Don't miss my NEW course The Art Within. In it, we cover watercolor fundamentals, drills, and practice. We also discuss finding your own creative style and how to get into "flow state" for optimal creative mindset. Check it out: www.jennarainey.com/the-art-within // If you want more monthly watercolor tutorials, check out my Patreon! I offer ad-free tutorials, Patreon-exclusive tutorials each month, and live art classes. Check it out here: www.jennarainey.com/patreon
This is Joseph Zbukvic - watercolour master - Watercolour Clock. He explains it in his book ‘Atmosphere & Mood in Watercolor. ‘. It has obviously filtered down over the 20 years and influenced many artists. You explained it really well and you credited Brienne and she credited Joseph. I love how explanations keep evolving. It helps the people like me who need to read and then usually see the technicals to really understand. Thank you
Consistency level analogies - summary - 1) tea - very thin watery/transparent , base layer, good for lightest values of darker pigments for large are to cover e.g.sea 2) coffee- just less transparent more darker value than tea, good for second layer, different pigment gives different consistency 3) Milk - thicker consistency, good for wet on wet shadow blending 4) Cream - thick / not move much at drip test, good for very dark values, no transparency, spreads like fire cracker when wet on wet 5) Butter - darkest tone and touch/heavy/tacky, good for dry brush effect, diffuses only at edges when used as wet on wet
Great instruction! Also, for anyone who doesn’t want their watercolor to bead up on a new palette, I learned a trick years ago. Take a plastic non-scratch scrubbie and rub it (dry or wet)on new plastic palette in all directions just hard enough to take sheen off. the surface should then take the paint with less or no beading up.
Oh my gosh, this has helped me soooo much!! I've been nervous with using too much pigment, mainly just because I'm unsure of the outcome and, in my head, it felt taboo. (You're using watercolor, use water...pffft) but when you were digging in your pallette to get more and more pigment, it kind of just opened that door of, huh....I guess I CAN do that! The consistency examples helped a TON! Very helpful! Thank you so much!!
@Apsalara i always think: you can do anything, if you wonder: can i do that? Than you just have to try it, you'll even learn Things so much faster plus.. Isn't that fun? 😃 Following the "rules" too much makes a persoon rigit, try and perhaps you find your own way, sometimes that is better than the "rules", plus there are amázing Artists that do Things different.
@@Pebblesmas I agree sometimes people can be too rigid. People should see the art rules more as like a malleable guideline and they should actually just really listen to what feels right for them
As a beginner I really hadn't thought much about consistency and what that means to watercoloring. I guess I just thought it's all "watery" and haven't explored enough with my paints/pigments yet so this has been a great video to opening my eyes to the different ways to use my watercolors. I'd love to see you do a short tutorial on using your favorite (or most often used) consistencies because I'm wondering if you work in stages, letting parts dry and coming back later or if you are able to do it all in one sitting?
Hi Biologie: just swinging through. Most watercolorists often do need to wait for areas of paint to dry, and it is even necessary for glazing techniques. Some artists hate waiting so much that they use a hairdryer to speed things up. I'd rather not have a hairdryer constantly sitting in my workspace, so I choose to wait. (I hate it.)
@@karltobar2810 I've considered attaching a hook to my desk side and hanging my smaller tool that looks like a mini hairdryer (which is a Ranger Heat-It Craft Tool).
This is one of ‘the’ best examples of watercolour consistency. I have done 3 online courses with famous landscape artists and none of them were able to show students how to do this correctly, we came away baffled and I learned the hard way by trial & error coming to the conclusion myself of the tea, coffee, milk, cream & butter which is perfect. So Well done ✏️🎨🖍.
I'm just trying to learn how to get some color on paper and it not be mud. I don't have a Art supply store nearby and bought some cheap practice stuff from Walmart. I've got hopefully better Paper, better paints and better brushes (bristles falling out)coming through Amazon. I've been looking for videos that teach you something about paint and not a bunch of talking. This video is so great. I'm decent at drawing, still learning how to use Value correctly and wanted to be able to put Color to be able to one day say now I've almost became a Artist. This video actually helped me understand that watercolor paint does not need to be watered down running everywhere mess. I've got a long way to go. I've given up a few times from frustrating attempts to watercolor. This is a confidence booster. Now I've got to practice. Thank you.
Jenna, thank you! This is one of my biggest problems (along with a million others). It helps me that you teach the basics. I need a good foundation. It's not as much fun as painting flowers, but it's so important.
So glad that I found you here. I have been an art teacher/artist for years and though I am teaching the same concepts/rules I have not been able to put things into words the way that you do. So wonderfully. Thank you for this help!
I am brand new to watercolor and this was a fantastic tutorial! The dry ones were pretty successful but need a lot more practice on the wet on wet. By far the best explanation I have found so far!!
The more I work, the more issues I uncover. This video is helping me so much! My earlier 'techniques' have involved a lot of paper towel blotting and poking my brush directly into paint. You are an excellent instructor.
Thank you, Jenna. This helped a lot! It was a light bulb moment. I've struggled with my paints being too watery especially when doing wet on wet now I feel like I get it.
So good I watched twice. Really good for not only beginners but people like me that have been at it for almost two years but couldn’t figure out what went wrong in their paintings. I am going to do this exercise to get better at water paint ratio. Really excellent.
THANK YOU for this Jenna!! 🙏🏻 SO helpful - I had been adding water randomly and not understanding how the process works. Great to have it explained so well. 😊
This is a wonderful way of explaining the different watercolor consistencies. Oh, how I wish I had this information when I started painting 20 years ago! I am going to teach a beginner watercolor class soon and will definitely share this video.
I have this book, I guess I really need to get it out. I’m just getting to the point where I’m realizing that watercolor is supposed to move and flow. I started out using it more like acrylic, but was never happy with my results. I’m so happy I kept at it, thanks for sharing all your knowledge.
I've been moving backwards instead of forwards! I started watching your videos in a helter skelter order and results of course have been all over the place. This video has been very helpful and will help me get a better start. Thanks!
I’m just a beginner and this cleared up a lot of questions for me. I’ve watched your beginner video a few times and was confused why my colors and results were not consistent with yours. A real lightbulb exercise! Thank you.
Hi Jenna Use a glue stick and a wet tissue on your plastic palette or tin palettes! (stops staining and beading on new palettes) and even at your stage, it will stop the beading. Have fun! New to your channel....thanks again! In kindred spirit Eliza Dulwich Hill, Sydney Australia x
Oh my gosh, this was sooooo helpful. I even took notes on my paper. So the next night I started working on bleeds… so when it didn’t run, I knew what to do to fix it. This video made a night and day difference.
Thank you Jenna! I’ve just started following you and I’m an absolute beginner but this video gave me a great help to learn to play with values! You’re a great teacher also for an Italian student still struggling with English 😊
REALLY helpful and enlightening for this newbie, thank you! I've come to the conclusion watercolor is a thinking person's game and I had NO idea it was so nuanced. I will be learning for the rest of my life😂
This goes along with another of your videos, about the 5 stages of watercolor painting. First two related to drawing (shapes, details) Next three relate to light, mid-tones and details. Now it's clear what consistency the paint needs to be for various stages. Some teachers demonstrate their techniques, which is great, but you explain the theory behind them, which is something many of us need to develop our own ways of working.
A very timely video for me, because I've been reading about this very exercise in a book by Spanish watercolour artist Pablo Rúben López Sanz (although he doesn't use your drink analogies). I found the analogies to consistency very helpful and an easy to remember guide when mixing the paint and loading the brush. These exercise videos to develop skills, feel and nuances are superb for helping relative beginners like me. I tend to paint a bit heavy, using too much pigment, so I lose a lot of the transparency effect that watercolours can bring. Mind you, I do like intense colours, so I guess that's a bit of thing with me. I do try and paint more transparent sometimes, which is something I'm working on through urban sketching type paintings, loose flower paintings and trees for example.
I keep watching this video, when it's part of another longer video and this solo version. It is so helpful. I am still in the stage of too much or not enough water, but I'm getting better at it and videos like this help so much. I've seen the comparison to various kitchen liquids before but the examples they used were mostly products that I have no familiarity with aside from tea and milk. lol
Thanks for this! It has really made so much clearer to me. You have given me a major breakthrough in understanding. I years ago did a painting of a lava flow that I really struggled with and worked on over a couple of years. Since the la palma eruption I saved videos of it to try another lava painting. Now with this understanding I think that will be much easier. I also think a lot of my efforts will benefit from this video.
Thank you so much for these explanations and demonstrations! As a beginner I have been struggling with the water and pigment ratios; I was beginning to understand but this video has really helped a lot to pinpoint the important factors! I'm very inspired :)
Lovely examples and a great tutorial. TCMCB, those are good things to remember when working on pieces. I love how you broke it down and then showed the after as how you might apply it to our work. As a beginner in the world of Water Color, I find I have more FAILS than success. Though it is a journey and someday I may actually get to a point that I can paint. Enjoyed your sharing, your enthusiasm and your teaching style. I look forward to watching more videos to learn. ✨🧡✨
It's really difficult to control the amount of water when using watercolor, I used too much so my strokes were not as I wanted. Thanks to your video tutorial I can rest assured to finish my next paintings. Your sharing is great, I appreciate your contribution.
This is my favorite video of yours so far because water consistency had me stumped. I also got a question answered that maybe others have. And that is, what’s a better shape palette for mixing? I see you’re testing consistency in a wide open, flat area and demonstrating how to determine it. I’ve been using small little circular cups. Now Imma go make some tea, coffee, milk, cream and butter. But first I will go get a better mixing palette! Thanks so much.
This is just what I needed! -- It should not be a surprise to me; but I just started a week or so ago and painting has yielded mixed results, but after doing these swatches, I can already see I can use them :) thanks for the video!
Ty for these videos. Been trying water colors for 6 months (acrylics do better) but had more practice. Like pouring acrylics they say (consistency like “warm honey” but not often do I make “warm honey”! So know need more practice in water control! See most artist (even with water & pigment on brush) get some off by pressing it on a paper towel. Tyvm as every lil tip helps!
This is so informative and helpful, thank you. But one of my biggest problems is that I get a blob of darker color somewhere on whatever shape I'm making (for instance, if I'm doing a leaf it will be at the tip). It's so frustrating! But I did watch your video where you said you practiced for hours every day for a long time before you got it right, so I'll keep chugging away.
Also the paper sizing can effect the water absorbency. Stonehenge let's the water sit in top longer than others that suck the water of a wash in like a man stranded in the desert. When she laid down the wash at first I thought, "Oh the water will dry before she gets to the tea part." Then I remembered seeing the Stonehenge tablet in the thumb nail and realized it would be fine. 😅
so interesting that some colors spread differently than others with wet-on-wet. this video is both informative and helpful. I'm learning a lot from you, and I would be so interested to hear who YOU learned from.
Another beautifully presented lesson🤩. I paint in a completely different style, but this explanation allowed me to crystallize how I think about water and value control.
I've seen thus explained but never as clearly. Thank you so much. Looking forward to your book, you've been busy! ❤ Your Misty Jungle demonstrates this pretty well too!
Hullo Jenna, Excellent instruction of basic paint density! I know different paints react to the consistency according to their recipe in spreading out and so forth. I have also discovered the hardness of water was something I never considered until I had troubles with my watercolor paints when traveling! I know you do not want to introduce to many variables when teaching I believe you balanced this very well. Thank You.
This was inCREDibly helpful!!! THANK YOU!! I have been struggling w/ my water/pigment ratio and this as a game changer, for sure!! I did the exercise and it opened my eyes. Looking forward to no more muddy paintings. Thank you!
This is very helpful. Thank you! My mantra these days is "you are worthy of your supplies" (I read this in the comments on Dr. Oto Kano's video) so I don't feel bad using a lot of paint like in cream and butter consistency. I always had the issue of my paint spreading too much in the skies to the point there are no clouds. Wet on wet is difficult to master because they react so differently in different drying stages. Would love to see a video on it! If you have one already then I'll look for it.
WOW. Pun intended. Thanks so much for this clear and instructive video. As a beginner, I have struggled with water control. It is always hit or miss. Hope the new house is all you dreamed.
Don't miss my NEW course The Art Within. In it, we cover watercolor fundamentals, drills, and practice. We also discuss finding your own creative style and how to get into "flow state" for optimal creative mindset. Check it out: www.jennarainey.com/the-art-within // If you want more monthly watercolor tutorials, check out my Patreon! I offer ad-free tutorials, Patreon-exclusive tutorials each month, and live art classes. Check it out here: www.jennarainey.com/patreon
Watched. You're very detailed in explanation. It's good. Helps a lot. Thank you.
This is Joseph Zbukvic - watercolour master - Watercolour Clock. He explains it in his book ‘Atmosphere & Mood in Watercolor. ‘. It has obviously filtered down over the 20 years and influenced many artists. You explained it really well and you credited Brienne and she credited Joseph. I love how explanations keep evolving. It helps the people like me who need to read and then usually see the technicals to really understand. Thank you
Glad you liked my explanation, Tracy, thanks for sharing!
Consistency level analogies - summary -
1) tea - very thin watery/transparent , base layer, good for lightest values of darker pigments for large are to cover e.g.sea
2) coffee- just less transparent more darker value than tea, good for second layer, different pigment gives different consistency
3) Milk - thicker consistency, good for wet on wet shadow blending
4) Cream - thick / not move much at drip test, good for very dark values, no transparency, spreads like fire cracker when wet on wet
5) Butter - darkest tone and touch/heavy/tacky, good for dry brush effect, diffuses only at edges when used as wet on wet
I like using q tip in place of brushes.
Thanks in less than 1 min
I’m 76…saw the headline and hurried to watch…low and behold it was about WATERCOLOR???? Lol❣️
Great instruction! Also, for anyone who doesn’t want their watercolor to bead up on a new palette, I learned a trick years ago. Take a plastic non-scratch scrubbie and rub it (dry or wet)on new plastic palette in all directions just hard enough to take sheen off. the surface should then take the paint with less or no beading up.
Yes, I worked that out myself as well. Makes a huge difference! ❤
Oh my gosh, this has helped me soooo much!! I've been nervous with using too much pigment, mainly just because I'm unsure of the outcome and, in my head, it felt taboo. (You're using watercolor, use water...pffft) but when you were digging in your pallette to get more and more pigment, it kind of just opened that door of, huh....I guess I CAN do that! The consistency examples helped a TON! Very helpful! Thank you so much!!
@Apsalara i always think: you can do anything, if you wonder: can i do that? Than you just have to try it, you'll even learn Things so much faster plus.. Isn't that fun? 😃 Following the "rules" too much makes a persoon rigit, try and perhaps you find your own way, sometimes that is better than the "rules", plus there are amázing Artists that do Things different.
@@Pebblesmas I agree sometimes people can be too rigid. People should see the art rules more as like a malleable guideline and they should actually just really listen to what feels right for them
I have heard about the tea, coffee, milk, cream, and butter consistency before, but having you show butter as a dry paint really helped.
Glad it helped, Joanne! 💕
As a beginner I really hadn't thought much about consistency and what that means to watercoloring. I guess I just thought it's all "watery" and haven't explored enough with my paints/pigments yet so this has been a great video to opening my eyes to the different ways to use my watercolors. I'd love to see you do a short tutorial on using your favorite (or most often used) consistencies because I'm wondering if you work in stages, letting parts dry and coming back later or if you are able to do it all in one sitting?
Hi Biologie: just swinging through. Most watercolorists often do need to wait for areas of paint to dry, and it is even necessary for glazing techniques. Some artists hate waiting so much that they use a hairdryer to speed things up. I'd rather not have a hairdryer constantly sitting in my workspace, so I choose to wait. (I hate it.)
@@karltobar2810 I've considered attaching a hook to my desk side and hanging my smaller tool that looks like a mini hairdryer (which is a Ranger Heat-It Craft Tool).
@@jenniferalvarez4041 Great workaround; thanks for the feedback.
This is one of ‘the’ best examples of watercolour consistency. I have done 3 online courses with famous landscape artists and none of them were able to show students how to do this correctly, we came away baffled and I learned the hard way by trial & error coming to the conclusion myself of the tea, coffee, milk, cream & butter which is perfect. So Well done ✏️🎨🖍.
I'm just trying to learn how to get some color on paper and it not be mud. I don't have a Art supply store nearby and bought some cheap practice stuff from Walmart. I've got hopefully better Paper, better paints and better brushes (bristles falling out)coming through Amazon. I've been looking for videos that teach you something about paint and not a bunch of talking.
This video is so great. I'm decent at drawing, still learning how to use Value correctly and wanted to be able to put Color to be able to one day say now I've almost became a Artist.
This video actually helped me understand that watercolor paint does not need to be watered down running everywhere mess.
I've got a long way to go. I've given up a few times from frustrating attempts to watercolor. This is a confidence booster. Now I've got to practice. Thank you.
Glad this has been a confidence booster. Here's a video I did on avoiding muddy colors, hope this helps too: ruclips.net/video/yKckdhS9RjA/видео.html
Jenna, thank you! This is one of my biggest problems (along with a million others). It helps me that you teach the basics. I need a good foundation. It's not as much fun as painting flowers, but it's so important.
One of mine as well.
So glad that I found you here. I have been an art teacher/artist for years and though I am teaching the same concepts/rules I have not been able to put things into words the way that you do. So wonderfully. Thank you for this help!
I am brand new to watercolor and this was a fantastic tutorial! The dry ones were pretty successful but need a lot more practice on the wet on wet. By far the best explanation I have found so far!!
Glad it was helpful!
The more I work, the more issues I uncover. This video is helping me so much! My earlier 'techniques' have involved a lot of paper towel blotting and poking my brush directly into paint. You are an excellent instructor.
I’ve done this for years but have never had anyone explain it to me. Thank you!! So helpful!
Thank you, Jenna. This helped a lot! It was a light bulb moment. I've struggled with my paints being too watery especially when doing wet on wet now I feel like I get it.
Glad it was helpful!
Seriously thank you❤❤.. no one had ever explain this before.. I think it was the major problem that I couldn't address when I use watercolor!!
That was the most clear explanation I have heard on my watercolor journey! Thank you.
So good I watched twice. Really good for not only beginners but people like me that have been at it for almost two years but couldn’t figure out what went wrong in their paintings. I am going to do this exercise to get better at water paint ratio. Really excellent.
THANK YOU for this Jenna!! 🙏🏻 SO helpful - I had been adding water randomly and not understanding how the process works. Great to have it explained so well. 😊
Hi Jenna, I thought your lesson is and was very helpful. Because it show the time it takes to mix all of the vakues shown. Love it.Hal
This is a wonderful way of explaining the different watercolor consistencies. Oh, how I wish I had this information when I started painting 20 years ago! I am going to teach a beginner watercolor class soon and will definitely share this video.
I had no idea I've been winging it with my watercolor sketches until now. THANK YOU!
I have this book, I guess I really need to get it out. I’m just getting to the point where I’m realizing that watercolor is supposed to move and flow. I started out using it more like acrylic, but was never happy with my results. I’m so happy I kept at it, thanks for sharing all your knowledge.
Thank you! What an informative video. Outstanding as usual.
I've been moving backwards instead of forwards! I started watching your videos in a helter skelter order and results of course have been all over the place. This video has been very helpful and will help me get a better start. Thanks!
I’m just a beginner and this cleared up a lot of questions for me. I’ve watched your beginner video a few times and was confused why my colors and results were not consistent with yours. A real lightbulb exercise! Thank you.
This help me discover wide range of possibilities with just 'one color'!
Appreciate the lesson 🥹
Glad you enjoyed!
Hi Jenna
Use a glue stick and a wet tissue on your plastic palette or tin palettes! (stops staining and beading on new palettes) and even at your stage, it will stop the beading.
Have fun!
New to your channel....thanks again!
In kindred spirit
Eliza
Dulwich Hill, Sydney
Australia x
Oh my gosh, this was sooooo helpful. I even took notes on my paper. So the next night I started working on bleeds… so when it didn’t run, I knew what to do to fix it. This video made a night and day difference.
Thank you Jenna! I’ve just started following you and I’m an absolute beginner but this video gave me a great help to learn to play with values! You’re a great teacher also for an Italian student still struggling with English 😊
You are extremely generous with sharing your skill set, because of this, I believe you will have even greater success than you have now.
REALLY helpful and enlightening for this newbie, thank you! I've come to the conclusion watercolor is a thinking person's game and I had NO idea it was so nuanced. I will be learning for the rest of my life😂
One of the best watercolor teaching. Thank you. It was super helpful.
I haven’t seen this demonstrated with the consistency! Thank you
This goes along with another of your videos, about the 5 stages of watercolor painting. First two related to drawing (shapes, details) Next three relate to light, mid-tones and details. Now it's clear what consistency the paint needs to be for various stages. Some teachers demonstrate their techniques, which is great, but you explain the theory behind them, which is something many of us need to develop our own ways of working.
A very timely video for me, because I've been reading about this very exercise in a book by Spanish watercolour artist Pablo Rúben López Sanz (although he doesn't use your drink analogies). I found the analogies to consistency very helpful and an easy to remember guide when mixing the paint and loading the brush.
These exercise videos to develop skills, feel and nuances are superb for helping relative beginners like me. I tend to paint a bit heavy, using too much pigment, so I lose a lot of the transparency effect that watercolours can bring. Mind you, I do like intense colours, so I guess that's a bit of thing with me. I do try and paint more transparent sometimes, which is something I'm working on through urban sketching type paintings, loose flower paintings and trees for example.
So glad to hear this is a timely video for you, Mark! Thanks for sharing!
I keep watching this video, when it's part of another longer video and this solo version. It is so helpful. I am still in the stage of too much or not enough water, but I'm getting better at it and videos like this help so much. I've seen the comparison to various kitchen liquids before but the examples they used were mostly products that I have no familiarity with aside from tea and milk. lol
This has been so helpful, I have really been struggling with water control and paint consistency. Thanks so much. ❤
This was so helpful! Thank u! I hadn't been able to figure out how the spreading happened in a slow way like the cream. I love it!
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks for this! It has really made so much clearer to me. You have given me a major breakthrough in understanding. I years ago did a painting of a lava flow that I really struggled with and worked on over a couple of years. Since the la palma eruption I saved videos of it to try another lava painting. Now with this understanding I think that will be much easier. I also think a lot of my efforts will benefit from this video.
This was so very helpful!!! Thank you so much for sharing!! I love all your insights and your thoughtful explanations!
Wow Jenna, you are such a pleasure to listen to, and your instructions are clear and doable! Thank you.!
Thanks so much!, I now know I am often not using enough pigment!!
Thank you so much for these explanations and demonstrations! As a beginner I have been struggling with the water and pigment ratios; I was beginning to understand but this video has really helped a lot to pinpoint the important factors! I'm very inspired :)
Can't wait for your new book! Just bought your other two. Thank you for your teachings!
Só helpfull to me, thanks 👏🏻
Lovely examples and a great tutorial. TCMCB, those are good things to remember when working on pieces. I love how you broke it down and then showed the after as how you might apply it to our work. As a beginner in the world of Water Color, I find I have more FAILS than success. Though it is a journey and someday I may actually get to a point that I can paint. Enjoyed your sharing, your enthusiasm and your teaching style. I look forward to watching more videos to learn. ✨🧡✨
Thank you! This helped so much! It seems like such a simple exercise, but it helped me recognize the 5 stages of paint consistency.
Wow !! Thank you very very much !
This will help me so much with my values. You're such a good watercolorist and a generous teacher.
It's really difficult to control the amount of water when using watercolor, I used too much so my strokes were not as I wanted. Thanks to your video tutorial I can rest assured to finish my next paintings. Your sharing is great, I appreciate your contribution.
This is a great! Thanks so much I appreciate you and your husband so much!
This is my favorite video of yours so far because water consistency had me stumped. I also got a question answered that maybe others have. And that is, what’s a better shape palette for mixing? I see you’re testing consistency in a wide open, flat area and demonstrating how to determine it. I’ve been using small little circular cups. Now Imma go make some tea, coffee, milk, cream and butter. But first I will go get a better mixing palette! Thanks so much.
This is just what I needed! -- It should not be a surprise to me; but I just started a week or so ago and painting has yielded mixed results, but after doing these swatches, I can already see I can use them :) thanks for the video!
AHA! Light bulb moment😳Brilliant!❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
It reminds me of Chinese brush painting, and the five shades of black ink.
Ty for these videos. Been trying water colors for 6 months (acrylics do better) but had more practice. Like pouring acrylics they say (consistency like “warm honey” but not often do I make “warm honey”!
So know need more practice in water control! See most artist (even with water & pigment on brush) get some off by pressing it on a paper towel. Tyvm as every lil tip helps!
A fantastic tutorial in which I learned a lot! Very clear explanation, thank you! 👌
This is so informative and helpful, thank you. But one of my biggest problems is that I get a blob of darker color somewhere on whatever shape I'm making (for instance, if I'm doing a leaf it will be at the tip). It's so frustrating! But I did watch your video where you said you practiced for hours every day for a long time before you got it right, so I'll keep chugging away.
Also the paper sizing can effect the water absorbency. Stonehenge let's the water sit in top longer than others that suck the water of a wash in like a man stranded in the desert. When she laid down the wash at first I thought, "Oh the water will dry before she gets to the tea part." Then I remembered seeing the Stonehenge tablet in the thumb nail and realized it would be fine. 😅
so interesting that some colors spread differently than others with wet-on-wet. this video is both informative and helpful. I'm learning a lot from you, and I would be so interested to hear who YOU learned from.
Thank you 4 an amazing video, again New lessons i have not seen before, and great lessons and practise possibilities, loved it!
Blending colors is a good topic too.
Another beautifully presented lesson🤩. I paint in a completely different style, but this explanation allowed me to crystallize how I think about water and value control.
I've seen thus explained but never as clearly. Thank you so much. Looking forward to your book, you've been busy! ❤ Your Misty Jungle demonstrates this pretty well too!
Hullo Jenna, Excellent instruction of basic paint density! I know different paints react to the consistency according to their recipe in spreading out and so forth. I have also discovered the hardness of water was something I never considered until I had troubles with my watercolor paints when traveling! I know you do not want to introduce to many variables when teaching I believe you balanced this very well. Thank You.
This was inCREDibly helpful!!! THANK YOU!! I have been struggling w/ my water/pigment ratio and this as a game changer, for sure!! I did the exercise and it opened my eyes. Looking forward to no more muddy paintings. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful, David!
@@JennaRaineyChannel It was MORE than helpful....it was the KEY that unlocked my frustration w/ ratios! Thanks!
This is very helpful. Thank you! My mantra these days is "you are worthy of your supplies" (I read this in the comments on Dr. Oto Kano's video) so I don't feel bad using a lot of paint like in cream and butter consistency. I always had the issue of my paint spreading too much in the skies to the point there are no clouds. Wet on wet is difficult to master because they react so differently in different drying stages. Would love to see a video on it! If you have one already then I'll look for it.
Thank you, I had just put down in the survey about water blending. Thanks again .
Nicely explained and demonstrated. Thanks.
Very very helpful‼️ Thank you. My university professor in 1969 was a failure..he didn’t teach us anything helpful…the only bad egg I had. ❤️💕
WOW. Pun intended. Thanks so much for this clear and instructive video. As a beginner, I have struggled with water control. It is always hit or miss. Hope the new house is all you dreamed.
Thankypu so much for your precious time.
The best video ever. Makes me want to start dabbling right now in your realm!
I hope your book will get to Europe the same summer! I love your book with flowers, forests and birds!
REALLY great video. Thank you Jenna!
Thank you soooo much! This helps me so much and I am excited to do these exercises! I hope you know what a GREAT teacher and artist you are! 😀
I was initially very confused because in my country, we usually drink tea and coffee with milk. Then it clicked that you meant tea and coffee black! 😅
Wow....what a great way to explain things. Thank you!
Thank you very much for teaching this in detail. I have seen " the light" and is dying to test this out !!
I love this so much. Thank you for posting it.
Thank you! This helps so much for beginners!
This is soooo good. I have such a problem with this. Your explanation is so clear. Can’t wait to try it out.
Glad it was helpful! 💕
This has been extremely helpful. Thank you
Thank you, this is soooooooo helpful, heading off now to practice practice practice!
So glad it’s helpful for you!
About pencil lines: I use a watercolor pencil in the same color, keeping the pencil line very light.
Your video was really helpful and gave me a concrete way to understand consistency of my paint and how it works on dry and wet. Great exercise.
sooooo helpful! I have been using too much tea/coffee....not really exploring the others enough. Thank you!
This is so incredibly helpful. Thank you so much!
Thank you for an excellent explanation. ❤
Brilliant video for us beginner!! Thank you!
Fabulous!!! Thank you so much ~ you are so generous!
You are an amazing teacher👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Super super helpful video. Thank you.
Glad it’s helpful!
You Jenna…are the bomb! Thank you!
Thank you Jenna! This very very helpful. I would love to see a video on BLENDING!
This is immensely helpful, Jenna. Thank you very much.
Mel in Devon 🍰🌻
Awesome my friend we thank you so much for your knowledge⚘
Awesome tutorial as always. Water control is def one I struggle with.
Thank you so much!!!! This helped me so much.