The first step of the process is to create my working sketch. This is completed with black pen and gray markers. My sketches are done in a 18"x24" sketch pad. The composition is from various elements brought together.
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Now that I have a value pattern and my sketch is on my watercolor paper, it is time to get down to business. I thoroughly soak my paper and lay in the sky. I try to limit my time in the sky to 30 seconds. Anymore and I have the tendency to fiddle with it. I tip my paper on end to let the colors blend. I graduated the sky from dark to light. I also layed in the forground field using a large brush. The first steps look ugly, but you try to loosly get color and value in without the detail. Hopefully this will produce a fresh loose painting.
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The next step I keep working in the colors and values. Referring to my value sketch. Since the midvalue is the largest, I typically work on this first. I can always go back and darken values if I need to. I try to not go into area more that twice. This helps to keep the painting looking overworked and muddy.
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I wanted the painting to have a warm dominance. I contued to work the color and values, then I let the painting dry. The final step was to come in with the rigger and add my lines and my darkest darks. And here is the final.
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Now it is critique time. I did not hit the dark values in the trees on the left side. They needed to be darker. The shape of the tree over the roof neede to foil the flyshop sign a bit better. The trees to the left of the fly shop are too similar in size and shape. No variation in size and the angles are similar. I will do this painting again, and try to do a better job with the values and make some additional compisitional adjustments along the way. Stay tuned for the next painting.
10 comments:
Great step-by-step. I admire your efforts toward the cause. I actually learned about the program because my father's girlfriend is a b.c. survivor. I believe the reasoning behind this was that casting helps rebuild muscle tissue where it was lost during masectomy.
Kudos.
It is so nice to see all the steps in your process. I wish others, who are not 'into art,' could see all the work that goes into a complete painting. It sure makes me appreciate it even more and I believe it would others too.
good work.
It is interesting your working process.
kuriyama
Fantastic work!
Thanks so much for that Jeff. Really useful (and a BEAUTIFUL painting too!)
It is worth to attend workshops just to work like this! Congrats.
Oh, GREAT step-by-step! And great results on the painting. I like your self-critique, and agree about the darks on the left and the foliage around the sign (although I wouldn't have been able to put my finger on those things, myself -- wow, you're good!) -- but am wondering if you went back onto the painting and made the fixes?
Jeff, how wonderfully generous of you to share your method in a step by step, easy to follow style, thank you . The end result is sensational. I wish I was half as good.....I know, I know, practice, practice.........
Wow,Jeff! This is wonderful, the step-by-step is VERY helpful to me, as I am such a novice!
Thank you so much for this step by step look into how you work. I am always interested in the progression of how the finished work is accomplished. I have signed up for a Tony Couch workshop here in CA in March and wondered if you have any advice for preparation for this. It will be the first such event I will attend.
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