Leisure Painter

Explore watercolour

Watercolours sometimes fail through a lack of visual cohesion, due to any number of causes. Perhaps a local mixture is too strong, calling attention to a part of a painting we didn’t intend; or too weak, like a pale flesh colour on a sunny day. It could be inconsistency in a shadow colour applied throughout a painting, which disjoints rather than unifies a composition. An inadvertently high contrast between two elements might unintentionally draw our eye from the focus we intended, or one colour may have a hue that is incongruous, through its temperature or depth of tone. There are several ways to avoid many of these incongruities:

1 Simply keep practising.

2 Think about your mixtures as you work and ensure that colour choices and water contents are those you intend and are compatible with what is already laid.

Ingredients might also be consistent and (right). Alternatively, paint shadows in the same operation as the object that casts them, to keep paint flowing and help develop unity.

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

More from Leisure Painter

Leisure Painter5 min read
Loose And Lively
I certainly had no natural gift in art as a child, but always loved sketching and colouring so, many years ago, I decided that I would teach myself how to paint using watercolour. Sometimes I learned from art books from my local library, but more oft
Leisure Painter2 min read
Welcome
To all those of you who have been loyally reading Leisure Painter and The Artist over the years, I'd like to let you know that Sally Bulgin, the editor of The Artist and previous publisher of LP, left her post at the end of March after nearly four de
Leisure Painter2 min read
Online Gallery
WWW.PAINTERS-ONLINE.CO.UK Stephen Mason studied art at A-level but did little painting until he retired and now enjoys exploring painting and drawing styles and subjects. Here he describes one of a series of paintings he made of the North Yorkshire f

Related