ACRYLIC FALL CLASS Project: Cool Refuge
I'm working on a 16x20 panel canvas and the only
drawing that I did with soft vine charcoal was just the edges of the building
walls and where it connects to the walkway. On the bright wall I used a mix of
cad yellow, a touch of orange, even a little burnt sienna and I scumbled and
scrubbed the color on. Scumbling means my brush was going in all directions,
using all sides of the brush in a jumbled way, I want the texture in the walls
because this is a stucco wall. This is just the underpainting for this wall we
will put some brighter highlights on it later.
On the wall behind the chair we are going to
under paint with a cooler version of the yellow wall. To get that color we're
going to mix in the same area of the palette that we were just using with the
yellow, orange, and sienna but to that we are going to add a little touch of
purple and even a little touch of blue. When I say “little” I mean a very tiny
amount especially the purple because it will dominate the lighter colors. Blues
and purples are your natural shadow colors and if you are painting shadows you
must include them in whatever color you are mixing this will give the color a
cool look visually. Be careful when you add the blue and the purple because you
don't want to add too much it will make it too dark, you just want a cooler
version of yellow.
Again you are going to be scumbling this color
on to the wall because you want to have a lot of brush strokes on these walls
because they are stucco and old stucco at that so they've probably patched plus
they weren't put on smoothly to begin with and that's what your brush strokes
will do for you: Create that look of texture.
Once the lighter wall was dry, I sketched on the
door and windows but I think it would have been easier for me and for you if I
had waited until after this next step, if you are having trouble or you haven’t
gotten this far yet you might want to mix the highlight color for the wall
which is white or gesso with a touch of yellow and orange to tint it. Using the
dry brush technique (no extra water in your brush an little paint also),
scumble this color over the sunny wall
even where the door and windows are, you can draw them in after and not have to
worry about painting around them.
The doorway on the sunny wall is made by using
your yellow again plus a little purple and white, you want a light mauve color.
Don't get this color too dark because it is in the background and you don't
want to have a really dark spot back there in the middle of a light surface
remember when things go into the distant they become softer and grey in color
and value you can also use that color to base in the steps add just a touch of
white with yellow for the top part of the step.
To under paint the walkway starting up near the
door you will take your burnt sienna, orange, a little yellow and white and
with horizontal strokes start scrubbing it in where the walkway will be. You
want to be sure that your strokes are parallel with the top and bottom of your
canvas so that the walkway looks flat. As you come down towards the side of
your canvas start adding a little more orange and burnt sienna and then little
touches of purple,
there is a shadow that the wall is casting down this walkway
and it comes off at a bit of an angle, look at the photo, that's where you want
to start adding those little bits of purple eventually you will be switching to
burnt sienna, purple and blue with touches of almost any other color on your
palate including white/gesso to create a dark underpainting for the walkway.
Note how the shadow falls over the texture of the bricks. |
The border between the sunlit part of the
walkway and the shadowed part of the walkway is not a hard, straight line. These
are flagstones or cobblestones they have texture and elevation that shadow is
going to be very irregular so please make sure that when you are in that area
that you blend some of the light into the shadow and some of the shadow into
the light to create a soft interesting edge. Look at the photo of the palm tree
shadow I too as it goes across the uneven bricks. See how it falls over the
edge making little scallops? Also notice how soft the edges are, there is
little distinction divides the dark parts from the soft outer part of the
shadows. The more you can see in the World you live in – and understand why –
the better a painter you will become.
Once the door area is dry you can mix a red -
either the cad red light or napthal red or the alizarin crimson - with a little
touch of your ultramarine blue to create a dark burgundy color for the door and
just put a sliver of that color where the door will be, it is recessed into the
wall so it needs to be dark.
The windows were just a blue color, almost
straight ultramarine blue with maybe a little touch of white. We're going to be
doing more to everything but this just bases them in so you can see them. This
should get you caught up to where we are in class look at all your angles check
to make sure you have soft edges and we will start working from there you
should have your whole canvas covered in paint at this point.
Keep painting and I will see you in class.
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