Submitted by Forsaken_Ad1923 t3_yiok3d in Art
Comments
artisnotsubjective t1_iujrj6y wrote
Ideally and usually there is no white paint in watercoloring. The point is in order to convey a sense of absolute brightness one has to use the paper itself. I'm sure there are super bright white©® paints available today, but what makes watercoloring unique is the very light and bright values one can achieve because of water's unique transparency , which opaque, dense paints can only achieve "artificially".
OK-KUN t1_iujrq3i wrote
So how did you do it?
a-m-watercolor t1_iujsxsk wrote
I'm not OP, but typically you use negative painting. Paint around the highlights to preserve them, then you can adjust the hotness of them later.
OK-KUN t1_iujt68y wrote
I was dozing off so i didn't realise he wasn't op,and tysvm for telling me
ntrrrmilf t1_iujxpgy wrote
Not OP but someone who uses watercolors:
If you expand the image, you’ll see that there are areas left unpainted or with less paint than other areas. That gives shading.
artisnotsubjective t1_iujz3md wrote
yeah basically reverse. paint starting with brightest, leave darkest to last.
seaweedslitherz t1_iuk30ug wrote
It looks like a shot of film (:
TheStephenKingest t1_iuk7h3t wrote
Extraordinary. The representation of light is wonderful. I love this.
OK-KUN t1_iujo8r7 wrote
How did you do the sunlight? Did you just use white or is there more to it?