Ciao Elisa, grazieee! Sei stata bravissima ed efficacissima, ora ho voglia di provare anche se al momento una altra marca. P.S. Riguardo ad un blu che non riuscivi ad asportare in modo efficace: a volte anche per gli acquerelli, in particolare alcuni blu, ci sono pigmenti che tingono e difficili da sfumare. Grazie ancora ero troooppo curiosa❤
Excellent! Wow, thank you Elisa for these tests. About the blue, Giovanna is right: some watercolour pigments stain more than other (staining colours). You covered a lot in this tutorial. The main question that stays open for me is the drying time: traditional watercolour dries quite fast, oil (traditionally used) dries very slowly: so I am still wondering how much time does it take to dry when it is so diluted and how much time could you « rework » it. As an example: if you have a colour put on your paper, could you « reactivate it after 10 minutes with water? And if you have a colour on your paper, could you blend it with another colour after a while? Or does it dry almost as fast as traditional watercolor? I'm asking because drying time is the main advantage of oil over acrylic: you can rework and blend it more easily and much longer. In the same way, it would be a major advantage over traditional watercolor to be able to rework a « oil Watercolor » painting longer in time. Any thoughts? Thank you!
Hi, here I am. I can answer by saying that the times are similar to those of an acrylic. After 10 minutes you will no longer be able to activate it... in fact, unlike watercolors, these colors are considered permanent. Maybe I forgot to say it but this note actually makes me stop using them as watercolors. I hope I have answered you.... and... no, if you add water, the drying is not slow (like oil) but rather fast.
Molto interessanti le prove che fai. 😘
😀grazie!👋🏻☺️
Ciao Elisa, grazieee! Sei stata bravissima ed efficacissima, ora ho voglia di provare anche se al momento una altra marca. P.S. Riguardo ad un blu che non riuscivi ad asportare in modo efficace: a volte anche per gli acquerelli, in particolare alcuni blu, ci sono pigmenti che tingono e difficili da sfumare.
Grazie ancora ero troooppo curiosa❤
Ah ecco! Allora come nella stampa! Il blue è “tremendo”❤️💪🏻🔥Grazie e a presto
@@ElisaValanti_Artist a presto!
Excellent! Wow, thank you Elisa for these tests. About the blue, Giovanna is right: some watercolour pigments stain more than other (staining colours). You covered a lot in this tutorial. The main question that stays open for me is the drying time: traditional watercolour dries quite fast, oil (traditionally used) dries very slowly: so I am still wondering how much time does it take to dry when it is so diluted and how much time could you « rework » it. As an example: if you have a colour put on your paper, could you « reactivate it after 10 minutes with water? And if you have a colour on your paper, could you blend it with another colour after a while? Or does it dry almost as fast as traditional watercolor? I'm asking because drying time is the main advantage of oil over acrylic: you can rework and blend it more easily and much longer. In the same way, it would be a major advantage over traditional watercolor to be able to rework a « oil Watercolor » painting longer in time. Any thoughts? Thank you!
I have the answers, today I'll answer you🤗
Cool! I'll be glad to hear back from you. Thank you for your generosity!
Hi, here I am. I can answer by saying that the times are similar to those of an acrylic. After 10 minutes you will no longer be able to activate it... in fact, unlike watercolors, these colors are considered permanent. Maybe I forgot to say it but this note actually makes me stop using them as watercolors. I hope I have answered you.... and... no, if you add water, the drying is not slow (like oil) but rather fast.
Ok. Thank you very much for all your tests. Great experimentation.