Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Sunset from the Backyard

Here is another gouache painting on watercolor paper. The picture of the painting was taken with a Canon T2i and a Tamron 7-210mm f1.4-5.6 manual lens.

Sunset View.

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Sunset at the Lake

Another gouache painting. This is 5.5x8" in size. Canson cold press watercolor paper.

Sunset

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Early Morning at the Estuary

A 5x7" scene painted with Dick Blick's Premium Tempera on cold press watercolor paper.
Better Days

Monday, December 23, 2013

Misty Farm Road

Here is a 4.5x6" gouache painting on cold press watercolor paper. Painted with sponge and brushes.

Misty Farm Road

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Friday, December 20, 2013

Todays Painting

The challenge here was to render the foliage. Gouache on poster board sealed with white acrylic primer.

 Dark Forest
4x5" Premium Tempera

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Places in El Salvador

This is from a photograph of a beach in El Salvador, Central America. The greens were brilliant.

Rocky Beach

Tranferring a Charcoal Sketch to a Painting Surface


A common method for transferring a sketch to paper or canvas is by rubbing charcoal on the back of the sketch, but charcoal dust gets everywhere and the surface gets dirty. Here is a method I use when I am working in gouache and oils.

Materials: Pure Powdered Charcoal General’s, vegetable Glycerin, sharp hard pencil 4H, painting knife and a small soft sponge. I mixed the charcoal on my tempered glass palette as shown below:
 









Mix a few drops of glycerin with a small amount of charcoal, mix with a painting knife until the charcoal is completely wet. Apply mixture with the soft sponge to the back of sketch and let it dry for about three minutes. Carefully fix the sketch to the canvas; hold it in place with masking tape so it does not shift. Transfer the lines by going over the sketch with the hard pencil [a fine ball point will work well too.] Glycerin temporarily binds the charcoal to the paper and stops it from flying everywhere. The charcoal drawing will still come off so this is the time to trace it more permanently with dark [under-painting] acrylic, oils, etc depending on your painting technique.

This is the original sketch:
 












Glycerin dissolves in water and does not affect the subsequent application of gouache, acrylic, watercolors or oils. This is how the charcoal, wet with glycerin, looks like after applying it on the paper with the sponge:

This is how the transfer looks on poster boar covered with a layer of acrylic primer [not gesso]. I believe this is a cleaner method.



Snow amoung the trees.