How I Use Gouache - Gouache painting tutorial

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  • Опубликовано: 28 янв 2025

Комментарии • 160

  • @madameojou
    @madameojou 4 года назад +39

    Lena I am so happy you put this out! You are one of the reasons along with Minnie Small that I started painting with gouache and even filming the process. Thank you for providing such great content.

  • @donnabeem3036
    @donnabeem3036 4 года назад +3

    Wow I have never heard of that type of paint before and I could listen to you talk about painting all day long everyday for the rest of my life with that accent and what a beautiful place to paint

  • @carylpark7192
    @carylpark7192 2 года назад +3

    The way you paint boldly without fear is amazing. 👌

  • @shrljazz
    @shrljazz 4 года назад +11

    Lena so happy I found this new video of yours it is so informative. I’m on the fence about getting a set of gouache but I’m learning a lot about the medium on RUclips with yours and others tutorials. Thanks for an excellent demo.

  • @longyarn4288
    @longyarn4288 4 года назад +12

    Instead of paper towels, old tea or hand towels, washcloths and discarded mens undershirts (thin white t-shirts) work well too, and can be washed and used again. My hubby went thru a lot of undershirts as a postal carrier, so I would cut the seams off and use them. When my face washcloths become too raggedy they go in the sack for blotter cloths as well. Environmentally friendly yes, but I also don't feel bad if I'm out & about and loose it somewhere. 👍😁👍

  • @ageloe
    @ageloe 4 года назад +4

    This was very helpful! Thank you! Your video quality is amazing!

  • @tarias_sketchy_adventures
    @tarias_sketchy_adventures 4 года назад +1

    Such a useful video, very well explained - thank you so much!

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      I am glad you enjoyed this video! 😊

  • @salama3161
    @salama3161 4 года назад +3

    Thank you for this video!!! Needed this very much because I just started using gouache paints.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @Birgitte10000
    @Birgitte10000 4 года назад +13

    I love these videos with you talking in them! Super helpful. Thanks!💕

  • @sojournstory
    @sojournstory 4 года назад +2

    I really appreciate you sharing your knowledge with the world. Thank you Lena!

  • @sandihester
    @sandihester 4 года назад +2

    Lena, great video!! I will be recommending this one for sure - I often have people ask me from my channel (BITS OF AN ARTIST'S LIFE) about other artists that use gouache or ask me more questions about using gouache and I always send them to your channel. I can't believe how hard that wind was blowing - yikes!

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      Thank you so much, Sandi! I love your channel! You’re always so positive and funny 🥰

    • @sandihester
      @sandihester 4 года назад

      @@LenaRivo Lena - you watch my channel?!?! Whooohoooo! Really appreciate that!

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      😁 I do, Sandi! I love your personality!

    • @sandihester
      @sandihester 4 года назад

      Lena Rivo 🙌🤗

  • @KirsiJulkuArt
    @KirsiJulkuArt 4 года назад +3

    You have a great plein air setup! Thanks for the video Lena :)

  • @thb-music
    @thb-music 4 года назад +3

    Very grateful for this run down. Thanks!

  • @nathalieheath5693
    @nathalieheath5693 Год назад

    So very helpful to actually see what you are doing! Tfs!!

  • @djhall4799
    @djhall4799 3 месяца назад

    I have enjoyed plein aire gouache painting for many years. This is a lovely video to view. Thank you. D. J. Hall

  • @tomhoward8304
    @tomhoward8304 4 года назад +2

    Wow, it was windy for you. Thanks for sharing your experience with gouache. Beautiful work as always.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      Thank you, Tom!

  • @natlisan
    @natlisan 4 года назад +2

    I really enjoyed watching your process! Thank you for sharing.

  • @sathyapriyasubramaniam8715
    @sathyapriyasubramaniam8715 4 года назад +1

    Detailed info on Gouache and a great painting as usual!! Thanks Lena Rivo!

  • @ArtwithAhra
    @ArtwithAhra 3 года назад +1

    I leaned a lot from you~ !
    I love gouache a lot !!! oh. such a attractive materials~ 🌿

  • @minahaa8666
    @minahaa8666 4 года назад +3

    i love your videos so much 💕💕💕

  • @christineh5717
    @christineh5717 4 года назад +1

    Thank you, what a fun medium to try!

  • @jackiegarroutte8970
    @jackiegarroutte8970 8 месяцев назад

    I love using gouache too! Wonderful medium

  • @carlamariestudios
    @carlamariestudios 4 года назад +3

    So beautiful, as always!

  • @deejaytori
    @deejaytori 4 года назад +8

    Thanks so much for this informative video! I really like your approach to gouache. I've tried it like watercolor in the past, but thinking of it as more like oil or acrylic was such a revelation, and made such an improvement both in the way it felt to paint with it, and in the result.
    By the way, I'm curious as to why you're using titanium white instead of zinc white to mix with your colors here.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +3

      I am glad you found this video helpful!
      This video was filmed before I started using zinc white in my painting, so at that time titanium white was the only white I used.

  • @Yorky222
    @Yorky222 4 года назад +2

    Lovely explanation Lena.

  • @patwessels2322
    @patwessels2322 4 года назад +5

    Great video - thanks. I see when mixing colours you dip straight into different colours on your palette without first cleaning your brush. How do you prevent your palette from eventually becoming contaminated?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +13

      I usually do not clean my brush when I used colors from the same family of colors, blues, for example, or reds, but you are right, sometimes I dip the brush into different colors without cleaning it well. The palette becomes contaminated slightly but after every painting session I clean it by removing the small specks of foreign colors from the wells of my palette using a damp brush - I clean the brush, dry it in the paper towels and then I dip it into the contaminated color to pick the colors that shouldn’t be there, then I repeat this process for another color. It’s work surprisingly well and it takes me only a few minutes to clean the entire palette.

  • @nikhiljatav662
    @nikhiljatav662 3 года назад

    Your videos are so helpful for thanku so much and gouache varnish also so priceless for thanku

  • @roystapleton9333
    @roystapleton9333 4 года назад +7

    Thanks so much a Lena. You have confirmed many of the things I have assumed after watching your process videos. As a Watercolour Sketcher using thick paint without an underlayer seems strange. If you do not get the correct tone and value first time do you layer it or live with it and how do you cope with the Gouache colour shift? Is it just experience?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +11

      Hi Roy, with gouache you can easily correct anything in your painting and repaint even the largest shapes. It’s opaqueness and covering power allows you to do that. Color shifts become a problem mostly when you need to match a color that you have already used. For example, if I need to repaint a part of the sky and I need to mix exactly the same colors of the same value, I usually mix a color that seems to be correct and make a small brushstroke in the area I need to repaint. I wait a few seconds to see if the brushstroke dries darker. If it does, I make the color lighter and test it again. It might sound complicated but it’s not, it’s just a matter of habit and patience :)

    • @roystapleton9333
      @roystapleton9333 4 года назад +1

      Lena Rivo thank you.

  • @saistudent_sachinprabhu
    @saistudent_sachinprabhu 4 года назад +2

    Thank you for sharing :) Have been following work for over a year, love your work :)

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      Thank you so much!

  • @colleenmcchesney1482
    @colleenmcchesney1482 2 года назад

    Oh wow, this video was a huge help for me in finding out why I am struggling with the consistency & my paints drying out too fast. I mostly definitely need to get some of the Winsor & Newton medium to stir into my paints. Thanks so much for sharing this with us. I have a stay-wet palette already so I think that the additional medium shall help me out. Have a great weekend!

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  2 года назад +1

      I am glad you have found my tutorials helpful, Colleen. With the W&N blending medium you might not need the stay-wet palette at all because with the medium gouache stay moist much longer. I just love it.

  • @gannapast
    @gannapast 16 дней назад

    Thank you for video! This was very helpful)

  • @Pedro_Cardoso
    @Pedro_Cardoso 4 года назад +1

    Cascais! Good choice. A couple of weeks ago, I went to Guincho to take some photos (there's an old and rusty lighthouse there). Inspiring places!
    Thank you for this tutorial, very useful, Lena. You're so talented. 👌🏻

  • @mikel4510
    @mikel4510 4 года назад +18

    Despite the uncalled-for and moronic remarks from your detractors, this is one of the better art tutorials on YT. James Gurney, accomplished watercolorist, also uses gouache for plein air painting in much the same manner as you. Maybe check out his YT channel for some tips on plein air equipement. Thanks for sharing! 👍

  • @ioga1977
    @ioga1977 3 года назад

    I am just in love with your works ! Your skills are too high ............

  • @ravennaprojects
    @ravennaprojects 4 года назад +1

    Wow I’ve been trying to use gouache sort of like watercolor, no wonder it’s looked so bad lol thanks so much for this tutorial! Most helpful video on gouache I’ve seen

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад

      I am glad you enjoyed this video, Will! Thank you!

  • @karenmason1731
    @karenmason1731 4 года назад +1

    Such good information. Thank you!

  • @brennakohlhase4194
    @brennakohlhase4194 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this information…you are incredibly dedicated

  • @shonaaitken7635
    @shonaaitken7635 3 года назад

    Thank you, Lena. This was a very helpful video.

  • @SarahBurnsStudio
    @SarahBurnsStudio 4 года назад +3

    Does your paint box every get moldy if it sits for too long?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +2

      No, if I open the box and spray my paints at least once a week. If I forget about them then the only color in my palette that can get moldy is quinacridone rose.

    • @SarahBurnsStudio
      @SarahBurnsStudio 4 года назад +1

      @@LenaRivo thank you! I have the same paint box and mine started to smell a bit funky...but maybe it was just one color! Ive heard a drop of clove oil can help with that but I havent tried it.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +2

      Hm.. weird.. I have stored the same paints in my box for years without cleaning the box or refilling the paints completely, and they never smelled anything but gum arabic, the binder of gouache. The only color in my palette that can get moldy is quinacridone rose, but it’s clearly seen when the mold appears on it. Gouache from cheaper brands may contain some organic compounds that are edible for mold, but professional pigments that I use do not seem to be probe to getting moldy.

    • @SarahBurnsStudio
      @SarahBurnsStudio 4 года назад +2

      @@LenaRivo Interesting! I use Holbein Artist's Gouache which I thought was professional but maybe they just use something weird in their binder. Thank you for your insights!

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      Sarah Burns Studio I use them too... along with W&N gouache. I use my paints often so maybe that is the reason I have never had serious problems with molding... Mold doesn’t like fresh air and when you move the paints. I don’t even know what to think. I love Holbein’s gouache and never had problems with it.

  • @tommycarlier9617
    @tommycarlier9617 4 года назад +1

    Very helpful! Thank you so much! I'll be checking out that pdf for sure

  • @bluebee4157
    @bluebee4157 2 года назад

    Tjank you so much for sharing your experience. 🙏

  • @theponderingpilgrim4342
    @theponderingpilgrim4342 4 года назад

    Thanks Lena for sharing this video. It is very helpful and informative. I found it very good, in relation to learning to paint with Gouache.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад

      Thank you, Andrew. I am glad you found this video helpful!

  • @jytte47
    @jytte47 4 года назад +1

    Thank you very much for this video. I never thought about using paper towels for the excess water :o)

    • @longyarn4288
      @longyarn4288 4 года назад

      Old tea or hand towels, washcloths and discarded mens undershirts (thin white t-shirts) work well too, and can be washed and used again. My hubby went thru a lot of undershirts as a postal carrier, so I would cut the seams off and use them. When my face washcloths become too raggedy they go in the sack for blotter cloths. Environmentally friendly yes, but I also don't feel bad if I loose it somewhere. EDIT TO ADD: I'm going to paste this comment on the main section too. 😉

  • @iknownothing-49
    @iknownothing-49 4 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for this introduction. I seem to remember in your pdf that you mentioned putting a little hydrogen peroxide in the spray bottle with water. I haven’t been able to find out how the hydrogen peroxide might effect the colors or the paper. Will it cause yellowing or bleach or change the colors over the long term?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +4

      Hi Imelda, hydrogen peroxide won’t affect your colors, but I do not recommend to use it anymore because it doesn’t seem to have any effect on the mold. Currently, I am using distilled water to spray my squeezed gouache paints, but my quinacridone rose gets moldy anyway if I leave my palette intact for more than two weeks. So, it seems like nothing can stop the mold from growing and to me it’s not a big deal because the only color in my palette that can get moldy is quinacridone rose (of any brand). Maybe the pigment itself contains the spore of mold. So, I think we can use just tap water to spray our palettes. I had used it for a few years before I stated adding hydrogen peroxide to it or using distilled water and I hadn’t had any serious problems with mold during that time.

    • @iknownothing-49
      @iknownothing-49 4 года назад +1

      Lena Rivo Thanks for letting me know.

  • @joycebutler3494
    @joycebutler3494 4 года назад +2

    Do you recommend a certain kind of brush for gouache, soft bristle or synthetic ?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +4

      Synthetic brushes for acrylics are the best for painting with gouache, they are not too soft like watercolor brushes and they aren’t that hard as brushes for oils. Natural bristles are too rough and they don’t like water.

    • @joycebutler3494
      @joycebutler3494 4 года назад

      Lena Rivo thank you for your response. It helps.

  • @miklosnemeth8566
    @miklosnemeth8566 Год назад +1

    This is a fundamentally important video for gouache painters, this is the 4th time I am watching it. 0:17 "Guache is easy to carry around" in your fantastic PDFs you wrote that you have to always keep your airtight plastic storage palette box in upright position, since the lid is not made to separate the compartments airtight; that is, if you turned the box sideways or upside down, the paints would be mixed together. Is there a version of this kind of box where the compartments are separated from each other when the cover/lid is put on the box?

  • @karensmith7050
    @karensmith7050 4 года назад

    Wonderful and informative, thank you so much

  • @sputnik130857
    @sputnik130857 4 года назад +1

    Hi Lena, acryl gouache and plain gouache are two different things? Different techniques or similar?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +4

      Hi Maria, acrylic gouache is basically acrylic paint with opacifiers added. It dries permanently and can't be reactivated once it has dried. I have never used it because for me it's very important to be able to work on edges in my painting at any time, making them softer or harder. This can only be done with traditional gouache.

  • @andreatorraca8755
    @andreatorraca8755 4 года назад +1

    So helpful, wonderfu

  • @alsalzeri6973
    @alsalzeri6973 2 года назад

    Hi Lena, thanks for this video! When you paint plein air, how do you dispose of your gouache water?

  • @saimaanwer2877
    @saimaanwer2877 2 года назад

    Hello
    Best wishes for you
    My goauch paints dry very fast on paper.
    Also my brush not working properly.
    Any specific paper for gouch

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  2 года назад

      There’s a simple solution to your problem. You need to watch this video: ruclips.net/video/vGEnHB2Eq10/видео.html
      Also, make sure that your paper is not too absorbent. For example Hanhemuhle bamboo paper is awful. Good quality hot pressed paper is the best for gouache in my opinion.

  • @jillrobbins4488
    @jillrobbins4488 4 года назад

    Thank you for a wonderful video!!

  • @t.pisani8239
    @t.pisani8239 Год назад

    How do you keep your colors clean? It looks like you go straight from the palette into your paint containers without cleaning your brush. Doesn't that contaminate the colors??

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  Год назад

      It does a bit, but I clean the colors in my storage palette with a clean brush after every painting session therefore they stay clean.

  • @Neorhim
    @Neorhim Год назад

    May I ask you what is your favorite and 2nd prefered brands of gouache?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  Год назад +2

      I use three brands of gouache interchangeably, depending on the stock of colors when I re-purchase paints. These are W&N, Holbein (artist gouache) and Schmincke Horadam. All of them are excellent and I don’t have any preference between them.

    • @Neorhim
      @Neorhim Год назад

      The price! Haha. I bought Schmincke when there was a great sale on it, when I realised the standard price, I jumped! Then I thought: « oh maybe I won’t stick only to one brand... » Thank you for your answer.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  Год назад +1

      @@Neorhim to me the price of gouache paints is irrelevant because they last a very long time. On my three-week plein air painting trip to Capri I took a couple dozens of extra tubes of gouache or even more, thinking that I would need a lot of paint for the three weeks of painting. I painted every day, two-three studies a day (from 5x7 to 6x8 in), I painted 38 studies in total and I only used one full tube of ultramarine blue, one full tube of yellow ochre and three tubes of white. I partially refilled my palette with other colors only once. So, when you use gouache correctly, meaning without layering it in thick layers, it lasts much longer than oil or acrylic because it’s much more pigmented than any other paints.

    • @Neorhim
      @Neorhim Год назад

      Fair point, I'll consider that indeed. Still it is interesting to know your feelings about other brands, it gives latitudes. Thanks.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  Год назад +1

      @@Neorhim I understand, but I don’t buy other brands. I live in Spain, so those three brands are the most accessible to me. And I would never use student-grade gouache for my painting because they don’t give the unique experience of real gouache paints. I have tried Sennelier “fine” gouache and found it not to be “fine” at all. It felt like very cheap student-grade gouache. It was my only experience with other brands… Many people use M.Graham, but several of my students had problems with mold when using it. Maybe because M.Graham add honey to their paints or other organic substances, I don’t know. When those students switched back to W&N the problem disappeared.

  • @i.brekha4532
    @i.brekha4532 2 года назад

    Great channel glad to find it

  • @liz-mc6bs
    @liz-mc6bs 2 года назад

    Very useful 🙂

  • @petermot645
    @petermot645 2 года назад

    I’m sorry you had to deal with the strong wind, great video !

  • @andrewdanesto29
    @andrewdanesto29 Год назад

    Nice, Thank you for sharing.

  • @tuan_nini
    @tuan_nini 2 года назад

    Thank for the insightful videos! May I ask, have you managed to take the paintbox with you onboard on flights in Europe?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  2 года назад +1

      Glad in was helpful! Yes, I have, as well as many of my students. You can carry this palette in your hand luggage with your other liquids. However, it’s not very convenient because you will need to make sure not to flip it, otherwise the color may bleed. Letting the colors dry for a while before the flight can be beneficial.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  2 года назад

      Glad in was helpful! Yes, I have, as well as many of my students. You can carry this palette in your hand luggage with your other liquids. However, it’s not very convenient because you will need to make sure not to flip it, otherwise the color may bleed. Letting the colors dry for a while before the flight can be beneficial.

  • @숑숑-i2h
    @숑숑-i2h 4 года назад +1

    Hello great artist ! :) i am surprised how gouache makes such a wonderful drawing like oil painting through your works. I love your painting a lot 💗💗 no matter what material you use. I am sorry that my english isn’t very good btw. I follow your tutorial. And wondered how you can maintain your gouache moist. Mines get dry quickly so i squeeze only a bit but you do much. I knew you use w&n and Holbein. I use those too. My question is How can you maintain gouache moist ??

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      That storage palette that I use prevents my paints from fast drying. Since it has narrow and deep wells the paints dry only on top. When you squeeze gouache on a palette your paints dry on all sides, if that makes sense. So, getting this kind of a palette is the first thing you would want to do to make your paints stay fresh longer, but even with this palette you would still need to spray the colors in your storage palette and on the mixing tray when they start getting a dry peel.

  • @mikhailfishbeyn1469
    @mikhailfishbeyn1469 2 года назад

    Hi Lena I am trying to start painting with gouache. Could you send me a link to the storage box for paints and palette?I could not find it in this video. Thanks so much for the video. I subscribed.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  2 года назад

      Hi Mikhail, you can get that storage palette on amazon at this link amzn.to/3sxq6gZ. or you can find it on AliExpress if you type “airtight palette box” in the search bar.

  • @jenneke9763
    @jenneke9763 4 года назад +1

    I've just finished watching your intro video + reading your PDF guide. As someone who wants to begin painting with gouache-using a limited palette, they're exactly the resources I've been scouring the internet for. Until now, though, with so little in-depth INTRO info about gouache available, I'd been 'culling' from acrylic/oil sites, hoping it would translate well to gouache. I love the colours/light you achieve in your work. I found it interesting that you advise mixing with zinc white. Most artists just say 'white' or Titanium, but I'd wondered if zinc white would offer a more gradual change of tone, thus more control. You also advise starting with cadmium red and yellow. Is that because they are the most opaque red and yellow pigments? Thank you for this gouache goldmine!

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +3

      I am glad you have found this video and my pdf guide helpful! Zinc white allows you to slightly alter the values of saturated colors without making them look faded/washed out. Many of my students dislike zinc white because it dries faster on the mixing tray than titanium white, but zinc white has been used as a mixing white by artists for centuries and I find it great for when you want to preserve the vibrancy and saturation of your colors, so basically yes, it offers you more control. Titanium white is perfect when you need to mix very light or/and very opaque colors. As for the , yes, I use them because they are most opaque red and yellow pigments. Winsor and Newton recently launched cadmium-free red and yellow colors which should be good substitutes for the original , but I haven't tried those yet.

  • @Neorhim
    @Neorhim Год назад

    Hi Lena. I wonder what you can say about mold and preventing it. Have you ever had any issues? I just had mold on a Schmincke Ivory black, I was surprised because they all contain biocide. I thought I was fine without too much worrying. Now I wonder if I should discard all the colours in my palette in case they may have been cross-contaminated. What a waste! Would you? Or just discard the contaminated color? I also wonder - if I keep the other colours - what can happen : can I contaminate my art piece with colours that look fine but are in fact contaminated? I heard you use clove bud oil but can't find in which video you mentioned it. You use it on the rubber pad of your palette, is that so? Thank you

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  Год назад +1

      Hello, you can just scrape the mold off that color and keep using your colors. That’s what I have done. I have never used clove oil with gouache. I usually use distilled water to mist my paints while painting, and when I don’t use my gouache for a long time I open the palette box at least once a week and mist the paints with distilled water. One of my colors (quinacridone rose) used to get moldy when I left my palette unopened for a long time, but since I started opening the palette and misting the paints more often that hasn’t happened. Mold doesn’t like fresh air, so opening the palette once in a while and refreshing it with clean water is important. Also, you have watched my video about the W&N medium that helps gouache stay moist longer. That medium is pure propylene glycol. Propylene Glycol has anti-microbial properties, so if you add a few drops of the medium or pharmaceutical-grade propylene glycol to each one of your colors it will further protect your palette from the mold.
      I hope this help :)

    • @Neorhim
      @Neorhim Год назад

      Absolutely, thank you very much for your answer. Very important information about the blending medium. Do you use exclusively distilled water while painting too?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  Год назад +1

      @@Neorhim no, I use distilled water only to mist the paint in my palette box. To wash my brushes, I use tap water. When I travel, I use tap water to mist the paints as well :)

    • @Neorhim
      @Neorhim Год назад

      Thank you again, sorry for all my questions. Mold seem also to grow on our nerves ;-) if I may: I can't find anywhere else that the winsor and newton blending medium is propylene glycol. I'm trying to check if indeed there is a Anti-microbial properties to it. Do you remember where you had the confirmation of the composition of the winsor blending medium? I'm just trying to cross-check the information. Thank you so much.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  Год назад +1

      @@Neorhim they used to provide that information in the safety sheet of the blending medium on dickblick.com. I have seen it. But then, they for some reason removed that information from the safety sheet. Maybe they wanted to keep the composition of the product a secret. I don’t know. If you email them and ask them what the medium is made of they will tell you that they can’t tell you that.
      You don’t need to use the medium. Propylene glycol has been used to slow down the drying time of acrylic paints for a long time. It can be mixed with acrylics, gouache and watercolor. It is often added to foods that have to stay moist for a long time, and it has anti-microbial properties.

  • @gillinacook1477
    @gillinacook1477 4 года назад

    When the lid is closed on the gouache pallet, does the colours run into each other? Do you have to keep the pallet flat? I’ve just bought a pochade box. If you put this kind of pallet in the pochade box while carrying it to location, will the gouache spill in the pochade box if it’s on its side? Hope you know what I’m trying to ask. 😊

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +2

      Yes, the colors would run into each other if you tilted the palette. It has to be stored and carried flat, in a horizontal position. The lid is great, it has a layer of rubber that makes the box airtight, but it doesn’t prevent the colors from bleeding from one well of the box to another.

    • @gillinacook1477
      @gillinacook1477 4 года назад

      Thank you letting me know. How do you transport your gouache pallet and prevent spilling? Just trying to get some ideas. Thank you so much ☺️

  • @callmedeno
    @callmedeno 4 года назад

    Is that white palette the stay wet palette?

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад

      No, that is an ordinary plastic mixing tray.

  • @joandreicer1656
    @joandreicer1656 2 года назад

    I cannot sign up for the free guide using goauche. Please, help!

  • @tamijacque8335
    @tamijacque8335 4 года назад

    Hi Lena, In your palette I notice three greens in the lower left side. This palette is set up slightly different than your most current palette color list. I’m curious to know what these greens are: color/brand? I gather one of them is Sap, and another maybe Chromium Oxide, but it is the other I am not sure about. This was quite the challenge working both the sun and the wind!! Thank you~

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      Hi Tami, the palette in this video in the version that I had used before I created my online course that you have taken. When I was working on the course I eliminated all the unnecessary colors from my palette as well as the colors that weren't lightfast enough. The green you have asked about is the permanent green light from WN. I think its permanence is B. I wouldn't recommend using it. You can mix the same light green by adding cadmium yellow lemon to permanent green deep which is lightfast. The three other greens in this palette are the greens that I keep using in my palette now: permanent green deep, sap green chromium oxide green.

    • @tamijacque8335
      @tamijacque8335 4 года назад

      Lena Rivo This leads me to ask you then about the green created in your more recent painting, ‘Summer Fun’ - the boy with light green swimming suit; was this made with cad yellow lemon and sap green to be that bright? Color is amazing to me. Thanks to your course I have learned things about it I never knew-

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад

      Yes, exactly, but I also added a tiny bit of red to the color to make it a bit grayish because as you know shadows should always be gray not matter how colorful they may seem. The color seems so bright because it’s surrounded by grayer colors with lower saturation. I am very glad that the course was so valuable for you, Tami! Thank you ❤️

  • @monicajimenez9718
    @monicajimenez9718 Год назад

    Where did you boy that screen suppoter??!!🖌️.

  • @숑숑-i2h
    @숑숑-i2h 4 года назад

    thank you a lot for this tutorial and PDF. It really helpful. I made my palette like yours :) and i am enjoying painting whith gouache.
    i am wondering what brand do you use for ‘permanent margenta’ and ‘dioxidine violet’. I can’t find those color at winsor&newton.

    • @kantamana1
      @kantamana1 2 года назад

      they do have dioxazine purple gouache (Windsor violet), and there is at least a watercolour version of permanent magenta

  • @yowhoney3865
    @yowhoney3865 4 года назад

    Thank you so much!!!!! 😍😍😍 You are so amazing ❤❤❤

  • @Vladimok
    @Vladimok 4 года назад

    Merci pour vos videos.
    Où avez-vous acheter le spray pour humidifié votre palette ?
    --------
    Thank you for your videos.
    Where did you buy the spray to humidify your pallet?
    Traduction google

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад

      I believe I got it a grocery store 😁

  • @goilo888
    @goilo888 3 года назад

    I know your comment about not thinning acrylics to a watercolour like consistency is the generally accepted rule, however, when painting on paper, (NOT canvas), I really like doing exactly that. It forms a nice stable underpainting for the addition of other water-based paint. Even watercolour can be used on top of it since it won’t make the paper non-porous unless you put the acrylic wash on too thick.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  3 года назад +2

      I have noticed that watercolor artists and people who have some experience in painting with watercolor tend to use gouache in thin layers while oil painters tend to use it in more opaque layers. It seems to be the matter of preferred painting techniques. Technical reasons aside, I use gouache in the way I use it because it replaced oils for me, so I just adapted my usual painting technique to this medium. Painting in a puzzle-like manner in opaque layers, without doing much layering, allows me to finish my paintings faster and keep my colors cleaner, but many artists achieve beautiful results using gouache in thinner layers. We should do what we like and what works the best for us. I didn’t want to sound like stressing about archival properties of paintings too much. Not at all. I think that the greatest value of painting lies in the feelings the artist experiences during the painting process and in how every painting and the challenges it presents change the artist, in terms of both their skills and their personality.

    • @goilo888
      @goilo888 3 года назад

      @@LenaRivo Absolutely. I am more of a watercolorist (not a good one!) and am getting back into gouache again after only trying them briefly years ago. Have enjoyed watching (and still watching!) your videos.

  • @everythingpxrple
    @everythingpxrple 4 года назад

    where did you buy your mixing palette? is it ceramic/porcelain and easy to clean after painting for the day? + thank you for explaining everything so well about gouache!

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +2

      If you have download my free pdf guide by the link in the description to this video, you should find a section regarding my mixing palette in the guide. That palette is the inner part of a storage palette that I got on Amazon (I left the link in the guide). It’s made of plastic and it’s really easy to clean. I have used the same mixing palette for years and it’s still in a great condition. It’s only slightly scratched by the ferrules of my brushes for I mix color furiously 😁

  • @techmorning
    @techmorning 4 года назад

    Hi Lena. Bright colors like yellow gets contaminated very easily in my palette box. I'm so messy! Any tips for this?
    Thanks in advance, you're the best gouache artist on Earth!

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +1

      Hi! You probably just need to clean your brush every time you deep it into one of those bright colors. I don’t always wash my brushes between different colors, but when I need to pick a yellow I definitely clean the brush well. Also, after every painting session I clean each one of the colors in my palette box using a clean and slightly damp brush. It easily absorbs the small bits of foreign colors and leaves the palette clean 😉

  • @marzsa2715
    @marzsa2715 4 года назад +1

    Thankyouuuu

  • @OceanVibrations
    @OceanVibrations 4 года назад +2

    You rock

  • @mirkoviti
    @mirkoviti 4 года назад

    Thank you very much, guaches thecnique is’nt so easy, your skills are pretty useful 😊👍

  • @hayzee313
    @hayzee313 2 месяца назад

    ahhhhhghh I just discovered u I love your channel 🫶🏽

  • @dininurdiani2779
    @dininurdiani2779 4 года назад +5

    May I know what is your favorite gouache? It’s look so opaque and easy to blend 😊

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +2

      I use W&N and Holbein traditional gouache paints 😉

    • @barba4885
      @barba4885 4 года назад

      @@LenaRivo Hi! You are so inspirational to me! Holbein traditional gouache is that the white box that is listed for a higher price on Amazon?

  • @morsar2009
    @morsar2009 10 месяцев назад

    Pls add Turkish subtitles Lena❤️🌹

  • @sherrierichard2848
    @sherrierichard2848 4 года назад

    I have a question that has been haunting me, about your palette box. When you are dipping your brush into the colors to mix a color, doesn't your brush have paint on it and then you go into another color to add that color...so how do you keep your individual colors from being polluted during the mixing? What is your process for keeping the color wells clean while mixing during a painting session? Do you clean them up after you are finished?
    I'm tired of wasting my gouache paint and want to use your method of putting enough in the palette wells to always have paint ready to go, but if they have other colors mixed in with them, then it seems like if you clean them out at the end - you would still be wasting paint? HELP!

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +2

      Even though I answered to this question in an email yesterday, I will copy and paste my answer here in case someone else has the same question.
      I always hold a paper towel in my left hand while painting and before dipping my brush into a new color I dry it using that paper towel. If the color I am going to use is very different from the color I have used before I wash the brush and dry in with the paper towels in my second bowl. If the color I want to use is similar to the one that is on the brush I only dry the brush with the paper towel in my left hand and pick the color I need. This keeps my palette relatively clean.

    • @sherrierichard2848
      @sherrierichard2848 4 года назад

      @@LenaRivo Thanks and that answers my question perfectly!

  • @saimaanwer2877
    @saimaanwer2877 2 года назад

    For me very difficult to use

  • @annedeguernon8117
    @annedeguernon8117 3 года назад

    Could you please zoom in a little? Thx!

  • @miklosnemeth8566
    @miklosnemeth8566 Год назад

    I fell in love with your art and gouache, but when I saw how brutally expensive guache is. Even the medium priced W&N or Lefranc Bourgeois gouache paints are more expensive than the super high quality Sennelier oil pastels. In your fantastic free PDF book, you mentioned that you have a 22 color set, which means that, if someone wants to follow your tutorials, that student is expected to buy 22 tubes right away. In my area W&N guache (other than the intro 6 or 10-pack sets) are not sold at all by local art stores. I am in the continental EU, and I am not willing to buy from UK or US stores. So, guache seems to be esoteria, and a brutal hassle to start with. Yeah, tempera is available abundantly, but W&N gouache is not. You live in EU, wher do you buy your paints? The only gouache available in one of our local art store is Lefranc Bourgeois, which is not inexpensive at all, either.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  Год назад +1

      To me professional gouache doesn’t seem to be more expensive than professional oil or acrylic (I don’t have experience with oil pastels), because even though gouache tubes are smaller they last much longer that any other paint (although, I do not paint large with gouache). The only “color” that I use up a lot is permanent white which is sold is larger tubes and I buy those in bulk.
      Except for the blues that I use more than other colors, I refill my storage palette on average once a year (and not all of the colors need to be refilled) which means that most of the tubes last me two or three years. I haven’t bought new gouache paints for a long time.
      Lefranc Bourgeois Linel extra fine is excellent gouache. Cheaper gouache paints shouldn’t even be considered gouache because unfortunately they do not provide the same experience and results as high-quality gouache paints. I live in Spain, so I buy most of my art supplies here. Many of my students begin with a very limited palette and then, they gradually expand it by adding a couple new colors a month to speed up and facilitate color mixing. I am aware that in some countries professional gouache is not available or is too expensive. In that case, I would use a different, more accessible painting medium.

    • @miklosnemeth8566
      @miklosnemeth8566 Год назад

      @@LenaRivo Thank You so much for the detailed reply and encouragment. Definitely, I am happy to hear that gouache paint lasts a long time other than whites, but that is OK, the situation is similar with oil pastels, you use enormous amount of white oil pastels. With oil pastels my typical size is 24 x 32 cm, which is not a lot larger than your 20 x 25 or 30 cm paintings.

  • @anamaria286
    @anamaria286 3 года назад

    👏👏👏💖💖💖💖

  • @SharonCullenArt
    @SharonCullenArt 4 года назад +19

    Your approach and use of gouache appears to be from an oil painter’s point of view. I paint in gouache and am a watercolor artist. My approach as well as most watercolorists approach is very different. We begin with more water and work in layers allowing each successive layer to have less water so that it doesn’t move the paint underneath. I would never work with gouache in this way. It is interesting to watch the way you use it but it isn’t the only way. And adding water to thin the first layers of gouache will not make it dust.

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +41

      Yes, I know that many artists use gouache like watercolor, but that is not just a question of habit, it’s more a technical question. The particles of watercolor are tiny, they are designed to be absorbed by the watercolor paper, while the particles of gouache, oils, and acrylics are much larger, they need a binder to hold them together and “glue” them to the painting surface. Just as we can’t dilute acrylics with water (acrylic medium should be used for that), oils with turpentine (linseed oil should be used here), we shouldn’t dilute gouache with water too much too. The pigment particles in these mediums have to be connected, held together and attached to the painting surface by the binder. So, we can’t dilute the binders of these three mediums too much or they will loose their properties (the first washes for underpainting are an exception). I keep this in mind when I am working in oils, acrylics and gouache. There is not much difference between these mediums.

  • @mehmetmaden7654
    @mehmetmaden7654 4 года назад

    🦄

  • @carylpark7192
    @carylpark7192 2 года назад

    👍🙏💞

  • @judyregalado6947
    @judyregalado6947 4 года назад

    Hi am

  • @IheartLacrymariaOlor
    @IheartLacrymariaOlor 3 года назад +1

    I thought the thumbnail was real lol

  • @adityajaishankar4509
    @adityajaishankar4509 4 года назад

    Hi :) Big fan of your work but I don't necessarily agree w your method as being the right way to use goauche. Being one of the more expensive mediums painting gouache in thick layers is frankly a waste and something that can be achieved with cheap acrylics. I prefer to use a bit more water and paint opaque washes which I believe to be a much more smart way to paint with gouache

    • @LenaRivo
      @LenaRivo  4 года назад +10

      Not adding too much water to gouache paints doesn’t mean painting in thick layers. Using gouache the way I use allows me to finish a painting with just one layer (with a few details added on top of that layer) instead of applying many semi-opaque layers of paint. This approach saves me a lot of time and helps me control the values and hues of my colors much better. It also results in a clearer painting. In this video, I explained how I use gouache because many people had asked me about that. I am aware that many, even probably most of the artists who use gouache, use it in semi-opaque washes. I wouldn’t say it’s a smarter way to paint with gouache though, especially considering it’s physical characteristics. Diluting gouache with water to a watercolor-like consistency is like diluting oil paint with turpentine which is technically wrong.

  • @jolkawot4731
    @jolkawot4731 2 года назад

    красиво)