Tuesday, July 31, 2007

In the window of the pigment store where I work part-time
there are banks of display cases full of colored pigments.
I've been wanting to record them and then come home and try to match the colors with paint...
First to match the pigments on my palette,
which by the way, is an old enamel kitchen tray found on Ebay...
And then to match the colors swatches on a test sheet of paper.
The next step is to make a painting...
My watercolor teacher, David Dewey, used to say,
the painting is first of all, set up on your palette.
Get your colors down there first.
I used to take a ton of pictures of his palette mixings...

Then put it down on the paper.
I'd love to select a few of these bottles and make a painting from just those colors - what's known as doing a "limited palette" painting.
Another Dewey trick was to use your dirty water to put the washes down on the paper. It's easier to see where the water is on the white paper if there are bits of pigment in the wash. For most watercolor painters painting with clean water is like religion!
Here's a watercolor paintbox I'd love to have. A client of Wendy Brandes Jewelry designed this for herself using a poison ring bezel!
Claus Oldenburg of the Spoonbridge and Cherry sculpture, said
he does most of his idea sketching at the dinner table...Wouldn't this paintbox ring be a tremendous help?

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