Watercolor Artist - USA (2019-10)

(Antfer) #1

38 Watercolor artist | OCTOBER 2019



  1. CREATE A VALUE SKETCH


Capture the
“Big Idea” in
a Value Sketch
I made this value
sketch for a morning
demonstration at
Mirror Pond in Bend,
Oregon. Value can
make or break a
composition.
Painting a thumbnail
sketch using one
color—capturing the
“big idea” of the
composition—helps
establish the most
obvious contrasts of
lights and darks, and
keeps you from
getting confused by
smaller, subtler
variations within the
values. Try to keep all
the darks connected.

Include More Subtleties in the Color Version
Your color version need not be an exact copy of the monochromatic value sketch (at left, above). Once you’ve found the
values, you can paint what you want to see and include more subtleties (at right, above). Think of the land and its refl ection
as a combined shape as you paint wet-into-wet. After it dries, fi nd a subtle separation between the land and its refl ection.

Rock Formations
carmine or alizarin crimson,
cerulean blue or cobalt
blue, and raw sienna or
yellow ochre

Tree Refl ections
ultramarine blue or
viridian with raw sienna
and/or raw umber

Basic Tree Color
raw sienna, viridian,
new gamboge and
cobalt blue

Light Greens
cerulean blue,
cadmium yellow pale
or cadmium lemon

Sky Colors
cerulean blue, warming
toward the horizon with
alizarin crimson and
cadmium orange
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