I thought the gold design reminded me of a very unruly eyebrow, but then I looked at it longer, and thought a feather. Some use the wrapper from each pan to make a chart in order and make a color swatch in order on the back of said color info chart and laminate the whole thing. I look forward to each of your uploads, you are easy to listen to and understand your meaning on the topics you discuss. Thank you for sharing and have a wonderful day.
Good job with painting with those! Seems like you have a very good understanding of watercolor. I love Watercolor, and find it is super fun and forgiving to work with. You can always lift the color with a dry brush or paper towel if you put it somewhere you didn’t want, or to add a highlight.
Thanks so much for the tips!! I know NOTHING about watercolour painting - I have no idea why the company thought that I was a good person to test out artist-grade paints. ;) :D
I have a few chemistry/art videos on my channel - I just need to make more. :) This is a link to a short playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLGXRXOsdRqjbSILgHotQrkJ60Jeo9C7iD&si=PuOt56-xMG_0nOO1 I have one video in there where I talk about prehistoric pigments and one where I talk about the different between pigments and dyes (and laking). I've also got some other chemistry/art videos in another playlist - not specifically about pigments but still science-y. :) ruclips.net/p/PLGXRXOsdRqjZ5c0W-95t9W0WwWwXlaITi&si=LjiBYZ0EeFEpXTq8 Hopefully, there will be more soon! :)
Put the dark color down at the base, then with a clean brush drag the color up. Or you can put down a wash, then add more color at base. Also lay water on what you are coloring and then drop in color. Maybe watch a few watercolor tutorials before you attempt to watercolor
Great ideas - thank you! I truly have no idea how to watercolour other than using it as a base layer when colouring - if I want to do anything other than that, I'll definitely watch some tutorials. :) Thanks for chiming in!
I do water color and yes it is a learning curve . yes you can not just take it from the pan and blend specially with better grade watercolor paints cause it is just too thick . you have to mix it with water to get is as light or as dark as you need it to be . the cheaper paints you can take it from the pans but meh it depends. I also use water brushes VS the real brushes . I think I kinda mastered the water brushes better than the brushes LOL. too lazy to get a water dish most of the time lol . the mixing area is also for mixing 2 or more colors together to get yet another different color all together.
I thought the gold design reminded me of a very unruly eyebrow, but then I looked at it longer, and thought a feather. Some use the wrapper from each pan to make a chart in order and make a color swatch in order on the back of said color info chart and laminate the whole thing. I look forward to each of your uploads, you are easy to listen to and understand your meaning on the topics you discuss. Thank you for sharing and have a wonderful day.
True about the wrappers! I might do that if I get any future paint palettes (which I shouldn't - I have more than enough :)). Glad you enjoyed it!
I love your product testing! You do a fantastic job thoroughly researching the product. Well done!
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it! :)
Good job with painting with those! Seems like you have a very good understanding of watercolor. I love Watercolor, and find it is super fun and forgiving to work with. You can always lift the color with a dry brush or paper towel if you put it somewhere you didn’t want, or to add a highlight.
Thanks so much for the tips!! I know NOTHING about watercolour painting - I have no idea why the company thought that I was a good person to test out artist-grade paints. ;) :D
Connie I would be so very interested in a video about pigments and where they come from etc, I’d love your chemistry brains take on pigments :)
I have a few chemistry/art videos on my channel - I just need to make more. :) This is a link to a short playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLGXRXOsdRqjbSILgHotQrkJ60Jeo9C7iD&si=PuOt56-xMG_0nOO1
I have one video in there where I talk about prehistoric pigments and one where I talk about the different between pigments and dyes (and laking).
I've also got some other chemistry/art videos in another playlist - not specifically about pigments but still science-y. :) ruclips.net/p/PLGXRXOsdRqjZ5c0W-95t9W0WwWwXlaITi&si=LjiBYZ0EeFEpXTq8
Hopefully, there will be more soon! :)
Put the dark color down at the base, then with a clean brush drag the color up. Or you can put down a wash, then add more color at base. Also lay water on what you are coloring and then drop in color. Maybe watch a few watercolor tutorials before you attempt to watercolor
Great ideas - thank you! I truly have no idea how to watercolour other than using it as a base layer when colouring - if I want to do anything other than that, I'll definitely watch some tutorials. :) Thanks for chiming in!
I do water color and yes it is a learning curve . yes you can not just take it from the pan and blend specially with better grade watercolor paints cause it is just too thick . you have to mix it with water to get is as light or as dark as you need it to be . the cheaper paints you can take it from the pans but meh it depends. I also use water brushes VS the real brushes . I think I kinda mastered the water brushes better than the brushes LOL. too lazy to get a water dish most of the time lol . the mixing area is also for mixing 2 or more colors together to get yet another different color all together.
Thanks for the info and the advice! :)
for $70.00 Ca. they can keep it