Thursday, January 16, 2025

More about split color wheel mixing

Creating a split color wheel

Below is the first color wheel I created in Sandy Maudlin's class. It took weeks for me to complete. Since we didn't have time for that I chose a simpler color wheel. This puppy takes an entire 22 x 30 sheet of watercolor paper. Good thing I marked all my color choices with codes on the bottom left.

This lesson was all about creating colors from just 6 primaries. A "split" color wheel uses a warm and a cool of each primary. I prefer the term "leaning toward" to warm or cool. If you want very pure and clean looking secondaries (orange/green/violet) you choose primaries that "lean" toward those colors. Therefore, the "cool" yellow, which has no orange in it (like lemon) faces the "cool" blue, which leans toward green.

The warm yellow (that leans toward orange) faces the warm red (that leans toward orange). The Cool Red, such as magenta or quin rose, leans toward violet, so it faces the warm red (French ultramarine) which leans to violet.

The students downloaded this color wheel and drew it on watercolor paper. Then they combined the primaries that faced each other to make the secondary colors. My suggestion was to make the secondary color first. Example: To make a good secondary green, mix the cool yellow and the cool blue (cerulean) on the palette until you get a good green. Then add yellow to the mix to make a yellow green; then add blue to the mix until you get a bluer (more teal) green. Then move on to the other secondaries.

I would suggest labeling the colors you use so you don't get confused.

The little half circles on the outer wheel that look gray are filled with the complement (opposite) of each primary mixed with that primary to create gray or brown. 


After the color wheel, we made a chart at the bottom to show what would happen if you mix colors that do not lean toward each other.  There is a final column to see if you can figure out what that color's complement is. (Hint: a WARM yellow has a COOL--bluer-- violet; a COOL yellow has a WARM-redder- violet)

For those who want to do a more complex color wheel, here is one that allows you to mix colors that lean toward each other; then colors that do not lean toward each other; and the inner circle uses only colors in your printer: cyan, yellow, and magenta.




Here is a color wheel I made for myself on a larger piece of paper (11 x 14) I liked having larger spaces to color so I could see what a color looked like dark or watered down. When I was done, I went through some of my tube paints and tried to match them to where they would show up on this color wheel. It's a good way of discovering which paints you might want, which ones you don't need. The piece in the middle helps identify color schemes (triad, complementary, analogous, etc.) but there is another lesson on that on a different blog.




After the color wheel, we talked about complementary colors. Complement means "to complete." So the complement of a color is across the color wheel/opposite. If you want the complement of red, what colors are missing from the primaries? Yellow and Blue, which make green. Green is the complement of red. Violet is made of blue and red...what is missing? Yellow. That is the complement of violet. And Blue and orange are complements. 

Below is a link to my blog with the exercise we did with complementary colors.




We also discussed the advisability of using tube color when you want to create dark brown, black, or grays. It is very hard to get your primaries in pans to get thick enough to make a dark black, so I take a little directly from a tube and mix the colors with a little water. That takes away from the struggle of getting enough thickness in a pan paint.

A very popular way to make blacks and grays is with French ultramarine and Burnt sienna, which is a very orange brown. You make it grayer by adding more blue; browner by adding more burnt sienna.  Mixing Alizarin/Pthalo/and burnt umber also produces a nice black. You can experiment with combinations. 

I was asked about my favorite colors to use. That changes from time to time, subject, and things I learned.
For example, cadmium is toxic, and many companies are gradually switching over to non-toxic cadmium "hues," which duplicate the color without the toxic cadmium. 

So what I am most likely to use are:(bold ones are  in my palette)

Yellows

warm: new gamboge (very orange) or hansa deep (less orange)
cool: hansa yellow light or lemon yellow
neutral: primary yellow (good for combining with anything)

Reds

warm: Pyrrol red or Pyrrol scarlet
cools: magenta, quin rose or permanent rose, Alizarin for darks

Blues

warm: (lean to violet) French ultramarine, cobalt (I use cobalt for glazing)
cools: Pthalo, cerulean, cyan

Other necessary: Burnt sienna

My favorite convenience colors: (chosen for different reasons)

Transparent Pyrrol orange (for flowers)
Quin burnt scarlet (for skin tones)
quin coral (flowers & skin tones)
quin gold (for shading yellow flowers)
raw sienna or ochre (skin tones)
burnt umber
lunar earth (for granulation)
green apatite genuine (because I love it)
Carbazole violet

Some people like a basic green like sap (warmer), Hookers (bluer)
But if you get a true green, you can make anything just by adding blue or yellow, red or violet.
Personally, I don't put green in my pallet; I just carry little contact lens carriers in my pallet to hold greens or other odd colors I want for a painting. 


My Blog on split color wheel simplified

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/8812132386157895665/4240977623940030232

Split color wheel cards--If you want some homework!

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/8812132386157895665/6322867704138753851

creating a split primary wheel (16 min)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8BlD6ijheyk




Thursday, January 9, 2025

Watercolor Boot Camp Week #1: Supplies, strokes


 Daily I see artists struggling with concepts that I either learned or WISH I'd learned early in my watercolor journey. In this three weeks, I hope I can help artists avoid some of the pitfalls so they can progress faster.

This first week is about supplies. You honestly don't need much to begin. But your choices can greatly affect your progress.

Basically you need:

*watercolor paint, six colors

*3 watercolor brushes (about an 8 round, 3/4 " flat, and liner brush)

*100% cotton 140 lb paper

Other than that, you need a palette for your paints; some paper towels or white tissue, water, spray bottle, masking tape, something to store and protect brushes, and a willingness to experiment and make mistakes.


PAINT:

There are HUNDREDS of paint colors and brands out there. Do you choose pans or tubes? Do they have to be professional grade?

I was spoiled by having an amazing teacher when I began. She had us use the right paper and paints right from the beginning. I have my preferences, but to begin USE WHAT YOU HAVE. Professional paints have purer pigments, fewer fillers, and they perform better. Watercolor paints have several attributes that other mediums don't have, besides the "hue" or color.

TRANSPARENCY: This is probably the most important, because it is the transparency that gives watercolor it's glow and beauty. Transparency is labeled transparent/semi-transparent/opaque. It is usually not on the label, but you can get charts from manufacturers that give that information. 

SEDIMENTARY: This provides texture. Some paints are not able to be ground as finely as others, which makes some particles heavy, and they granulate. Some of these are burnt sienna, French ultramarine, any of the lunar paints, etc. Professional paints will designate this on a chart.

LIGHTFAST: This means the paint will not fade over time. Some paints (Alizarin, Opera) are famous for being "FUGITIVE", which means they fade quickly. Paints will indicate by Roman numerals I, II, III, or IV, with IV being the least light fast. You want paint that is I or II.

STAINING/LIFTING: Professional paints can be staining or not, and should indicate on the label. Staining paints quickly get into the fibers of the paper, and are hard to remove or "lift." Artists take advantage of this quality in several ways. If they want to glaze other colors over another, and want the under color to not mix or lift, they will use a stainer. If you are doing flowers or a face, and you know you will be lifting high lights, you would choose LIFTING colors. Common stainers are Pthalos and Carbazole.

PIGMENT COLOR:  Pro paints will provide the pigment number. This helps in comparing brands, which don't always use the same name as another brand for the same color. For example, French Ultramarine is PB (pigment blue) 29; Imperial Purple is PB 29 plus PV 19 (pigment violet). Winsor Violet is P 23, which is the same as Lucas Dioxazine or Daniel Smith Carbazole.

SERIES NO.  You will see a Series No. on many paints. That doesn't indicate quality of paint. Instead, paints are priced according to what it costs to produce. Series one will be the cheapest; series 5 will be the most expensive, because they are made with the most expensive pigments. 

INFLUENCE or TINTING STRENGTH: This can be important to remember when mixing colors. Yellows have very little influence, so if you want a green, you will need more yellow than blue. You would start with the yellow and add bits of blue until the hue you want is achieved.

VEHICLE or binder: Most watercolor, except for QoR, use gum Arabic as the binder, or the vehicle which the pigment is ground into. It is also the same vehicle for gouache, which is an opaque watercolor.

BRANDS:

People have their favorites, and you can mix and match them. I pretty much stick with Daniel Smith, Winsor Newton, Lucas, Holbein, M. Graham (which has honey in it), Sennelier. There are some homemade companies cropping up that also do a good job, but they can be expensive.

Student Grade: Cotman by Winsor Newton makes a pretty good student grade of paint. If that is what you have, use it, but gradually add some of the better brands to your list. Student grade will have more filler, less pigment, and miss out on some of the other qualities of watercolor paint. 

TUBES OR PANS

My preference is tubes for several reasons. I always have pure paint ready if I need it.(paint in the pan, especially yellow, gets polluted by other colors).  It is easier to mix a dark color, rather than struggle to reconstitute a dry paint. I can put the paint where I want it in my palette. Plus I can easily share a color with someone. 

Pans are handy and usually cheaper because they have more filler. Often your set places the colors close together, and they get mixed up and need to be cleaned out constantly.

WHAT COLORS DO I NEED?

Start with a "warm" and a "cool" of every primary. In the next week we will discuss the "split primary" color wheel, which will help understand color mixing. Cool colors lean toward blue, and warm ones lean toward orange, in general. Generally speaking, you can make nearly every color with 6 primaries:

WARMS

Reds that lean toward orange (I avoid cadmiums bc they can be toxic. They do now make cad "hues")

Blues that lean toward purple -- cobalt; French Ultramarine)

Yellows that have a tint of orange

COOLS

Reds that lean toward violet (pinks; magenta, permanent rose)

Blues that lean toward green (cerulean; pthalo)

Yellows that look very pure, like lemon 

You can prob get away with one yellow if it is not too light and doesn't lean to orange

I NEVER use white or black, so you don't need it.

Many colors are considered "convenience" colors, because they are mixes that are used frequently. (such as sap green). Some you get because you need something either staining or lifting. Some are heavily sedimentary, and you want that look for landscapes. Some are neutrals, such as burnt sienna. Your palette will evolve as you become more experienced and learn what subjects appeal to you. 

PALETTES

Here are a few I've used over the years. 

The first I'd ever painted from (outside of a plastic dish) was the one on the left. The wells are large, and it has two large mixing sections. I still use one like this at home. It allows me to have the colors I need, and to use large or small brushes. An advantage not many consider is that colors don't get mixed up, contaminated, as much as in a palette with smaller wells. Also, the lid has two additional mixing sections. 

The one on the top right is a small, about 9 inch, palette. The wells are pretty small. But it does have 5 sections for mixing. I often use this to lend to students.

The bottom is a stay-wet circular one I bought because I thought it would be nice to have all my colors in the color wheel. The wells are nice size. But it has no space for mixing paint. Bummer.


On the left is my most recent palette, a Mijello with 40 wells for paint. I thought I'd at last add some colors I didn't have space for, like some greens. But, alas, when I fold the lid over, any wet paint gets mixed in with paints on the bottom. So sad.

On the top right is one I use for kids and is OK for small items. The daisy shaped one on the bottom right is cute, but I only use it to store odd colors or tubes that I've had to pry open. The very bottom one is a flat tray, originally for acrylic paints, that I just use for mixing space.


I used this one for teaching and traveling for a long time. It has trays that pull out to give 3 large spaces for mixing. It cracked, and the hinge broke, which is a weakness with palettes by Mijello. After that I bought the larger one, above, and was disappointed. So, for traveling and teaching I am going back to this one. 

I've arranged my paints, left to right, like the color wheel. It starts on the top left with cool yellow, then to warm yellow, then oranges, then warm reds, then cool reds, then purples, then cool blues, then greener blues, then neutrals. No greens. See those little cups in the middle? They are little containers I use to keep a green or two and any odd colors I want for a painting. 

This one works while I'm teaching. But at home, especially for bigger paintings, I like my old big one. I also have a tiny palette for traveling in the car. 


BRUSHES

There are many decent brands of brushes out there. I personally like Silver Black Velvet, but Princeton Neptune makes a reasonably priced brush that I like. Some people love the Escoda, but they are more costly. You will get a lot of tips from other students, so be open to that.

To begin with, you only need three. I like a round brush, about a size 8; a flat, about 3/4 inch; and a liner brush for fine details. That is all I had for years..... specialty brushes are cool, but not necessary. If you plan to paint larger, then larger brushes are needed. 

Watercolor brushes are generally short handled and designed to suck up moisture and release it. Sable is wonderful, but I honestly like the synthetic or mixed just as well. I like my brushes to have a little snap to them, not to be "moppy." 
Your brush should be able to come to a sharp point when wet, with no extra hairs sticking out. It should hold together when wet. As a rule, you should not use watercolor brushes for any other medium, except possibly gouache. (which uses the same vehicle). 

You might consider getting two other inexpensive brushes:  One is a "lifting" brush...one that is stiffer...to help lift out unwanted paint or to lighten an area. The other is a small brush used only for masking fluid, usually and old brush no longer good for watercolor. 

In class I had a set from Emma LeFebvre from craftamo. You can watch a brush demo on craftamo.com/botanical

Cleaning brushes--super easy. Just rinse out with lukewarm water and soap. Bring to a sharp point, then air dry flat. When they are dry, put them in something (brush side up) to protect them.

PAPER

Just because a paper is called watercolor paper, doesn't mean it is any good. Even paper that is 100% cotton and acid free isn't always quality.  My preference is Arches, Fabriano Artistico, or Kilimanjaro. For class it should be 140 pounds cold press. 

Arches is great because it only makes ONE quality of paper--the good stuff. It will take punishment, any technique I need to use, will take masking fluid and tape and contac paper. It absorbs the paint beautifully, and has the right amount of sizing. I can glaze or lift. If you spend money on anything, spend it on paper. 

There are some less expensive papers which I think are OK to practice on because they seem to absorb the paint and give a similar effect as good paper. They either don't lift, or don't take masking, but are OK for other techniques. There may be others but these are the ones I've tried. 
 FLUID, Bao Hong, Bee 100% cotton

WEIGHT is important. We usually use 140 pound because lighter weights will buckle. 300 pound paper is quite expensive, and requires additional water because it absorbs more. 

SOME RULES TO REMEMBER

Over and over again, I hear that the key to mastering watercolor is learning to CONTROL THE WATER.
So most of what I am concentrating on will be how to control and manipulate the water and paint. It takes practice. 

The first RULE we talked about was ONLY PAINT ON WET Or DRY PAPER. Ideal wet will be a shiny area, but NOT PUDDLEY. There is a time when the paper loses its shine, but is not "DRY." To tell if your paper is dry enough to paint on, touch the area with your finger tips; then touch some paper that has not been painted. They should be the same temperature. If the painted area feels cold to the touch, it is not DRY.

The second rule we talked about is Water flows from areas of more wetness (like your brush) to areas of less wetness. Paint will not flow to the dry paper unless you purposely put it there. If you wet an area then add paint the paint will be darkest where you first put it down with your brush, then gradually get lighter as it travels down the wet paper. 

PRACTICES

First, introduce wet into wet technique, where you wet the paper first, apply paint, then learn to "charge" another color into it. See what happens to the paint in a 'puddley area" and on one that is just "shiny."

Practice controlling the water/paint ration by making lines that start out dark and gradually get lighter. To make it lighter, after each addition of paint, blot the brush on a towel to remove some paint, or add a little water to the brush.

Practice using your brush as a mop for when you have too much paint. Use the brush to mop up the excess paint/water for a more even spread of paint.

The first thing I asked people to do was to play with brushes. See what their brushes can do. Make marks, see how long a line they can make before running out of paint. Practice how much pressure to put on the brush.  Try using light pressure, then harder pressure to use the belly of the brush, then light pressure. Use the marks to swatch out some colors.  


Then practice making "washes." Practice how much water to paint they need. See how to use the brush to pick up excess water and paint. Then make a graded wash in a shape, like below.



When the graded wash is dry, practice painting some long strokes over it, such as in the picture below. These strokes require you to start with the sharp point of the brush, gradually add more pressure as you pull the brush along, then lifting the brush back to the point to end the stroke. 
(I'm being sneaky and introducing "glazing" in this one) Notice how the color of your stroke changes as it passes through each color on the graded wash.

(all of these grasses are made with the same brush, just using different pressure)


Here are some short videos that may help, and not be as boring as this:

Mind of Watercolor: Steve Mitchell discusses the importance of learning water control



Emma LeFebvre talks about supplies and exercises--27 minutes



Jackie Hernandez supplies--9 minutes


Kristin Van Leoven 5 things I wish I knew 16 min









Thursday, December 5, 2024

Wax Batik Snowman pics Plus a surprise

 Results from Student's wax batik

The main supplies used for making corrections (AFTER it was mounted and dry):

Inktense sticks

Gouache

Bleed-Proof White

Black Pen

Watercolor

All the instructions are in last time's post.

                              Lynn: Didn't require much, just used some dry inktense stick to brighten the tree


Sylvia: wanted to retain as much of the batik look as possible, so mostly
used the side of a white inktense to create extra texture in the sky


Francis: used a little white on the trees, then some inktense sticks (yellow-green) to brighten the trees a little


Sarah decided a city girl needs a city snowman, so made a hint of
city in the background. She used watercolor to clean up some edges around the
snowman face and tree.


David used bleed proof white to get ride of unwanted black lines. He mixed it with some blue WC to create some shadows on the snow. I like the volume in the trees.


Vicki added bleed proof white to the trees plus a little
yellow green intense stick.


Carol did not do the crackle at the end, and the results looks so pretty.
It didn't need much touch up at all.


You can't see it well, but Shirley used a lot of shiny silver
to make it look like snow. That kind of paint doesn't copy well,
but in person it looks very crystal-like.


Jackie kept the background light and pastel, and I love the effect. She used some blue for the crackling, and then made some more blue by running a stick of inktense over the cracks. Still has to put a face on him, but he's looking sweet.


WATERCOLOR STENCILING




In class I gave everyone a stencil and a unique brush called a blending brush. It allows you to stencil with watercolor without the bleeds. The brush looks like a white sponge but is actually a lot of absorbant hairs.
Card artists use it with stamp pads to blend colors effectively.

Besides getting clean stencils, it is not expensive. Mine are called Yoseng blending brushes.


Jackie Hernandez shows how to use this brush for stenciling:



Thursday, November 21, 2024

 Final Steps in Batik


When the final color is the value you want it to be, dry it all well and put a final coat of wax over the entire piece of rice paper. (see below)


Freeze it for 5 minutes. While it is freezing, mix up some strong color in a separate cup (this is to keep the wax out of your palette.) In the past, I have used a black mixture, but you can also use dark green, blue, violet, or blue.

Remove the painting from the freezer and crumble it up in a ball. This will loosen some of the wax. Shake excess into the trash.

With a stiff (OLD) brush, push some of the dark color into the cracks. You can do all of the page, or you can pick and choose the places you want this dark batik look. In the picture below, you will see black lines in the snow...I'm wishing I'd used some blue instead for a gentler look.


IRONING OFF THE WAX

You will need lots of newsprint or paper bags or brown packing paper. Set an iron to a medium setting.
Lay about 3 layers on the bottom, set your picture on the top, then top that with three more layers of paper.
Be sure to cover all the painting. Iron until you see the wax melt onto the paper.
Change the paper and iron again.
Repeat until you see no wax residue coming from your painting.

MOUNTING THE BATIK

You can now mount your batik onto a WHITE surface. I usually just use my less expensive watercolor paper (Like Canson XL, Strathmore, etc.). I use Matt medium for the glue, but other glues will work. Just please don't use Elmers school glue.

Next week I am showing how I mount it on a piece of hard panel with a gallery wrap.

Step One:

Prepare the board by brushing on GAC or other prep that will protect the surface from any oils or color in the wood. (If you already have a board primed and gessoed, you don't have to do this) Put two coats of gesso on top of that and dry completely.

Step Two:

Find the center of the painting. Cover the board with Matt medium gel. (IF the painting is large, you may have to do that in stages so it doesn't dry too quickly) Center the painting on the board, and gently smooth out the wrinkles. I usually put a piece of wax paper over the painting and use a brayer to smooth it out. This prevents the paint from coming off onto the brayer and your fingers. 

Dry this completely. When the batik is mounted and dried, you are ready to make any corrections you want to make.

Angela Fehr does a video about mounting on a panel. She shows how to do it with regular WC paper. My steps are similar (she uses a commercial primer first, which replaces the GAC sealant and gesso). Also, with rice paper, I do not seal with wax. I just use a Kamar varnish. 


MAKING CORRECTIONS

Any time you want to make corrections, which should be on a dry, mounted paper, try using watercolor first. Sometimes there is a wax residue that resist the watercolor, but often it is fine. Mounting the batik gives the paper some stability and also allows some control over the paint.

If You lost some whites try: white gouache; posca pen; bleed proof white.
If you want a light color over a dark color, you can use gouache, or even pastels.
Other things you can try for small corrections are: watercolor pencils; inktense sticks or pencils; tiny bits of white fluid acrylics; posca pens; black permanent pens; pastels.


Thursday, November 14, 2024

Wax Batik Christmas Card

Wax Batik in Watercolor

Watercolor Batik uses wax as a resist, and then it is completely removed at the end.

I learned this method of painting about 12 years ago, and I love it. Each artist, of course, has their own twist on how to do it, what works for her . I love the look, but it takes some preparation. Here are a few that I have done in batik:

Today's project: Snowman Card

"Feed Me"


Katy


"It's a Jungle Out Here"


                                                                Bird of Paradise


This time we are doing a simple (about 4 waxes) Christmas Card. If you are just learning the technique, you need to keep it simple, with very few small shapes. Keep the size around 12 inches...much bigger takes a lot more time; smaller makes the shapes so small it is hard to control the wax.

Supplies:

Rice paper, about 30gsm, like ginwashi, kinwashi, or unryu
A wax pot (I use a small skillet) that can be set to temp of 180 to 200
Old brushes that will only be used for waxing
wax paper/butcher paper
water proof pen
brushes and watercolor paints

Before I begin the steps, I want to give some safety measurements and caution.
1. The wax must be kept at 180 to 200 degrees. Cooler, it will clump up. Higher... and you will see it smoke...it can burn and catch fire. I am using silicon padding underneath it.
SO: please turn it off when not in use. And give the person using it some space.

2. This paper is strong enough when dry, but fragile when wet. ALWAYS keep a backing on it (like the wax paper) when moving it or drying it. Small tears can be repaired, but it's better not to rip it.

3. ONLY USE WAX BRUSHES. They are just brushes designated to be used with wax. Do not use your good brushes. Once you dip a brush in the wax, that is all that brush is good for.

Step One

Draw your sketch and shrink it to about half a sheet of copy paper. You are going to make a "map" of values to show which areas to wax 1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.
Leave everything that will be white, white on the paper. This is everything that you will wax first, before you paint your first layer.
Color in everything that is the next (light) value with a colored pencil or marker, say blue. This is your second wax...after you paint your first layer, before your 2nd layer of paint.
Color your next value with another colored pencil, say red. That will be your third wax, before you paint a third layer of paint.
Continue until you have all your values a different color.

This "map" is about 4 x 6



Step Two

After you have designed your painting, it should be drawn to the size of the paper you want to use.
Set the sketch underneath the rice paper and trace the picture.
Then use a water-proof fine tip marker to trace over the lines. (You don't HAVE to do this,
but water will wash away your lines, and you might have to redraw if in pencil)





Step Three -  1st WAX

Heat the wax to 180-200 degrees F. NO HIGHER. It can cause a fire.
Use ONLY brushes designated for wax...it does not come out.

Set your rice paper sketch on top of the shiny side of the butcher paper. This is to protect the work surface from the wax.
Melt the wax and pick some up with your brush. You have to work quickly, as it dries fast.
Carefully wax all the areas that will remain white. (See all the #1's in the sketch...
The white areas in the colored pencil drawing in step 1)

I also SPATTER wax before painting to get some snowflakes. I ignored the face features and just waxed over the entire face...I'll put the tiny details in later.

Step 4 - PAINT 

Here is one area where I learned differently from some of the videos. I paint everything over with a light value, even if it will eventually be a dark value. In the videos, they paint mostly the areas that are light value. Either way, you next dry the painting completely. I often use a fan to help with this. You can use a hair dryer on LOW only....otherwise the wax can remelt. 

STEP 5 - WAX Again

Look for the areas with a #2 or blue on my map. Wax only these areas next. Then paint a darker value over these areas. (Again, I paint everything, gradually increasing my other values, but you can do just those areas.) Spatter again.

Step 5 - Paint again

Paint everything over with a darker value. You can choose those colors in specific places if you want to.

Repeat wax-paint-dry- cycle until you have the darkest values you want in your picture. 

If your wax gets a bit out of control or you accidentally drip on something unintended, don't get upset. We can fix anything.

Next week:

Finishing the batik/waxing off/mounting/making corrections.


Here are some tutorials you might want to watch:

Kathy George: 2-hour tutorial

(371) Little French Pitcher Batik - Watercolor Lesson with Guest Artist Kathie George - YouTube

Angela Fehr with guest batik artist: 30 min

https://www.google.com/search?q=batik+watercolor+painting&rlz=1CATRIY_enUS1088&oq=batik+watercolor&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUqBwgBEAAYgAQyCQgAEEUYORiABDIHCAEQABiABDIHCAIQABiABDIICAMQABgWGB4yCggEEAAYDxgWGB4yCAgFEAAYFhgeMggIBhAAGBYYHjIICAcQABgWGB4yCAgIEAAYFhgeMggICRAAGBYYHtIBCTg3NTdqMGoxNagCCLACAQ&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:31eef589,vid:ChSWOATH9us,st:0

Thursday, November 7, 2024

Watercolor Grounds

 Watercolor Grounds

Grounds are mediums that enable you to paint on substrates--surfaces--that you might not be able to paint watercolor on. They can also change it, add textures, or add background color.

We broke a piece of paper (or some used matte board) into 8 sections, and applied different grounds in 6 of those sections: Titanium White, Light Dimensional, Gold, Buff, Black, and Transparent. The last two spaces were reserved for Textural Medium and Lift Preparation. (see below) Before putting the transparent ground on, we put a mark or picture on the area.




We drew pictures to paint in each section. Here are a few ideas.


We tried painting on each section. Try to use a picture with texture on the dimensional ground.
On the black, use light, paint lightened with white, or iridescent medium. 



Here is an owl done on the dimensional ground.


What I'd like people to notice are three things:

1. The ease of painting on ground
2. Whether or not the paint can be lifted
3. How bright and intense the paint appears.



In the section for lifting Prep, Apply lifting Prep on half the paper.
Paint staining colors in bars--pthalos, purples, or reds. When dry,
try to lift part for on the prep side, and on the untreated side.
Compare how much or how easily it can be be lifted.


On the texture side, just paint a wash and see the kind of texture
it creates. In the picture below, I used gum Arabic on the clouds and
texture medium on the red ground.