(dog obviously using acrylic not watercolor)
Some personal stuff that I observed help frustrated and talented art students over 10+ years making, learning and teaching art professionally for no reason. Geared towards developing an everyday open-ended watercolor practice for expressive observational painting more than old-school illustration. Put together for a dev friend who bought some paints.
⚠️ All super-subjective and a work in progress, adding more as I think of it...
Recently Added --> Exercises! 🎉
- keep it simple
- buy brick sets / not tubes
- more money only helps up to ~$30
- check the pigments on the paint bricks
- if they list actual pigments it's good enough
- red flag if all the bricks are light / chalky looking
- red flag if the bricks are round / don't have pigments listed
- they might work a little but you'll hate painting
- just buy this / my mom bought it for me
- brushes are all doomed
- buy them on sale / follow your gut / no rules
- like magic wands / lightsabers maybe
- natural vs. synthetic hair doesn't matter
- keep plastic tubes if brushes have them
- rinse / wring out / re-shape by hand often
- reshape gently when cleaned out and moist
- aim for original shape of brush
- a medium round (the pointy but wide-ish one) is all you need
- 3-5 sized flats (the flat square ones) help
- don't leave them in water ever (ever)
- when they lose their shape keep them for scumbling (rough painting)
- when they still keep their shape be gentle with them
- these are probably fine to start with / better to buy in person
- get what's on sale / cheap
- open it up / feel the paper
- medium heavy is good enough
- postcard to printer paper sizes are good
- trust your gut / trial and error
- hot press means smooth surface
- cold press means rough surface
- they're both fine / go with your gut
- watercolor blocks you use one sheet at a time
- prevents paper warping a little
- old school / fun / unecessary
- loose sheets are fancier
- tear them into sections with ruler to keep nice edge
- rag paper means fancy 100% cotton
- old school / fun / unecessary / unnoticeable
- paper weight is in lbs or gsm usually
- 90+ lbs is a good rule of thumb
- if it feels thick enough it is
- this is cheap and fine / my students always used it
- this is fancy and also fine / I use it for painting and drawing
- squeezable water bottle / with plastic nipple thing
- dixie / condiment cups for water
- blotter paper / paper towel / ripped pieces of thick paper
- for negative marks / drying out overly wet paper
- keep your paper dry or moist not super wet
- cool effects possible with wet paper but...
- wet paper can be hard to control / frustrating
- use paper towels to control wetness
- paper towel wadded up in same hand as brush always
- use paper towel as much as brush sometimes
- add paint / dab off moisture with towel / repeat
- paint shapes not lines
- abstract shapes / areas of shadow and light
- don't fixate on size & location of shapes
- zoom WAY in on subjects
- draw a box with pencil / ruler to paint in
- force shapes / objects to fall off edge / zoom in
- no un-broken edges
- use chromatic black / mix dark brown and dark blue
- any dark complimentary colors can work
- dont use color at first / just chromatic black
- don't let yourself think about objects / people / things
- turn off brain / eyes and hands only
- just abstract shapes of light and shadow
- let your palette and paint bricks get dirty
- dirty watercolors make natural colors
- clean them with paper towels and water occaisionally
- add details / color after all this if desired
- erase dried paint by re-wetting / using blotter paper
- spend as much time looking at your subject as you do looking at your painting
- look up / look down / look up / look down
- find one tiny color / shape / highlight / shadow etc at a time
- don't think about what it is
- think about color and value (darkness) as separate
- think about value (darkness) as relative / on 1-10 scale
- the darkest thing you can see is 10 / lightest 1 etc.
- think of color as relative / warm and cool
- red / orange / yellow are warm
- blue is cool
- purple and green can be either
- whats the warmest thing you can see / whats the coolest
- use as few colors as possible / or none
- history is cool but optional
- watercolor originates from africa / the middle east
- where gum arabic comes from traditionally
- it was used to produce ancient artworks / maybe prehistoric
- it reached europe in the middle ages
- used for spooky illuminated manuscripts
- gum arabic is the traditional binder in watercolor
- fun fact you can eat gum arabic and they use it in desserts
- it smells delicious
- dont eat your watercolors
- all paint is primarily pigment + binder
- oil paint uses oil as its binder
- acrylic uses acrylic
- watercolor uses gum arabic or synthetic replacements
- its special property is its water solubility
- it remains semi-soluble even after drying
- but it resists increasingly as it ages
- thats why you use water with it
- also why you can layer etc
- good to know maybe
- obvious wikipedia link for watercolor
- less obvious wikipedia link for gum arabic
Some favorite exercises I used to use in my art classes. A lot of these pretty regularly got students who hated everything they painted to make something they felt really good about. These can be done individually or mixed and matched.
⚠️ Still adding to these and cleaning them up...
- paint something with just one color
- pretend like you're drawing not painting
- optionally choose a color that looks dark
- some classics are alizarin red, pthalo blue, raw umber (NOT black)
- choose two colors that are dark when mixed together
- mix a decent amount together to be as dark as possible
- again pretend like you're drawing not painting
- complimentary colors are not required
- some classics are ultramarine blue and raw umber or alizarin red and pthalo blue
- choose a single dark color adding very little water
- try to zoom way in on your subject (see tight frame exersise)
- try to paint only with 100% colored areas and 100% white areas
- try to not use any soft fades / gradients
- try to have only sharp edges
- try not to paint lines / outlines
- try to find the weird shapes of individual shadowed areas and individual light areas
- optionally do a light pencil sketch to start
- optionally use a single bright (unfrosted if possible) light bulb in a dark room on your subject
- optionally use a bright / complementary color instead of white
- draw a box lightly with a pencil
- leave a medium or large margin of blank paper around it
- do a light sketch of whatever you want to paint
- zoom way in on your subject matter
- make sure every feature or object is cutoff by at least one side of your box
- no objects should be completely visible in the frame
- consider working with just one or two colors (see above)
- optionally make a viewfinder by cutting a 2-5 centimeter rectangle out of dark paper or cardstock etc
- you can use the viewfinder at armslength (roughly) to find good compositions
- viewfinders are awesome
- a still life can be anything thats not a landscape or a portrait
- often its a random close arrangement of three or more objects
- at least two of the objects should probably be touching
- definitely consider combining this with another exersise