How to Unify Your Watercolor Painting
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- Опубликовано: 2 янв 2024
- ▶︎Free Downloadable Guide: 5 Steps to Plan a Successful Watercolor Painting www.learntopaintwatercolor.co...
Today I'm demonstrating how to unify your watercolor painting. Unification is important in watercolor painting. Painting the large shape of the scene will help you accomplish this.
If you would like to purchase some of the brushes I feature in this video you can take a look at my Amazon Affiliate link: www.amazon.com/shop/m.white.art Хобби
▶︎Free Downloadable Guide: 5 Steps to Plan a Successful Watercolor Painting www.learntopaintwatercolor.com/5steps
I love this video format! It is so helpful to see the reference photo, you pointing at the parts of the photo that you’re referring to, and hearing your thinking process and decision-making. This was really instructive. Thank you!
Details are the easy part, it's the drawing and overall large shapes and values that make the painting.
Love the breakdown and how you point everything out. The middle value is where I struggle. This is helpful.
I follow your tutorials with great results
Great job Matt. 'love the speed play-by-play!
Love the way you teach. so simple yet very helpful .
Very useful video ! Thanks a lot !
Keep up the high quality content!
And happy new year
Excellent tutorial, thanks. I will try to implement this in my next painting
Thank You
You're welcome!
감사합니다.
Thank you!
Extremely helpful. Thank you
Another great one. Thanks.
Thank you so much!
This is cool❤ tks Matt
I get it now! 💡 😮thank you 🙏🏻
Thank you for all your tutorials, you are a great communicator and so consistent in your tips and techniques. One question, how do you save the whites of your paper for your lightest lights/highlights when you wet both sides of your paper? It's a great technique, especially in Colorado where the paper dries so quickly that getting nice wet in wet and flow is very hard. But I have not figured out how to save the whites without masking or wetting most of the paper on both sides but strategically trying to leave some of the paper dry - which is quite a challenge!
It so happens I just watched a video where he answers this question: ruclips.net/video/EUu94-3JfTw/видео.html
I love watching your process... I would love to paint engaging city scapes or landscapes, but have mainly worked on florals, animals and portraits (which were my reason to begin watercolor). Is it important to connect mid value shapes in any type of painting or primarily in landscapes?
Could that be implemented when painting a foliage???