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Showing posts with the label tips on painting with acrylics

View on the Olive Grove - acrylic landscape painting

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"Vista sull'Uliveto" Acrylic on Canvas Panel 11" x 14" (27.9 x 35.6 cm) Finally my first painting posted for this year! I painted this entirely from imagination, without any reference photo. It has been such an interesting process; I had fun and I think I learned quite a bit.  The idea for the landscape came from memories of Tuscany, and the inspiration for the colors came from some new colors that I bought, very unusual for me - I usually mix my paint from the few basic colors, I did not own any fancy hues. Like a child I was super excited to try them all - you should have seen how psychedelic it looked after the first hour! Then, layer after layer, I toned it down.  Now I'm quite happy with it, I find it relaxing, despite the yellow sky. :)

Acrylic painting for beginners: getting started in 10 easy steps

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To become a better artist: Paint often, have fun, and enjoy the process. :) Image: Tulip field study, acrylic on paper. The 10 things you need to know to get started with acrylics. Answering the 10 basic questions for a beginner painter  that wants to start painting with acrylics. Click here to read. "What you can do, or dream you can, begin it.  Boldness has genius, power and magic in it." ~Goethe

Checking values in acrylic paintings

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I’ve been working on a harbor painting for a while now, on and off. It started as a realistic painting, and then it turned into a more contemporary one. Kind of in the middle of that transition I decided I would portray the scene half in the sun, and half in the shade. That’s when I started having value problems .  Picture 1 with color I was using warmer colors in the sunny areas, and cooler ones in the shade, but I soon realized that some warm hues have a darker value than cool ones, and focusing on temperature instead of value can really spoil all you are trying to do. Every painter knows the squinting technique to see values, but squinting has its limitations. What helps me a lot is using the “desaturation tool" . Here is how it works: I take a digital photo of the artwork, I download it into my computer, and I desaturate it using Photoshop (many other image editing software can do it too). Then I really see values. Picture 1 desaturated What I s...

Value Study

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"Trieste - value study" 6” x 6” (15.2 cm x 15.2cm) Acrylic on Canvas Panel I rendered a photo I took last summer in Italy using only 4 values. Lots of squinting and comparing. The fun was to try to paint shapes instead of details. The other cool part was mixing my own black and grays. Fun fun with this value challenge by the DPW .