Watercolors Step-by-Step
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About this ebook
Thanks to overwhelmingly positive responses to the demonstrations in my first book "Mastering Watercolors – a practical guide," I've created this manual of how-to demos.
Here you'll find twelve step-by-step paintings with reference photos and plenty of images to guide you through each piece. I've also included a section on watercolor basics, materials, and what to consider when working from photographs.
An ideal follow-on from "Mastering Watercolors – a practical guide," this book is especially suited to people who can't attend regular classes with a professional tutor.
Watercolor is wonderful and challenging medium which, like most creative pursuits, develops with regular practice.
Happy painting!
Joe Cartwright
Joe Cartwright
Everyone paints for very personal reasons. For me the pleasure of having created something original has been a strong lure. I also enjoy solving the many puzzles watercolor presents to me. Could I paint this scene with watercolor? How would I create a particular texture? How best to design my painting to get my message across? All of these questions have kept me fascinated with this wonderful medium for many years and hopefully will do so for many more. Watercolor allowed me to add a creative element to my life which had been missing. Initially it started off as a pleasant diversion from my regular job but soon became a passion. Of course, this is not the way everyone looks at watercolor. For some it just is not their medium. To others it is an enjoyable pastime which will always remain that way. To some it is a medium they admire and aspire to but always look upon it as a mystery. That is the beauty of it, you can get as absorbed in the subject as you want. The important thing is to have fun when you paint and not get too serious about it. After all, once you are set up, it only takes a little of your time and a small amount of money for paint and paper — that’s it. Happy painting! Joe Cartwright
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Watercolors Step-by-Step - Joe Cartwright
Introduction
This is a companion to my first book, Mastering Watercolors — a practical guide,
which forms the basis of my teaching manual. The demonstrations in this book were mainly done for my students as step by step exercises in class. Should this book prove popular, I intend to produce follow up volumes with additional demonstrations.
This book focuses on demonstrations of how to paint specific watercolor examples. My aim is to try and explain each work as simply as possible. Obviously it is very difficult to cover every little step within a few short pages but hopefully I have included enough to help you work through the paintings.
This book does not attempt to cover all the basics of watercolor painting. My first book, Mastering Watercolors – a practical guide,
covers those topics in what I hope are sufficient detail. In fact it was the positive response I received for that book that has lead me to produce this one. However, I have included a chapter on materials and watercolor basics as I cannot assume that everyone who purchases this book has already bought and studied the first one.
If you have kindly bought and studied Mastering Watercolors – a practical guide,
then you can comfortably skip that section and move on to Chapter 2, titled Working from photographs. As all the exercises are accompanied by reference photos, I thought it would be useful to say something about working from them, especially as most people do the same when working with their own material in their studio.
Before you tackle one of the exercises in this book, make sure you read the chapter through completely. This will make it much easier to follow.
Watercolor is a wonderful medium which appeals to artists from all around the world. It is not a medium you can push around however. Ideally you should lay your colors down and leave them. The medium will surprise you with wonderful effects, which you must resist from changing.
Joe Cartwright
Venice.JPGVenice 14 x 21
(36cm x 54cm)
Materials and basics
It is important that you use the right equipment and materials. Watercolor painting is challenging enough. You don’t want to make it any more difficult for yourself by using materials and gear that handicap you from the start.
I am always amazed at how often the real problem someone had been having with this medium, was so easily solved with the right brush, paper or paint. People try to do large washes with too small a brush or a brush of poor quality which is unable to hold the required volume of paint. At other times, in an effort to save money, they have used very inferior paper, with very little sizing, which acts like blotting paper. Some wonder why they can’t seem to get vibrant colors when they are using very cheap paints with an excessive abundance of fillers.
In order of importance you need:
Quality paper
Soft brushes that hold lots of water and spring back to a good point after you lay down some paint.
A palette that has large mixing areas and wells that can hold lots of pigment.
Artist’s quality paint.
Watercolor paper
Through The Trees, Brooklyn.jpgThrough the trees, Brooklyn, NSW. 14.5 x10.5
(37cm x 27cm) Painted with a round brush, foliage created by using the side of the brush and texture of the paper.
If your paper is of poor quality, without enough sizing, it will not allow the paint to flow over its surface. It acts like blotting paper rather than watercolor paper.
Obviously, it goes without saying that your paper should be acid free with good archival properties or your masterpiece will not be around for too long.
Watercolor paper comes in various sizes, weights and textures. Here are the main terms you will run across:
Sizes: A full sheet is approx. 22 x 30
(560mm x 760 mm). If you cut this into quarters they are known as quarter sheets.
Weights: Refers to the weight of the paper expressed in lbs. or grams per square meter. A common weight is 140lb or 300 gsm which is what I mainly use and recommend for my students. In small sizes such as a quarter of a full sheet, it does not need to be stretched, so you can very quickly start painting.
Textures: Rough (most textured), Medium or Cold Pressed (not as textured as rough) and Smooth or Hot Pressed (very smooth). I start my students on Rough as it holds more water, giving them additional time to work on their painting before it dries too much.
However, I use Cold Press for most of my work, and move my students to it as soon as possible, as it produces a slightly brighter painting. The smoother surface also allows me to lift paint from my work a lot easier than with Rough — especially after the paint has dried. I mainly use Arches brand of watercolor paper, but there are many others. You should try a few until you find one that particularly suits your skill and interest in subject matter.
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Brushes
Capertee Valley.JPGWolgan Valley 14.5 x 10.5
(37cm x 27cm) Painted with round watercolor brushes
There are many different brushes. Some people paint solely with round brushes, others with flat, many would use a variety. While I mainly use round brushes, as they suit my style, you should not limit yourself to just one type of brush until you have fully explored their possibilities. Some of the main brush categories are: Round, Flat, Fan, Mop, and Rigger. I will now discuss each brush type in turn.
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Round brushes
Round Watercolor Brushes white BG.jpgSome of my round watercolor brushes
These are the best brushes for my style of painting and the most used by watercolorists. They should hold a large volume of paint and when dipped in water they must come to a good point when tapped on the top of the container.
A brush that holds a lot of paint will allow you to keep working longer before you have to pick up more paint. This increases your painting speed, which reduces the risk of your work drying too fast.
A good point on a brush will also allow you to paint with it longer as you can use it for a wider range of brush marks. Having to change brushes wastes valuable time, allowing your paper to dry more than you would like.
You can also use the side of a round brush to create interesting textures.
Mop brushes
Watercolor Mop Brushes.jpgMop brushes
These are very good at holding lots of water and paint. They are not so good at holding a point, so they are mainly used for painting large washes. Having said this, there are some very well-known artists who use a mop watercolor brush for most of their work.
They are not so useful for detailed work.
Flat brushes
Flat Watercolor Brushes - Copy.jpgA range of my flat brushes
Some watercolor artists produce their whole painting with flat brushes. They are not in the majority, but it can be done and is not that rare. I will sometimes use a flat brush to create repetitive short vertical shapes such as small fence or lamp posts, they can also be used to create texture, such as when painting birch tree bark. If you are painting buildings, they can be very useful for making rectangular shapes.
I have a big 2" wide flat brush, that has very soft hairs, which I use to re-wet dry sections of my painting prior to dropping in more paint. This brush is the main flat brush I use and I use it almost exclusively for this purpose.
Rigger and needle point brushes
Rigger and Needlepoint brushes.jpgRigger brushes and needle point brush
With a rigger you can draw fine lines. I use these for drawing power lines in urban scenes.
The needle point brush is used for a similar purpose. It holds a lot more paint so it can be used for very long lines.
You can also use a rigger with just water to draw lighter lines in damp watercolor passages in your painting.
Fan brushes
Fan Brushes.jpgFan brushes, I prefer stiffer ones with badger or hog hair
These come in many different sizes and materials. I prefer the stiffer badger hair or hog hair ones. They don’t hold a lot of paint but they are very useful in several painting situations.
I use them to create textured timber effects and the foliage on palm trees and certain other trees, shrubs and grasses.
Bali Sunset.JPGBali sunset 10.5 x 14.5
(27cm x 37cm) Palm fronds created with fan brush
Watercolor paints
Artists’ quality paints, as opposed to cheaper students’ grade paints, are by and large purer and more vibrant in color and more transparent.
The colors in students’ paints are usually different to the true pigments. Often they are listed as hues of the pigments (meaning they look similar), but I have found that they can be very different indeed.
If you are starting out, there is no point asking your tutor which colors he used to create a mix if you and he don’t have the same brand of paint. I remember a student asking me how to mix a color, which was made up of Winsor and Newton French Ultramarine and Raw Umber artists’ paint. My student was not able to come close to what I mixed. When I checked what was going on, I discovered she was using students’ paints. They were not only very different in color but had so much filler material in them that they were very opaque indeed.
Palettes
Large palette, big paint wells and large mixing areas.jpgLarge palette, big paint wells and large mixing areas
Your palette must have large wells for holding your paint. I have had paint in some of these wells for over a year and yet it is still very usable (using Winsor and Newton watercolors). If it has dried too much I give it a little spray from my spray bottle a few minutes before I start painting and by then it is quite workable.
Having lots of paint in these wells allows you to quickly pick up a large quantity of paint when you need it. Stopping half way through a wash, to squeeze additional pigment from a tube so you can mix more paint, usually results in messy washes. This is because the paint on the paper will have already dried
Your palette also must have substantial mixing areas. If you need to cover a large area with your watercolor wash, then you need to mix this amount in one go. You will not have time to mix more paint halfway through