Tape the sides of your paper to protect a white border around the painting. The amount of image and white paper you want is determined by you but keep it consistent to make a cohesive body of work. Always work on 3 – 6 papers at one time. This allows you to move from one painting to the next while trying a variety of options to resolve the problems, and prevent you from becoming overly committed to any one while you work.
The primary tools used in this series are a brush, brayer, pallet knife, rubber stamp and a roller from adding machine tape or other paper rolls. I use mat medium to provide transparency and fluidity to my acrylic paints. I always start with thin layers. I chose a secondary triad, orange, green and purple for my pallet. Orange is the dominant color.
Begin by coating the papers with paint to create a light orange base. The mat medium will help this dry quickly. Drop a few drops of acrylic ink or fluid acrylic paint in a deeper orange or red orange.
Use a brayer to roll over the deep color to spread out the paint marks. Allow the beautiful textures and uneven color that occurs to remain.
When stamping is dry, use a chalk or other removable tool to sketch peaches on papers.
I use a hard light gray pastel.
With a paper roller I stamp a rich deep purple randomly into my design and over the surface the papers. The stamping will create some raised surfaces that will show through the added layers.
I added small details to some parts of the peach to define highlights and shadows.
I’ve added leaves to my peaches and a pit to the sliced peach. Build your browns from the existing colors on your pallet.
My last detail is to paint a softer lavender around the peaches and leaves. I’ve scratched into the wet paint to lift some of the color while wet. The painting on the far right has reverse stamping – dry stamping on wet paint lifts the paint to reveal the under painting. I added a few more color stamps to one, and then painted shadows under the peaches to ground them.
Finally - remove the tape and reveal the paintings.
Peach Love |
Discoveries
- Stamping can be applied in a variety of ways. This was an exercise in stamping heavy, creating raised surfaces that add texture and are exposed through the second layer.
- Reverse stamping to lift the paint off the surface and expose the color underneath.
- Building browns from the colors already on the pallet creates a unity of your colors.
Have fun with your SMALL Art Project.
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