Wednesday, September 25, 2013

What A Watercolorist Actually Does

By Mia Kent


Painting is a very broad art with a lot of sub categories like oil painting, watercoloring and many more. Now out of all of the variations, probably the most interesting of all these variations would be watercoloring because it is one of the easiest versions. Now a painter who does this is known as a watercolorist and this is the whole process he will take when he makes his painting.

As a painter in this field, one will be making use of water all the time. He will have to learn the art of using the right amount of water as well as the right amount of paint in order to be able to create the right type of mix. So he must always have a continuous supply of water beside him while he paints.

When the painter is ready with his canvas, then the next thing that he will do would be to wash the canvas a little bit. This means that the painter will have to soak the entire canvas with a little bit of water so that the effects of the watercolor mix will come out later on. So one should use a big brush to smear the paper with water before starting the portrait.

From there, now would be the time to paint the background of the desired portrait. In order to do this, one must mix some paint with a lot of water in order to be able to create a fading effect. So start mixing some paint with lots of water, then start coloring the background of the picture.

Once the background has already been painted, then the thing to do here would be to allow the canvas to dry up a little bit. Now if he would paint over a wet canvas, there is a big possibility that the newly added paint will get too wet and start running. Other than that, the background will look better once it dries.

After the background has already dried up, then now would be the right time to paint the actual picture on top of the background. As compared to the painting of the background, now one will be using only a little bit of water and more paint. The technique here would be to first put paint on the brush and then dip it in a little bit of water.

Another key element here would be to try out shades and color mixtures by playing with the paint and the water. For a thin shade, one will have to use more water. It goes vice versa for for a thick shade as one will have to use less water in order to have a thicker and fuller paint quality.

So basically, those are the steps that a watercolorist would take when he would be making his portrait. Now take note that these are the most basic techniques that every watercolor artist must already know. As he progresses with the art, then he will be learning more advanced sweeping and color mixing techniques.




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