Tell me about your technique for the White Tree.
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Riv Res
- Manwë
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marbretherese
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I agree, Merry!! it's really spontaneous, Iolanthe, and I'm interested that you regard it as a sketch for something more controlled. I think that it works as it is, "flawed" or not!Merry wrote: There's something very much alive about it, even in winter.
"Torment in the dark was the danger that I feared, and it did not hold me back.
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
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Lindariel
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Iolanthe
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I'm glad you all like it so much! I admit that although it evolved randomly with no plan I'm quite pleased with it
. But I can see another larger picture with this being a part of a greater whole. Though when I laid the first washes this morning it was plain I'd gone wrong at the first hurdle. I'll have to start again with take 2.
The boo boo is so monumental that I can't take the picture too seriously. I'll reveal all - if the Gondorian soldier walked from where he is to the tree and stood next to it the tree would be about the size of a sizeable gorse bush
. I only realised after I put the figure in (he wasn't part of the original plan). But if the figure was the correct size you'd hardly be able to see him. I guess it's what we call artistic license
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- wet on wet, wet on dry, dry on dry, masking, gouache overpainting, blotting out, scratching down to the paper, scraping back damp paint, splattering and best of all, salt sprinkling. Um - in fact that's 10 techniques
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Marbretherese is the expert on salt
. It's my first go at it and it's a lot of fun. The salt leeches out the paint giving the feathery, snowflakey effect. You need a coarsish salt (I ground it out of my salt mill) and a wash that's nearly dry. If it's too dry nothing happens. If it's too wet nothing happens. Wait until the wash has only a slightly damp sheen left on it, flick on some salt, then walk away and leave it until it's absolutely dry. Rub the salt off and hey presto! Interesting spotty bits
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The boo boo is so monumental that I can't take the picture too seriously. I'll reveal all - if the Gondorian soldier walked from where he is to the tree and stood next to it the tree would be about the size of a sizeable gorse bush
There's about 6 techniques fighting alongside each other thereRiv Res wrote:Tell me about your technique for the White Tree.
Marbretherese is the expert on salt
Now let the song begin! Let us sing together
Of sun, stars, moon and mist, rain and cloudy weather...
Of sun, stars, moon and mist, rain and cloudy weather...
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marbretherese
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I wouldn't say that! I've been shown salt effects and tried them but I haven't had many goes at them since the watercolour course I went on last JulyIolanthe wrote: Marbretherese is the expert on salt.
because I'm working on a painting at the moment which went very wrong almost immediatelyIolanthe wrote: There's about 6 techniques fighting alongside each other there - wet on wet, wet on dry, dry on dry, masking, gouache overpainting, blotting out, scratching down to the paper, scraping back damp paint, splattering and best of all, salt sprinkling. Um - in fact that's 10 techniques .
As for the "flaw" - it depends on your interpretation, I suppose. If your tree is near the brow of a hill, for example, and your figure has just climbed that hill, he's not too tall at all - particularly if he's of the race of Numenor
"Torment in the dark was the danger that I feared, and it did not hold me back.
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
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Iolanthe
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Merry
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Iolanthe
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Riv Res
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Merry
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Lindariel
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Another Iolanthe print I simply must have! Just marvelous! When will you be putting your new work on the V-W Marketplace? There are several I need to purchase -- Telperion's Children, Gollum, Cirith Ungol, and now Gondor!
Lindariel
“Therefore I say: Eä! Let these things Be! And I will send forth into the Void the Flame Imperishable, and it shall be at the heart of the World, and the World shall Be.”
“Therefore I say: Eä! Let these things Be! And I will send forth into the Void the Flame Imperishable, and it shall be at the heart of the World, and the World shall Be.”
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Iolanthe
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marbretherese
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The colours are lovely - you'd never know the painting had given you problems!Iolanthe wrote:I couldn't get the colour balance right and kept overpainting - something I hardly ever do - but it got there in the end!
"Torment in the dark was the danger that I feared, and it did not hold me back.
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/