Leisure Painter

Explore watercolour

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

Refine your watercolour technique

The importance of timing

Seeing connections in your subject

In this third article on how to advance your watercolour technique, I’m looking at edges and timing. In watercolour, the term lost edge is used to describe a gradual transition of paint between one mark and another when they are laid side by side before either has dried. A found edge on the other hand results from laying wet paint against or on top of dry. Between the two extremes, however, is a whole series of edges, which we do well to understand. There is also a relationship between the richness of a watercolour mixture and the dampness of the surface on which we lay it, affecting the behaviour of paint when we make a mark, but we can sometimes forget that when wrestling with other issues.

Let’s look in (International Artist Publishing, 2002) Joseph Zbukvic explains it by referring to a ‘watercolour clock’. One side of the clock describes a range of mixture strengths, weak to strong, which Zbukvic likens to tea, coffee, milk, cream and butter consistencies. The other side of the clock has four categories of moisture content of the background paper: dry, damp, moist and wet. The book shows sequential images in the progress of several paintings, describing passages of paint as ‘coffee on damp’, ‘cream on wet’ and so on. It’s an excellent analogy that will enable you to visualise the behaviour of brush, paint and paper in your head. It is important because understanding timing is probably the most significant skill separating watercolour from other media.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Leisure Painter

Leisure Painter5 min read
Vehicles
In this issue, I want to look at sketching vehicles, particularly cars, which are something of a favourite. Though I'm not mechanically minded I do get a certain satisfaction from capturing an apparent likeness. In the December 2023 issue of LP, I ta
Leisure Painter5 min read
Subject In Flight
I sat flicking through my collection of field sketchbooks from my travels, looking for ideas for a small painting, something summery or at least of warmer climes. A field sketchbook can transport you to a place in your mind's eye, because when you sk
Leisure Painter1 min read
Paint the Park
The Blackpool Art Society are holding their second Paint the Park plein-air event in the award-winning Stanley Park in Blackpool on Saturday 6 July. Hosted by the Blackpool Art Society, the event invites artists of all abilities to join them at the p

Related Books & Audiobooks