Leisure Painter - UK (2019 - Summer)

(Antfer) #1

http://www.painters-online.co.uk SUMMER 2019 61


t

Step 3
1 Paint the trees along
the right-hand bank of the loch by dotting in a mid-tone mix using the
basic green mixes. Indicate the shadows in the lower parts of the trees.
2 Add the beach using raw sienna and white with a touch of raw umber
here and there and, as the light is coming from the left, paint tree
shadows down over the beach using the tree shadow colour.
3 Paint trees on the right-hand bank using a mix of the basic green, cobalt
blue and cadmium yellow with the addition of a little raw sienna. Use the
same mix with the addition of raw umber for the darker, shadow green.
4 Paint the water using a mix of blue, white, a touch of yellow and
raw umber to make the darker sea colour then over the top dry brush
a cleaner, lighter blue, using strokes parallel to the far bank.
5 Block in the large coniferous tree on the right-hand side using a dark
green mixed from the blue and yellow with the addition of raw umber
and a little black. Over this drag a slightly lighter green of the basic
mix over the tree creating lighter foliage (needles).

t

softened with white.
5 Add the suggestion of forest over the
top using stronger, yellow greens. To the
left apply with little dabbing strokes using
the point of the No. 6 brush. Think of each
dab as a tree when placing the lighter
colours over the top.
6 The dark area on the right is a mix of the
basic green with the addition of raw umber
and a tiny amount of black. Use the dry-
brush technique to drag the mix up over the
mountainside to create the effect of broken
dark shadows among the trees. Don’t worry
too much about this area, as we will cover
most of it with a large conifer tree.

Step 2
1 Paint the sky with a slightly wet wash
of cobalt blue and white and the No. 8
watercolour brush. Make it slightly lighter
as you come down behind the mountains.
2 Paint the central peaks using varying
tonal mixes of cobalt blue, cadmium yellow
and white. Add a high proportion of white
to create the distant, hazy look.
3 The shadows are mainly blue and white
with a touch of raw umber and yellow.
4 Use the same colour mixes for the left
and right-hand peaks. On the left, add
a little raw sienna at the top, but keep it
muted with white and, on the right, make
the greens slightly stronger, but still

t

Step 4
Block in areas of greens first using one mid-tone basic green,
which has a little raw umber added, then using a scumbling
or dry-brush technique and a fairly dry mix of the much
darker green paint over the top. This is the same technique
you used to paint the large tree on the right.

t

Step 5
1 Using varying shades of our basic green mix build up the effect of
the foliage of all the shrubs and plants in the lower half of the painting.
Apply the paint using strokes that suggest the shapes of the foliage. The
green mixes need to be variations of the colours used already throughout
the painting. Lighter, brighter greens can be created with the addition of
more yellow and by adding a little white. Earthier shades of green are
created with the addition of raw sienna or raw umber, or both. The
areas where the greens are much bluer are created with much more
blue in the mix and the addition of a little white.
2 Paint the lily leaves on the bottom right with short strokes using a No. 2
watercolour brush. I used a very pale blue-green for dotting in the lights
that catch some of the leaves to the right of the rhododendron.

t

LPS 59-62 Ince_Layout 1 28/05/2019 14:52 Page 61

Free download pdf