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Controlling the Water


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Controlling the water!

Article
by
Arnold Lowrey ©
I see so many watercolours fail because artists have not come to grips with the control of water in their paintings. Many books on watercolour concentrate more on pretty pictures and the materials used, rather than tackle this subject, which is vital for success.
Most watercolours fail because too much water is used and the results are a wishy- washy mess.

So, let's come to grips with this important subject.

The question you must always ask is “Where is the water? – Is it in the brush, the palette or on the paper?”

If you have a lot water in your brush and water on the paper, the result is two lots of water combining and flooding everywhere out of control.

To have full control of water, you must have a palette with a flat mixing area that does not collect unwanted water. It is also advantageous to have one with open-ended colour wells.
So here are the five most important ways of water control

They are :-
      • Dry on dry
      • Wet on dry
      • Wet on wet
      • Dry on wet
      • The half loaded brush

Dry on dry

This is where the paper is dry and all the water is squeezed out of your brush, so that when you pick up paint and paint it on the paper, virtually no water is involved and the result is a scumbling mark

(No water on the paper and virtually no water in the brush)

scumbling

Wet on dry

If you load you brush with wet paint and paint on dry paper, an area is produced which is soft and flowing in the middle but with hard edges (No water on the paper and water in the brush)

Wet onto Dry
Wet on wet

When the paper is wet and the brush is fully loaded with wet paint, the result is two lots of water on the paper. Consequently, the paper can't handle this amount and the paint pigment flows on the surface. Tipping the paper will allow the pigment to flow around creating a lot of interesting shapes but accurate control is missing. Useful for backgrounds but you are relying on “happy accidents” to produce any meaningful shapes.
Wet on Wet

Dry into Wet

If you paint an area of paper using “wet on dry” above and then squeeze all the water out of your brush, you are able to lift the paint off the paper. This is because you are using a “thirsty brush” i.e. there is less water in your brush than is on the paper. He water travels from the paper back into the brush leaving an area of paper dryer than that surrounding it. (This is the same effect as wringing out a sponge and soaking water out of a puddle.)

If you now repeat this, but having squeezed all the water out of your brush, you pick up some neat pigment (no water!) and paint it into the wet, you will find that you can place it accurately without it flowing all over the place. Water has, again, travelled back into your brush so that the new painted area is dryer than its surroundings.

Watch how the wet area tries to attack the dryer area and softens the edges. This is ideal for those soft-edged misty trees in the background of your landscapes or soft reflections.

To lighten the tonal value of the added colour, drag out some of the pigment from your brush onto a dry piece of paper before applying. This will ensure the brush stays “thirsty”.

(Paper wet but virtually no water in the brush)

Dry into Wet

The half loaded brush - mingling

Dry into wet techniques tend to replace the existing paint with the new, so if you wish to create an area (say skies) by accurately painting into another whilst the paper is still wet, this method is the only way it can be done.

Mix you first colour with water (on a flat palette) to a suitable tonal value. Paint this first colour on the surface wet on dry.

Clean you palette and repeat this with the next colour. If necessary thin the colour with water so that tonal value is near the first colour), However, before you pick up the paint, squeeze out your brush, then pick up the wet paint with one sweep only. The brush loads from one side of you brush and is half loaded.

This allows you to paint the new colour into the wet area without it flowing all over the place. You have total control. This action can be repeated as many times as you like as long as you keep the paper wet. All the different pigments mingle down to one layer and you keep the resulting luminosity.

Mingling
Mingling is achieved by using the dry into wet or half loaded brush techniques, above. Painting into wet areas allows the pigments to settle on one level instead of stacking one above the other. Luminosity is retained.

What about “Cauliflowers” (back runs)?

These are caused by painting wet paint into half dry areas. The water in the new paint leaches into the old causing strange light shapes.

This often accidentally when water drips off your brush into a newly painted area which is “damp dry”. Do not, ever, try to paint this out while it is still wet – you only feed the cauliflower with more water and it gets worse.

Backruns
Here you can see where a drop of water accidentally was dropped into an area of half dry paint.

Glazing or Mingling?

Glazing
The traditional watercolour techniques, which are so often taught, create a series on glazes, (wet on dry), allowing each one to dry before the next is applied. Each new glaze stacks on top of the next, making the thickness of the overall paint greater.

This method can produce some effective results.

However, the down side is that every time you paint on a new glaze of colour you reduced the luminosity of the painting, as light, which creates the luminosity, has to travel though these layers and reflect back off the paper.
Glazing
Notice that the shadow glaze has been painted over the windows. This unifies it. If the windows had been painted in afterwards they would have a “stuck on” effect.

The finished painting

This painting uses most (although not all) of the above techniques.

Remember, if you have control of water, you have control of watercolour.

Finished painting (1)
Dry into wet allows the door. Steps and handrail to be placed in the wet and the images to be retained with soft edges
Finished painting (2)
Mingling –keeping the paper wet and pumping in new colours with half loaded brush
Finished painting (3)
Wet on dry – the windows have sharp or rough edges
Finished Painting
The finished painting – “Orange Wood Cottage”
Unless you spend the time to come to grips with these techniques, you will never move ahead in watercolour. The above are your watercolour crafts. They are the key to it all.

You can then, safely, concentrate on the importance of the art in you paintings. Composition, design, unity, value, colour, intensity etc which, when applied properly, will put you a step ahead of the crowd and help you to sing with your own voice!

Keep painting and good luck!

Arnold Lowrey © 2005

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