The process of a watercolor portrait from Start to Finish! Original work by @mayasky

in art •  7 years ago  (edited)

Hi all beautiful people!

Today I wanted to walk you through my latest watercolor portrait.
I've been mainly focusing on my oil paintings lately and it feels super nice to work with a faster medium like watercolor every once in a while to change things up!

This portrait was based on a photo of a friend but it looks nothing like her. I like to do that from time to time, just use pictures as a reference to get a sence of the light situation or to have a structure to base my ''imagined'' face on.

It's refreshing to be able to not care too much about likeness, but mor about the medium itself.

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A few of the stages from the portrait I will be talking about..

One of the aspects of watercolor that I really enjoy is that it helps me to train my understanding and design of ''shapes''. When I say shapes, I mean that everything we see is put together by one or several shapes. How these shapes and planes relate to each other by values and color will determinate the light effect and feeling of form we achieve.

This also applies in oilpaint of course, but because watercolor is such a loose and ''uncontrolable'' medium, knowing your shapes and planes really helps you to handle it.

So let's start!

Step 1:

1..jpg

Step 1 is making a drawing. Like you can see I haven't put any values in with my pencil, I'm just drawing in the ''shapes'' that i will fill in later with paint. One thing I find very helpful when I paint watercolors is to also draw in the shapes of the highlights. This lets me know where NOT to put down any paint but leave pure paper to achiece that nice clear white. Look at her nose for example and you can see I have drawn in the shape of the highlight.

Step 2:

2.jpg

The first thing I do is put down a light wash of a general skin color. This is a mixture of bright red, ochre and a tiny bit of ultramarine blue. I avoid painting over the areas that I have marked off as pure paper areas.

Step 3:

3.jpg

In step 3 I make a light shadow shape value and fill in the shapes that i know will have this shade or a darker color. It's always importrant to work from light to dark as we can always add darker values and more paint on top of a lighter layer. To start removing paint that is proving too dark on the other hand, that can be a pain..

Step 4:

4.jpg

A darker shade of the shadowshape mixture is added in addition to a slightly warmer and darker color in some of the areas in the lightshape. This shadowshape mixture was ultramarine blue, a little black, yellow ochre, alizarin crimson and some green. Remember that when watercolor dries it becomes much lighter than it first appear when wet.

Step 5:

5.jpg

Now I am addig the reds. Adding red will in most cases show you if the overall hue ( color temperature) is too cold or too warm. In this case i see that I can still push in some more color in the face. I add red notes on her nose and cheeks.

Step 6:

6.jpg

Now it's time to add the hair. I Start with a cool mixture of black, blue and red to make a light purple. This is because this is the color of the lightest areas in her hair. As I add more paint I will leave these areas out and build the darker values around them.

Step 7:

7.jpg

I add some warmer notes to the hair to give it more life. I also go over my lightshape to put more color in her face. At this point I can see that my shadows have become too light ad I am loosing a lot of the lighteffect. To darken them will be my next step.

Step 8:

8.jpg

The painting is starting to come together but I want to add some final darker notes to bring up the contrast just that little bit more. As you can see I've worked more on the hair and filled in those shawow shapes with som darker values.

Step 9:

9.jpg

In the final step I am adding in my darker darks. This is till not pure black, but black mixed with some red, yellow and blue. This is to give the darks some reflection and warmt. Often if we use pure black it can come off as a bit dead looking.

A couple of close ups..

10.jpg

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What do you think?

Have you tried watercolors and is so do you ever think of shapes?

As always I hope you're all having a wonderful and creative day!

<3

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My instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/marieblomfineart/

My website:
https://www.marieblomartist.com/

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Wonderful portraits. great work. thanks for sharing.

This comment has received a 0.28 % upvote from @booster thanks to: @harrybell.

Thank you so much @harrybell! I appreciate it!

Love how you managed to capture the light!

Thank you @tishyaoedit! 😊 That's so kind of you to take the time to comment!

Are you asking me what I think? It has turned out amazing especially with her skintone!

Yes, I agree. You're right to work with shapes and mark areas out especially with highlights because with watercolors, there are no undo if you make a mistake or two. It is such an unforgiving medium and because of that, I have a love and hatred relationship with it. xD It's not my main medium so I don't think I have as many experiences like you do, but it is nice to stretch my mind sometimes with it.

Lovely progress too, thank you for sharing!

Cheers,
Dm7

Thank you so much for your comment and support @dm7! 😊
It really is an unforgiving medium, that's very true.. I can recognize the love hate relationship too, hehe.. It's always a hit or miss situation for me with this medium, but I find that it really sharpens my attention 😊

It's my pleasure to share! I'm happy you enjoyed it! 🎨❤

It's no problem at all. :) Yup, I agree. It's definitely a great way to train your attention. Cheers!

Lovely! Love all the different progress spots.

Thank you @alevaskye!! 😊😘

Really beautiful work @mayasky .. watercolor is so hard to work with o.O

Thank you so much @beekart!! 😊 Yes, for me it's the most challenging medium!!

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Awesome! 😊 Thank you @trufflepig! 😘

Your excellent tutorial deserves more exposure, @mayasky. Upvoted, resteemed, followed…

Aw, Thank you so much for your support @photo-trail!! I appreciate it! 😍

Long time ago, when I was in school, controlling catchlights in the eyes was always my problem — watercolors simply would not “listen” what I wanted. Guess it was a bad quality… Your work is fantastic, @mayasky. Thank you.

Thank you very much @lighteye! And thank you for taking the time to share your experience with watercolor painting! :) Quality of the products definitely matter, that's for sure. 😊 Hope your having a good day!

Amazing work as always. I love the progress shots. Resteemed.

Thank you very much @invariable.muse! 😘 And thank you for the resteem, I appreciate it! ❤

beautiful piece

Thank you! :)

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

I've been reading your posts, you are so amazing!

Thank you so much @knthalo! :) You are very kind.. ^^

Fantastic portrait!!!

Thank you!! :D <3

another great post @mayasky, love these process posts you do, very interesting!

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(@ghulammujtaba)

Wonderful.thanks for sharing

Another great post. Completely interesting to me, with my tech/science background. I imagine myself in a Paris flat, painting lovers and wh**es haha. Spending the evenings at cafes talking everything. Ok, I've had my fantasy, enjoy your tropical muse...

Really wonderful portrait @mayasky. Your tutorial is really very useful and very instructive. Thanks for sharing your expertise with us.
Greetings.