My son and daughter-in-law gave me a subscription to Watercolor Artist Magazine for Mother’s Day and they renewed it for me as their gift to me for Christmas. What a fun gift for someone who loves to paint!! Through these magazines I have become familiar with Bev Joswiak, a watercolor artist. She considers herself to be an impressionist figure painter and I LOVE her paintings! Her comments in the magazines have encouraged me to try my hand at painting people and to try and paint them with a variety of colors, lost and found edges and to paint from my own photos. This past March when I went to my daughters in Las Vegas to help when she had a new baby, I met a family from their neighborhood at a park. The daughter of this family had a white blouse on with holes in the sleeve. I was fascinated with the color contrast between her skin and the blouse and I desperately wanted to try painting her. As I’m so new to painting people, I was pretty certain it wouldn’t turn out looking like this cute girl, but with some color suggestions from Bev Joswiak for painting African-American skin tones, I definitely wanted to try. And so I asked the father and the girl if there was any chance I could take her picture so I could try painting her someday. They both kindly said yes. Her two brothers wanted in on the action too so I got snapshots of them as well. My lighting was terrible, either full sun or too much shade from a tree, but regardless of my poor photos I was still able to capture her skin tone next to the sleeves of her shirt. I had so much fun painting this picture! Although I don’t think the family would recognize the girl in the picture, I think they might recognize the sleeve of her shirt. And although Bev Joswiak doesn’t know I exist, I thank her for her articles and her amazing paintings and for sharing them with Watercolor Artist Magazine!
Saturday, September 29, 2018
The Girl at the Park
My son and daughter-in-law gave me a subscription to Watercolor Artist Magazine for Mother’s Day and they renewed it for me as their gift to me for Christmas. What a fun gift for someone who loves to paint!! Through these magazines I have become familiar with Bev Joswiak, a watercolor artist. She considers herself to be an impressionist figure painter and I LOVE her paintings! Her comments in the magazines have encouraged me to try my hand at painting people and to try and paint them with a variety of colors, lost and found edges and to paint from my own photos. This past March when I went to my daughters in Las Vegas to help when she had a new baby, I met a family from their neighborhood at a park. The daughter of this family had a white blouse on with holes in the sleeve. I was fascinated with the color contrast between her skin and the blouse and I desperately wanted to try painting her. As I’m so new to painting people, I was pretty certain it wouldn’t turn out looking like this cute girl, but with some color suggestions from Bev Joswiak for painting African-American skin tones, I definitely wanted to try. And so I asked the father and the girl if there was any chance I could take her picture so I could try painting her someday. They both kindly said yes. Her two brothers wanted in on the action too so I got snapshots of them as well. My lighting was terrible, either full sun or too much shade from a tree, but regardless of my poor photos I was still able to capture her skin tone next to the sleeves of her shirt. I had so much fun painting this picture! Although I don’t think the family would recognize the girl in the picture, I think they might recognize the sleeve of her shirt. And although Bev Joswiak doesn’t know I exist, I thank her for her articles and her amazing paintings and for sharing them with Watercolor Artist Magazine!
Friday, September 28, 2018
Sadie & the Carousal
A little over a year ago I decided I wanted to learn how to paint people in watercolors. I’m blessed that some very good artists share their own paintings and how-to-demo’s on the internet—they give me ideas. And I’m so lucky to live in the day and age where I can easily download my own photos and retrieve some of my family member's photos with a few clicks of the mouse! So...my journey began. Using a picture I took of my grand-daughter, Sadie, at our local park/adventure land, I connected the picture to a small projector and shined it on my paper. This way I could at least get the basic outlines. I couldn’t see her facial features very well, but I was able trace enough to get proportions and objects correct. My other goal was to try and not get hung up on whether or not my painting looked like her. So my goal was to simply end up with a “cute girl on a merry-go-round” rather than “Sadie on a merry-go-round.” I also loved trying out the same picture three different ways. I was just given a water-soluble pen and wanted to sketch with it and let the water leak into the picture as I painted. That idea led to the brown horse. And although I painted “Sadie” rather lightly, she still stands out because there is color on her. After painting the horse “without” color, I wanted to add some color. I didn’t love the real carousal’s horse colors, so I had fun choosing my own. For my last experiment I wanted to see what it would look like with a colorful background. I actually don’t mind how it turned out, but I wasn’t super pleased with her facial features. She’s a cutie and I didn’t capture her smile quite right! (I painted all 3 pictures in May 2017)
Sadie on the carousal the reference for my painting |
Jackson & Sadie - airplane ride |
Jackson, Kristi, Sadie - Ferris Wheel |
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