 Okay, we can now introduce some of the creamy color that we mixed previously. I'll often use my finger just to blend an edge. Often in paintings you'll notice that the top left hand and top right hand corners, especially in landscape paintings, have got a darker tone to them. This is really handy because it helps to bring the viewer's focus into the center of the piece. So now to start to put in some of the sea area, it's just another mixture. It's very close to the top mixture, but it's just with the ultramarine blue and the white. That's all it's got in it, so it's very simple to mix. Where I've got some of the reflection from this color coming into the water, I'll just take a bit of this paint and that'll probably still be a little bit damp, so you see how it mixes it to make that greeny tinge that we've got in the water. So the next color I've got is just some of this pre-mixed color that we mixed for the cloud, just with a bit of white in. You see how it cools it down as well as lightens it up, just so we can start to paint in some of the reflected light from this cloud that's onto the beach. I'm not worried if I don't cover this over completely because it's quite nice to have a bit of texture, especially because this is like sand on the beach. It's a bit darker, so I'll use the darker color. This corner here is a bit bluer, so you can put some of the that lighter purple on and then you can mix some of the blue into it. Put in some of that local color. So now the basics to your acrylic landscape painting are blocked in. If you've got this far, brilliant! I hope you're really pleased with it. It's been very straightforward. We haven't used many colors, so now you can start to bring it to the next level of finish. I'm going to add some more of the pure blue and some of the crimson red that we've got, so we can start to get the real pinky pink that comes through the sky and darken some of the corners, as I was mentioning before, to finish the painting off.