I will return to the tree painting theme again soon, but I wanted to take a break and mix things up.
I also wanted to throw out a couple of suggestions on snow painting.
- Snow isn't white, learn to work with mixtures of another color that just slightly tints your white. Lay those mixtures over one another to get opalescence.
- Imagine a string of those interconnected paper dolls that are cut out with a scissors from black construction paper and laid on to a white ground. That's how things work in a snowscape. The sky and the snow are the white background and everything else is a dark silhouetted in front of it.
- Generally you will want to keep your lights warm and your shadows cool. This is most true on a sunny day.
- Look for the structure in the snow and try to explain it. It is not just all one value. You will need to seize on the changes of the planes in the snow and exaggerate them to get them to read.
- Don't divide the amount of snow and the amount of darks in half, let one be the dominant. Since it is a snowscape, usually that should be the snow.
- Sometimes it works well to have the sky darker than the snow.
27 comments:
I love your enthusiasm for snow painting. Truly snow just might be the most beautiful on the earth.
I love seeing Aldro's paint box. It looks like it certainly did not owe him a thing. Looks like those handles are cut right off an old cloth carpet bag and nailed right on to the paint box. In the old Yankee tradition: Waste not want not... Eat it up, wear it out, ..make it do. Terrific!
OK, Stape. There's got to be a great story behind how you ended up with Hibbard's paintbox. Are you really sure there's no magic in there?
Not one, but *two* cans of Moxie on that paintbox! Must have been a long painting session.
Looks like a really nice painting.
I want to see the painting on that easel. Great advice.
There's plenty of magic from this perspective. That brush is a wand!
Cool paint box, marvel!
Those are helpful "hints" about
snow painting that I will employ.
Thanks Stape!
The perfect post for a morning with a foot of fresh snow! I like the bulleted list, I'm going to print it for reference.
Love the Hibbard box. Nice artifact. I also like what willek said about it.
Reminds me of a table we own which came out of Inness Manor in Tarpon Springs, Fl. Though there is no proof or knowledge whether the paint on it came from the old man or junior....it's almost as cool as your box.
I like the analogy of the interconnected paper dolls - that really made something click in my brain. But then again maybe it was just the voices in my head making noises again.
Aldro Hibbard is a hero of mine as well. The man could paint snow like no other. Take good care of that box.
Just as snow isn't "white" either is sea foam, which presents the problem of trying to get depth and life into a blanket of whitish looking stuff.
You mentioned layers, and seeking opalescence, but it's a struggle, at least for me, dealing with the opaque quality of white paint.
I've been trying to get there using Liquin and glazing.
Do you find a similarity between the problems of blankets of sea foam and blankets of snow?
Are the solutions similar?
interesting instructional blog. Thanks for posting. I too have had a blast with winter painting. Was with an artist friend of mine trying to work in watercolors. He had a devil of a time with them.
Love the paint box. There is definitely magic there.
Philip:
I think that winter is by far the best time to paint outside.
................Stape
Willek
I think the handles are original.They were put on with brass rivets and there is no evidence that any other handles were ever on there. Whether taken from a Gladstone or not......
.....Stape
Bob:
There is a story, but I am not at liberty to discuss it.There was no magic left that I could see.
...........Stape
Michael:
Two cans was about right for the session.
.......Stape
Gregory:
I don't know,maybe.
............Stape
Bill?:
You are welcome, I hope to come up with a few more tonight,
..................Stape
Barbara:
Thanks , everybody seems to like bulleted lists, I will do more.
...............Stape
Simone:
Someday I would like to see that table.
..............Stape
Mary:
Thank you.Its is funny how an analogy can make things understandable sometimes.
.......Stape
Susan:
He was the guy when the subject was snow. I think he is way underrated.
...Stape
Michael:
I think that painting foam on the ocean and painting snow are mostly the same . I do seascapes too, I don't claim to be expert at it though. Sometimes I win.
.............Stape
Gary:
I have heard of people using alcohol and other means to work in water based media outside in the winter.
..............Stape
Deborah;
I shook it out over my head and I am no smarter therefore, no magic.
................Stape
LOL! Is that how you do it? I should have tried that with my textbooks in school!
Thanks again for the information about snow painting and tree painting. These posts are really helpful.
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