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Step 1
I transferred my drawing and masked the
whites with Incredible White Mask and an
old brush. Then I wet the paper and, using
a large flat brush, I stroked in a variety of
blues, keeping the lightest blue values at the
horizon and the darkest turquoise shades
in the foreground. Before it dried, I used a
tissue to sponge off some cloud shapes, and
I spattered clear water for texture.
Step 2
By painting the very darkest values in the
foreground waves, I was able to observe the
full range of values that would be included.
Step 3
I continued to work the entire painting,
which kept me from getting too detailed
in any one area. I removed the mask.
Step 4
The whites in the foreground water seemed
too stark and bright, so I toned them with
a light value and continued to work on the
reflections and waves in the distance.
Final
Because the foreground and distant water appeared
distinctly different from each other, I glazed them using
thin washes to blend them. I continued to add darks and
details to the pelicans, docks and background until
Top Bird (watercolor on paper, 21x29) felt complete. WA
Toolkit
PAINTS
- Winsor & Newton:
aureolin, rose
madder genuine,
Antwerp blue, burnt
sienna, aqua green - Mission: cobalt No. 1
SURFACE - Arches 140-lb. cold-
pressed paper
BRUSHES - Robert Simmons
2-inch Skyflow;
Winsor & Newton
One Stroke 1-inch
sable; Loew-Cornell
8050 Mixtique No. 1
rigger; variety of
synthetic and sable
round brushes; old
or inexpensive
brushes for applying
masking fluid
MISCELLANEOUS - Incredible White
Mask liquid frisket,
Gator Board, staples
Award-winning watercolor artist Kris Parins (krisparins.com) is a signature member of
several watercolor societies, including the American Watercolor Society, the National
Watercolor Society and the Transparent Watercolor Society of America.