demonstrationPastels
Come with e
A pastellist in South Africa has applied her significant pastel skills to this
calm and peaceful seascape complete with foliage carpeted sand dunes.
By Constance RobertsonMATERIALS
- Arches Pastel and Fusain
 Laid Paper, 29.7 x 42 cm,
 Ingres MBM, 130gsm.
- Charcoal.
- Schmincke Pastels: White; Light
 Green; Grey Blue 1; Light Ochre;
 Greenish Grey; Greenish Umber;
 Olive Ochre Deep; Permanent
 Red; Carmine Red; Madder Lake;
 Gold Ochre; Manganese Violet.
- Rembrandt Olive Green
 and Green Earth.
- Sennelier Pastels: 133 Prussian
 Blue; 298 Light Yellow.
- Unison Pastels: 44; A29;
 BV11; BV9; BG6; BG2;
 various other Blues.
- Winsor & Newton Natural
 Sienna and Winsor Yellow.
 FINAL STEP • Faber-Castell Art Eraser.
STEP ONE
Because this is a place that I love
and know well, I did not use a
photograph to provide inspiration ...
only my memory. I chose not to paint
in the open air, when midsummer
temperatures were in the late 30s and
the plant life was seeminglydead.
In South Africa,as in Australia,
painting outside can be unwisedue to serious ozone depletion.
Using a piece of charcoal
approximately 3cm long on its edge, I
dragged a centimetre line along each
of the four sides of the paper, thus
ensuring that there was enough space
provided for framing purposes later.
Applyingthe ‘ThirdsRule’, I made
small charcoalmarks horizontally
and vertically, and added light markswhere I thought the centres of the paper
were. I did not use any rigid means of
measuring this. The only time I ever
use a ruler to measure my work is when
I draw the horizon of an ocean – which
must always be straight (no matter what
your eye or the camera tells you).
Still using the charcoal’sedge, not
its point, I drew a rough sketch of
where my shoreline was and where