Watercolour Painting Course Part 1
Uploader Comments (andywalker4)
All Comments (24)
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I don't actually let the paints dry out at all. I keep them moist by adding a drop of water to each one at the end of the painting time. This keeps them workable and NO paint is wasted at all.
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@andywalker4 I don't agree with this method. I like my colours to be strong and vibrant. I feel that to let artists watercolours become hard and dry in your pallete is NOT good! You can't get them workable agian very well. Yes you can tease out paint but your washes will quickly become thin, weak and lack lustre. Also they can become gritty over time enhibiting a nice even flow. You are actually wasting your artists paints by letting SO much paint loose it's unique properties!
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everytime i paint i strech my paper and everytime it rincles
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brilliant lesson, may i know where you got the case from ??
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brilliant,, may i know where you got the case from ??
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its really helpful........
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OMG!!!!!!! Its really AWES [] /\/\ E ...........
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i have watercolours, but they're not in tubes, they're hard and dry (unless aquarell isn't the same as watercolour) is there any difference ??
very good lesson . May i know where you got the case from ??Thanks
forouzandeh1 8 months ago
@forouzandeh1 I Can't remember now, it was many years ago, but you can buy them in any good art store. there are lots of different types, so keep looking till you find the one you like. Sorry I can't be more helpful...
andywalker4 8 months ago
No, it actually saves paint! You keep the paint in the palette for next time, just as if it were paint pans so there is no wasted paint at all.
andywalker4 1 year ago 5
I may add some more videos from the course as time goes by, but they will probably be random videos from different parts of the course, rather than in any sequence. (Sorry, but I do have a living to make from the sale of my courses - I wish everything could be free!) Check out my prices at my website (see end of video for the address).
andywalker4 1 year ago