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September 6, 2009

What I’ve Learned about Portrait Painting

Filed under: Paint and Painting — Tags: , , , , , , — @ 6:30 am

Wow, I find painting portraits to be an awesome experience. Starting with a blank canvas you begin to create when you put the pencil to work. My first portrait was a baby in oils. Oils work best with portraits because they take hours and sometimes days to dry giving you the time to work with them adjusting skin tone, light and shade. Remember to always start with three shades to every colour you use. Mix your colour, this is your dark shade,  separate a portion and add a little white to it, this is your medium shade, then take some white and add a little of the dark shade now you have your lightest tone.

The medium shade is likely to be the tone you will use the most, with the darker shades for the shadow effects and the light tone in areas touched by light. Look at your photo or model carefully as you mark these areas on your portrait. Always soften the edges of your colours so they appear to blend into the next colour and not end abruptly leaving sharp edges. Don’t over blend or work the edges of your colours or they will end up runnning into each other. Continue to work on the skin areas building the character of your portrait with every layer you apply.

Depending on how much time you have to spend on your painting it could take anything from a few days to a few months to complete. Just be patient  the end result will be well worth it.

Have Fun :)

July 21, 2009

Mixing Colours for Painting

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , — @ 7:40 am

My art teacher has taught me a valuable point when painting and I would like to pass it on to you. It is possible to buy so many different pots and tubes of paint colour you can end up with so much more than you really need.  You will find that with only six colours and white you can make any shade or colour you choose.

What you need to always have on hand in your paint collection is warm and cool red, warm and cool yellow a pthalo blue, an ultramarine blue and of course white. Those six colours and white will make any colour you choose. When mixing always put your white out first and then add your colour a little at a time. If you do it the other way around you may find you have far more paint than you need.

You may have heard of’ ‘medium’, if you haven’t medium is a milky white in colour and dries clear. So you would get the same effect if you added water to your colour but without thinning the consistency.

For example, if you add medium to red you will get a lighter shade of red. If you add white to red you will get pink.

Here are some colour combinations:-

  • Red + Yellow = Orange
  • Red + White = Pink
  • Blue + Yellow = Green
  • Green + Red = Brown
  • Blue + Red = Purple

Remember always add your colour a little at a time and try to get three shades of each a light, medium and dark. To do this first mix your colours together, this will be your darkest shade,  then take a little of the colour and add it to white this will be your light shade, then take a portion of your colour and a little white to it this will be your medium shade.

Have Fun :)

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