1: to replicate someone's work effectively, you really need to paint like they do. i learned how difficult it is to bleed colours after years of desperately trying to keep them separate. 2: bleeding colours, mixing colours, avoiding black, and separating shades into different sections/tones. 3: mapping in this sense means to divide up your work into defined portions, so as to effectively colour them and fill them in like a colour-by-number painting. 4: i already knew what to do, i was just desperately avoiding bleeding watercolours until now because i don't like how muddled and brown it looks. 5: colour mapping, using big brushes, and taking fewer strokes 6: taking as little strokes as you possible can, and being very decisive with the paint you put on the canvas. 7: the guy made me feel so peaceful to watch!! i really liked how relaxed he was, and you could really see the confidence in his strokes. 8: lines- nope colour- lots of it to differentiate exposure space- full and busy, your eye darts around the page shape- simplistic but easy to define what the object is texture- bleeding colours, mixing, and blending. blotting with paper towels value- avoiding black to make shadows and using a lot of purple and brown undertones 9: flowy, precise, fluid, decisive, light. 10: colour mixing!
i lile to see you explore and push yourself. remember , you ar not learning just HOW to paint but how to THINK in paint. painting is thinking made visible so the more techniques you know the better you can express yourself. like, learning new words.
1: to replicate someone's work effectively, you really need to paint like they do. i learned how difficult it is to bleed colours after years of desperately trying to keep them separate.
ReplyDelete2: bleeding colours, mixing colours, avoiding black, and separating shades into different sections/tones.
3: mapping in this sense means to divide up your work into defined portions, so as to effectively colour them and fill them in like a colour-by-number painting.
4: i already knew what to do, i was just desperately avoiding bleeding watercolours until now because i don't like how muddled and brown it looks.
5: colour mapping, using big brushes, and taking fewer strokes
6: taking as little strokes as you possible can, and being very decisive with the paint you put on the canvas.
7: the guy made me feel so peaceful to watch!! i really liked how relaxed he was, and you could really see the confidence in his strokes.
8: lines- nope
colour- lots of it to differentiate exposure
space- full and busy, your eye darts around the page
shape- simplistic but easy to define what the object is
texture- bleeding colours, mixing, and blending. blotting with paper towels
value- avoiding black to make shadows and using a lot of purple and brown undertones
9: flowy, precise, fluid, decisive, light.
10: colour mixing!
i lile to see you explore and push yourself. remember , you ar not learning just HOW to paint but how to THINK in paint. painting is thinking made visible so the more techniques you know the better you can express yourself. like, learning new words.
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