Light & Shadow - In watercolor
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@xin-li thanks for the advice. I will try 'wet-on-wet' tomorrow. I am having lots of fun playing with this class.
I am pretty pleased with the next revision. I used a wash for the tone and a mixture of a blender and a direct marker on the paper. I think the transitions work a lot better. Let me know what you think.
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@Lee-White I would be very interested in any watercolor classes you do! I loved the process video you did of the boy in the boat and all the trees..
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@theprairiefox Good! BUT, control that value and don't go too dark with the shadow. There will never be anything near a black on the grey ball or the beach ball. Watercolor is tough when you are trying to get it to do specific things.
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You will need to use a paper like arches cold press for this exercise. Paper is EXTREMELY important when trying for specific results. Arches gives nice smooth blends. The same exercise with a paper like a Canson Montval will end in disaster. In watercolor, the paper dictates the look. When I want to control the blends, I use arches cold press. When I want more texture and technique isn't as important, I use a heavily sized paper like The Canson Montval.
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@Lee-White regarding to watercolor paper: can you print sketches on Arches watercolor paper with Epson P800?
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@xin-li yep!
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@Lee-White thanks for the hints on the paper. I am going to try an Arches cold-press today and see the difference it makes.
I am going to purchase an Arches hot-press paper to test with doing prints and watercolor together. I think the smoother surface will work better for printing, but the heavier paper will hopefully hold up to the watercolor better.
I would agree that the core tone went TOO dark on the last set. But it feels like I am starting to get to a place I like. I was pretty happy with the balls before I added the core shadow. Though the highlight on the beach ball is maybe not smooth enough.
I am glad that I am started with both balls for this project. It is amazing the difference working on the beach ball and the plain ball. I am getting anxious to start the more complicated objects. But I want to have my techique nailed first.
Thanks again for all your feedback.
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Well, wet in/on wet is interesting! I think I might have been doing it too wet!
It worked well for adding tone on the beach ball, but the simple ball it appears all of the pigment moved to the center. I applied water, then added tone via a wash and left it to dry. When I returned there was a line down the center! It might have been the fan working on it as well? Looks interesting, just not what I was going for.
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Here is the final wet on/in wet tones with shadows added.
I used Arches cold-press with this one. I have to say it is the paper is definitely less reactive to the water. But I found the painting with the blender is harder. The paper holds on to the pigment more than the smoother paper. I ordered some hot-press and am curious how that will do with the various methods?
I am very happy with these balls. I am going to continue to use the methods for this one (maybe a little less water on the wet in/on wet) on the other exercises. Wish me luck.
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@theprairiefox Check out this link for a really helpful tutorial by Susan Harrison-Tustain on using Hot Press. It reacts very differently from coldpress.