PRACTICAL
STAGE ONE
I began by drawing a detailed outline, using grids
and measurements to get accurate proportions
STAGE TWO
I blocked in the painting with a basic wash using
paint diluted with linseed oil to remove all the white
from the canvas and creating a broad basecoat
STAGE THREE
I continued painting the distant trees and branches,
keeping them quite bright and hazy, blending the
edges to create a soft tone that would contrast with
the sharper details of the foreground characters
STAGE FOUR
I marked out areas of shadow that would be
developed with texture and depth at a later stage.
At first I painted them slightly too regimented and
orderly, so I adapted individual shafts of moonlight
to create variation
STAGE FIVE
I worked in detail from the background forward,
starting with the twisting, eerie branches of the tree,
blending edges to create a soft focus effect
STAGE SIX
Masking tape was used to reserve areas for the
shafts of moonlight
STAGE SEVEN
Starting with a dark base coat, I built the texture on
the Wild Things, gradually adding highlights with
undiluted paint, using animal photos online as
reference material
STAGE EIGHT
I developed the flesh tones by building from dark to
light, gradually adding details, highlights and
textures to give the skin tone a warm, glowing
quality that would complement the orange hues of
the Wild Things
DEMONSTRATIONWhere the Wild Things Are
1 2
3 4
5 6
7 8
FINISHED PAINTINGMichael Sheen as Max in Where the Wild Things Are, oil on canvas, 23^1 ⁄ 2 53in (60 135cm)
http://www.painters-online.co.uk artistApril 2016 55