videos
11/20/2009 11:06:02 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, November 16, 2009
Paint Mist and Fog in Watercolor
Posted by Kelly
A sense of atmosphere can be the difference between a so-so landscape and a masterpiece. Veteran watercolorist Donald Patterson suggests this method for creating a semblance of mist and fog in your watercolor paintings: "Make a tinted, watery mix with titanium white gouache and brush it over the watercolor background. Select areas of the mist can be darkened or removed by wetting them with water and blotting with paper towels, making the technique practically fail-safe." Step 1: Paint any landscape as it would appear on a clear day. Step 2: Mix a watery wash of titanium white gouache tinted with a touch of phthalocyanine blue. On scrap paper, stroke the mix over some dried colors. Let it dry and you’ll be able to see if it has the desired coverage. If it’s too transparent, add more white. If it’s too opaque, add more color. From the December 2009 issue of Watercolor Artist. For more tips from Donald Patterson and other acclaimed watercolorists also check out Watercolor Secrets. From the Magazine
11/16/2009 2:13:37 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, November 05, 2009
Creativity Workshop: Pour It On
Posted by sarah.strickley
 Pat San Soucie explains how she painted Bright Landscape (above; watermedia and crayon on paper, 30x22): "I wetted the entire surface before pouring red, yellow and blue acrylic
mixes, then used aquarelle crayons to create circle and oval shapes. I
also played with small dots of complementary colors, adding metallic
pigments and scrubbing to accentuate tree shapes and field forms.
Additional contrasts of smoky grays added the final touches." You'll find the artist's 10-step paint pouring demo in the December 2009 issue of Watercolor Artist.Create a rich, textural underpainting using San Soucie’s pouring
and tissue paper blotting techniques. From there, build up an exciting
abstract design using her methods or your own experimental techniques;
or, for a more realistic approach, use the poured underpainting as the
start to a rich landscape, figure or still life painting. Send a JPEG
(with a resolution of 72 dpi) of your painting to wcamag@fwmedia.com
with Creativity Workshop in the subject line, and tell us about your
process. We’ll choose our favorite paintings and publish them on our
website. One entrant will receive a six-month subscription to
ArtistsNetwork.tv online video work-shops, plus $50 worth of North
Light fine art books. The deadline for entry is December 15, 2009.
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From the Magazine | Tips and Tools
11/5/2009 8:57:51 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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