Thursday, October 3, 2024

Results from Cutting Up

Some results from our cut up paintings


This was a fun class. I wanted to post some of the results because they are each so different.

The main focus of this is to look at your paintings in a different light; then reassemble them using the basic elements of art to create focus and unity. You can use color, line, shape, texture, and movement to create harmony in your collage work. 

                                              

Vicki's: Still working on it, but it's a great start. She's also used some Brush-O too. I think the center of interest is very effective.


Emily's. Working on making purples More dominant. It has a light spring feel, super fun to look at.


Carol hasn't glued hers down yet. She framed each square with some print scrapbook paper. That was a very effective way to create harmony.  Then used a punch to cut hearts out to bring it all together. Perfect for the granddaughter's room.


Francis---I love the moons pulling it all together with repeated shapes and colors. And it's good to cross over the boundary of each square to add more interest.


Mary: Making a "window" effect. More realistic. Not finished yet,
but a great start. And a good way to take some muted colors and
make them into a picture.


Sylvia's: not finished, but it has a wonderful fall feel. Makes me feel like
I'm camping in the woods.


Judy: Tied a lot together with some gold stenciling. Almost done.


Barb did hers at home. The green dominance and the gold make it very unified
and fun to look at.




Mine--I still have some work to tie it together. Prob going to use some bits of collage. But liking it. Got to break up that black square a bit and find some way to connect things without getting too busy.



Thursday, September 26, 2024

What to do with old painting you don't like

 
A fun way to use your old paintings:

First, cut up your painting into 3" or 2" squares. I did 3". Don't be too precious, trying to save some small part that you like. You want to be able to look at each piece like a new painting. (This picture started life as a woman fishing at night. ) When we do this in class, we are going to combine all our pieces, using bits of our own and bits of others' paintings.


Pick out the ones you think go together and arrange them in a grid. I used an 11 x 14 piece of mat board, because it is sturdy enough not to buckle when gluing the pieces on.


I used some Aqua colored gouache to add some "moons", and bits of color to tie the pieces together. Then I used some stencils with gold paint in areas. I was using repetition of color and shape (from stencils) to create some unity within the piece.

When putting together your own, be aware that you will use some element to repeat to pull the artwork together. It might be color, a shape, an object, or some texture that repeats itself. 



I used a watercolor black pencil to outline all the pieces that are not black. I watered the border down some to give a softer, almost burned look, to the outline.




There is still more I can do: collage, stamp, etc. 

Here is a YouTube of Lindsey, the Frugal Crafter. It is almost an hour and a half. She did a similar project, only began with a grid that she painted with watercolor and gouache first. 

The video is an hour and 23 minutes, but there are some good ideas in there.

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Heron on Crescent Watercolor Board

 Heron on Crescent Watercolor Board

First draw the heron onto the watercolor board. You should be able to erase as normal, but gently.

Go over the edges with a candle or wax crayon. This is to prevent too much water from getting onto the sides and warping or separating the paper from the support. Take care not to get wax on the painting area.

Use masking fluid on the areas you want to remain white, especially the delicate feathering on the outside of the body. Don't go heavy on the masking fluid, as it can tear the paper when removing.

When the masking fluid is dry, you can paint in your background.

Painting the bird will be a lot like painting on regular paper, so you will be able to glaze color over color without lifting the underpainting.

For the sunset background, I wet from the horizon up. Be sure your paint is completely dissolved or you can get streaks such as the red on the left, and it can't be lifted. I painted yellow at the horizon line, then magenta, then cerulean blue for the top of the sky. I wanted it to blend better than it did. I should have kept the paper wetter. This board does not seem to  blend well. I could also have covered the board with lifting Prep or sizing to make it more cooperative, but didn't think of it at the time.



For the water, I began at the horizon line and worked down: yellow, magenta, blue. While it was still wet, I tried some plastic wrap over the color to create a watery look and allowed it to dry. (Not the masking fluid is still on the bird)


I began painting the heron's body with a gray made from French ultramarine and burnt sienna. I darkened the patch on the head and underbelly.



I removed the masking fluid on the legs and wings. I painted the bill with warm yellow and orange. I used the same color on the legs. I shaded the neck with blue on the right side. 


I painted in the eye and created some volume in the legs. I still have a bit of finishing to do. I'm going to spatter Miskit into the yellow, then paint some greens over it. The I'm going to quiet down the water a little bit. 



I wanted this to look more like the wetlands near me. In the spring yellow flowers pop up, and when the area gets flooded, it looks like the flowers are growing out of the water. So I painted in some greens along the horizon with some yellow spots for the wildflowers. 
For the foreground, I calmed down the water a little bit and put some cat tails in the foreground. I also used some white gouache on the feathers.


OOPS!!! There were some unexpected issues in class. A lot of the boards developed a spotty mottling as soon as the watercolor paint touched the paper. It looked like granulated paint over the page. I've been trying to communicate with the maker to see if it is a mold problem or something else. 

Besides the mottling, the paper tears with a lot of Miskit. Maybe the paper is not as heavyweight as it should be. And you just cannot lift. I put a little lifting Prep on the bird's body, which made it easier to paint. These issues caused a lot of frustration. We had to use gouache to help cover up some of the mottling.

Here is an example of the discoloring of the paper.


Some things I learned:

1. If I did this again, I would put lifting Prep or gum Arabic over the entire board before painting, then dry it. This would make the paint flow and blend better and lift. I could also have used a blending Medium, which would have slowed down the drying time so that the paint could blend better.

2. I think this board would be good for pen and ink. The surface is much smoother than most cold press I've seen. 

3. I think I would not use masking fluid on the feathers, but paint them in with gouache at the end. I would mask out the neck and face if doing a wash over the background. Just not every tiny feather. For one thing, it is hard to soften the edges. For another, I don't like how the masking seems to pool at one end of a line.














Saturday, September 14, 2024

Using Crescent Watercolor Board

CRESCENT WATERCOLOR BOARD

What it is:

Arches used to make a watercolor board, but has discontinued. CRESCENT now makes one. It is cold press watercolor paper that is adhered to a heavy 1/8" thick board. The crescent brand is smoother than most cold press, though. 


Advantages:

There are several reasons you might want to purchase this. One is that it does not need to be stretched or even taped down, since it is rigid and does not warp. There is no real "learning curve" to learn how to use it, because it is so similar to the paper you are accustomed to. It takes most of the techniques we love--salt, masking fluid, Saran wrap, mediums, etc. Like cold press paper, you can glaze without disturbing the bottom layer of paint.

I was pleasantly surprised the first time I used it. The colors seem very vibrant, similar to hot press paper. And the brush seems to glide over the smooth surface. 

It is lightweight to travel with, and you won't need any hard surface to put underneath or any clips to keep the wind from blowing it away. 

I would recommend, however, that you should PLAN the size of your finished product for framing. For example, if I want my frame to be 16 x 20, and want to mat this to a 12 x 16, I will use a 16 x 20 piece of board with a 16x20 mat and an opening of 12x16 (a 2" mat). This makes framing much simpler. Otherwise you have a heavy piece of board you are trying to adhere to a lighter weight mat in order to fit the larger frame. 

Disadvantages:

Cost is more than a sheet of paper. Crescent watercolor board is available from art supply stores such as Dick Blick, Jerry's Artarama, and Cheap Joe's. It costs about $11.50 for a 20 x 16. You can buy 3 packs of 8x10, (about $12) 9x12, (about $17) and 11x14. (22.46). You can purchase singles up to 30 x 40 size.

I bought one 20x16 and made it into 4 8x10's. I wouldn't recommend this, though, because the board is 1/8 thick and difficult to cut. 

I had some trouble lifting the paint. That can be remedied with lifting Prep.

Be careful that what you buy says "Watercolor Board." Crescent makes many kinds of paper AND boards, some for colored pencil, some for illustration, etc. 

Here is a short video with Steve Mitchell testing the watercolor board:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Svhn3vnaYno


Finishing the 2nd version of the Heron on Canvas

 


Here is the finished version of the heron by the shore instead of in a marsh.
Since the background is light, I had to make adjustments to make the head stand out.
So, in addition to shading the neck, I made the beak darker and lightly outlined parts of the white head that touch the lighter sky.

I made a distant shoreline with small white marks to indicate islands where they congregate and have their nests. I added some reflection of the islands in the water. I found some references for some flying herons and added them to the sky to add some interest and improve the composition. 

I also added some pale pinks to the sky. Some ripples in the foreground water around the leg.

Here they are side by side. Two different moods, same reference.
 

                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              


           

Thursday, September 12, 2024

Painting on Watercolor Canvas - Blue Heron

 


There is a previous post about how I prepared the canvas to use watercolor. This one is just focused on the painting process itself.

The original reference photo was from Pixabay.


Draw/trace your picture onto the prepared canvas. If you make mistakes or get smudges from the graphite paper, use a magic eraser, dampened, to erase. A normal eraser will just smudge. 

Keep these tips in mind as you paint:

1. Put down the paint in the value and color you want the first time.
2. Using tube paints will make it easier and faster to achieve the paint consistency you need.
3. Don't use your good sable brushes. Canvas is hard on them.
4. Remember, everything can be ..and will be...lifted back to white.

This is a subject that can have any sort of background (except desert). Anywhere you find water, you can find blue herons. You can make a background of sea shore, lake shore, marsh, swamp, wetlands. Some have even been found in meadows and farmland. There are many near where I live, which is near an oxbow and the Ohio river. They like to nest in high places, like trees or island hills, away from predators.

So I left the background for you to choose.

Regardless of what you choose, the background is painted first. Paint right up to or even over the outside of the bird--you will get your whites back at the end. 

For the marshy background above, I held the canvas at an angle, vertically, to apply paints and let them run together--mostly a variety of greens and some burnt sienna, concentrating darks at the edge of the lake. I painted up to and even into the outer feathers of the bird.

When that dried, I turned the board horizontally and painted wet into wet, letting the paint run along the horizon to create the look of a pond or lake edge. 

Here is one I began using a pale, seashore background. The background is all done painted horizontally, allowing the paints to run left to right.



Painting the Heron

After the background is dry, using a small damp brush, I carefully remove paint that may have got on to beak, neck, etc. to bring it back to white.

To paint the Heron, I made a mixture of gray using French ultramarine and burnt sienna. There are many professional artists who use various strengths of this mix for grays. Add more blue if you want it grayer; more burnt sienna if you want it browner.

I treated the body of the bird, wings included, as if it were a giant football to be shaded with a medium gray. I used a bluer gray on the right side of the neck to create a shadow on the neck, like a cylinder.
When this dried, I painted a dark on the shoulder patch, the belly under the wing feathers, and part of the tail, and on the head. I used a dark made from French ultramarine and burnt sienna, but I added some pthalo blue to brighten up the color.

When dry, I used a fine brush dipped in water to remove paint to create feathers. It does not have to be a "scrub" brush, just firm enough to remove paint lightly. Very similar to the step of removing paint on the elephant on yupo. 

Legs and head

The main color I used for the legs is quin burnt orange, with yellow for hilights. You can use a warm yellow mixed with burnt sienna or red. The beak is a warm yellow with some burnt sienna in it. Use a dark mix for the black on his head and the feather extending from it. Make sure the canvas is dry when you apply these finer shapes or the paint will not be hard edges.

The eye is yellow, and after it dried, I used a fine pen to outline it, as it is too small for me to paint with accuracy. 
The leg is reflected in the pool of water. For that reflection, I painted it lighter with no hard lines. Then I ran a damp small brush through it (like water ripples) to break up the reflection a bit. 

Details in the water

I wanted it to look like water lilies in the pond. So I made some lilies using a thicker consistency of dark green, and painted right over the water with lily pads. For the pink flowers, I removed paint in the shapes of the flowers. When that was dry and back to white, I painted in the flower shapes in pink. 

**Sketcher's note on drawing lily pads: They seem big and round, but remember they are being viewed from an angle. If you want them to appear as if they are floating on the water, you will have to make them flat. They will only appear round if they are directly below you. Sorry, perspective is everywhere. 


Prove it to yourself: Make a dark dot in the center of a round lid. Take pictures of it at different distances and different angles. Notice just how flat the curves are as they touch the surface of your floor or counter. Also notice how that dark center dot is farther from the bottom of the circle than the top. At eye level, 
you can't even see the dot.
Bonus: all your friends will think you are weird for taking so many pictures of a round lid.



Finishing and framing

When you do watercolor on canvas, finishing is pretty easy. Use the Kamar Varnish spray, which we used on yupo projects. Spray a very light spray. Wait 15 min. Spray another very light spray. This "sets" the paint. (a heavier spray can move the paint, just as water would). Then you can give it a coat or two. After  it dries, test it to see if the paint moves with water. If not, you're good.

You do not need to mat this, and you can frame it without glass, as long as you have varnished it well.

Thursday, September 5, 2024

Yupo and Masa Paper Elephants

 Results from yupo and masa elephants

In today's class we finished up these two elephants. When the yupo version is finished, you have to seal it to keep it from being damaged. I typically use Krylon Kamar Varnish, which is specifically designed for watercolor. From a distance of 12-18 inches, use a light spray. Then let it dry before adding another coat of light spray. This is to SEAL it first. Then you can use a heavier spray to protect the painting. The first light coats are necessary because too heavy a spray can move the paint, just as water will.

BRAG TIME:

Here are some of the results from the yupo:

                                                       Judy


Delores


Vicki


Sylvia


Francis


Carol


Shirley




Jackie


Masa Paper results:

Sylvia




Judy


Emily


Delores


Jackie


Shirley


Some aren't finished yet, but I'll post them next time!