by Joe | Aug 10, 2011 | Beginners Guide to Watercolor Painting, Edges, Handling water, Tips, Transparent washes, Watercolor basics, Watercolor painting steps, Watercolor Painting Techniques, Wet on Dry
Wet on dry watercolor painting technique Wet on Dry is the watercolor painting technique you use when you want to place a hard or sharpe edge on your painting, though you can also use it to cover an area with a nice clean watercolor wash, see figure 6. With the wet on...
by Joe | Aug 10, 2011 | Beginners Guide to Watercolor Painting, Edges, Landscape painting, Painting Boats, Painting water, Reflections, Shadows and reflections, Tips, Watercolor basics, Watercolor Painting Techniques, Wet in Wet, Wet on Wet
Controlled Wet on Wet Technique As the paper dries, during the wet on wet technique, it will arrive at a point where it has lost its shine, now if at this stage you run the point of your brush across this damp section of paper you will see an interesting effect as...
by Joe | Aug 10, 2011 | Beginners Guide to Watercolor Painting, Edges, Watercolor basics, Wet in Wet, Wet on Wet
We will now look at the wet on wet watercolor painting technique. A good exercise to understand the potential of using wet on wet techniques is to mix a milk strength mixture of French Ultramarine and Alizarin Crimson. Then tape a quarter sheet of rough textured...
by Joe | Aug 10, 2011 | Beginners Guide to Watercolor Painting, Edges, Painting textures, Watercolor basics, Watercolor Painting Techniques
What is so important about edges? As watercolor artists, and artists in general, we paint our paintings through the creation of different edge shapes. In this article I will talk about the watercolor techniques that will produce these edges and how to use them to...