My Art Blog

A Wet Loose Style of Digital Watercolour With John Derry's Watercolour Brushes

 
 
 
The above is a link to this painting posted on John Derry's Blog:
 
It is the first posted painting done in this new wet loose style that I have been experimenting with lately. Are you wondering why I don't just dig out my real watercolours and just play with wet paint to my hearts's content? Sometimes I wonder why I keep trying to do this too. Stubborn I guess!
 
I found an article the other day about digital painting and this quote by JD Jarvis really struck home! This is exactly what I have found over the past five years of digital painting...
 
"Digital does have its drawbacks. Random effects that occur with natural media cannot be duplicated in digital without hard work, attention to detail and patience."
 
 John Derry's watercolour brushes go a step further towards being able to execute some random watercolour marks. I am still experimenting with them. The way they work on different layers is an important aspect of the use of these brushes. For example, painting with the Gel Wash Brush on a new layer, then clicking the Preserve Transparency box and unclicking the Pick Up Underlying Colour box, then painting on top of it with the Gel Blender has the effect of masking the area you painted with the gel wash. The paint only goes in the area you painted with the gel wash.


 
 

Comments

dwsel said:

'Afternoon at the Pond' has a random look I love in landscape watercolour paintings. I like it's bright and vivid, but for me its intense green shade of foliage and deep cold blue sky reminds of spring morning rather than summer afternoon which light is more yellow/orange/pink with warm blue sky. Personally I'd make this painting a bit less saturated, because there might be colour shift problem in yellow-green area while printing.
I'm going to read carefully article you posted link to. It seems to be interesting at the first look.

Wednesday, September 23rd

Joan A Hamilton said:

Hi Dwsel
You hit the nail on the head with your comments. I was thinking the same things myself. Although Northern Ontario afternoons can be pretty intensely coloured. It actually printed okay because I always reduce the dye concentration before printing on the Fine Art paper. I seem to have the habit of posting a more intense version though usually.
I really appreciate your in depth and valuable comments. I think I should show you my stuff before I post it though! :)You always have a way to improve it or suggest another look.

Thanks again and Happy Painting!
Joan

Wednesday, September 23rd

painter learner said:

Thank you!

Tuesday, June 7th

Joan said:

Whoever you are Painter Learner - you are very welcome!
Thank you for stopping by!
Joan

Tuesday, June 7th

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