Watercolor
Class Project Week 3: Cloud Study
I
finished up the Cloud Study at PV in the last class, Torrance we will be done
this in our Monday class though I do have some work to finish up my clouds, I
do think we will be finished with our clouds as well so start looking for your
own project to start the following week. PV students you will need to find a
project you would like to do or finish up the clouds when we have class, I will
be around to help and do spot demos for problem areas.
Once
you feel you are finished with your clouds the final thing to do is put in your
mountains and foreground. It is best to start with the mountains that are
furthest away. They should be softer and grayer than the mountains in front but
they are close enough to have a little bit of color. If you have some gray left
over on your palette you can use that (one of the reasons I don’t clean off my
palette, I may need a color that is already mixed) but if you need to mix gray
remember it is ultramarine blue, a little burnt sienna and a touch of purple
with enough water to dilute it to a medium gray. To this gray I added a touch
of orange and a bit more sienna, I want a warm gray. This color should also be
a stronger value (darker) than the grays in the clouds. The reason for this is
it is closer than the clouds and as objects come closer they become more
intense in color, less gray. This is how you get depth in a 2 dimensional
painting.
I
painted this color onto the ridge on the right side. If you can’t see it, make
it up. You are the artist and you can create things if you think it will help
your painting. While that area is still a bit wet, mix up a touch of orange,
with the mud that is on your brush and a bit more water to create a soft orange
color and lightly touch your brush to the wet paint to create ridgelines and subtle
details in the distant mountains. Let the watercolor do all of the work, just
touch the tip of your brush to the paper, make a line and let it go. If you
mess with it too much you won’t get the look you want and it is an aspect of
watercolor you need to understand so you can make it work for you not against
you.
The
next ridge has more color so to that same gray I used on the last ridge, I
added some hooker’s green and a touch of blue to make it more colorful and a
deeper value (it is closer so it needs to be a deeper value).
While
that ridge is still wet I added a bit more sienna to that gold color I used on
the other ridge and did the same thing: created some detail by just touching
the tip of the brush to the wet paper. I also picked up a little blue and went
on the shadowed side (right side) of the mountains and just touched to createsome shadows. These mountains are closer so you might see those shadows.
With
each closer ridge I added more color into the gray until I got to the tops of
the trees that were closest to the viewer, I under painted with a light green
(sap green with yellow will work and add water to dilute) and while it was wet
I did a similar thing to what I did in the clouds: I added darker greens in
shapes leaving some of the light areas to show highlights.
Let
this dry. If you feel you need to go back in to add color or value wait until
it is dry so you know exactly what you have to do. If you like it the way it is
then it is time to move on to something new. I will see you all in class.