Wednesday, April 21, 2010

50 Painting a 2nd acrylic

6 comments:

  1. Great video Brad. Good luck at the show.

    I love the contrast between thin and thick paint areas. It looks like you painted thinly with the underpainting, and then went back and modified with thicker paint?

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  2. Your observation is correct Jeremy, I started with the paint quite thin but not watery. I could still easily paint wet-into-wet and the underlying layer easily took the paint off my brush. I gradually built up thicker texture.

    Keeping the paint thin isn't the problem with acrylics. Building up thick impastos is much harder. Ultimately it may prove too difficult but I still have a lot of experimentation to do.

    Many thanks for the feedback. I'll let you know how the show went.

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  3. It always helps me to watch each segment more than once to let your information sink in. Thanks and good luck with your show.

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  4. Thanks for the feedback Jim. I'm glad there's enough depth to the videos that they warrant multiple viewings. I do try to edit them down to the bare essentials.

    My daughter will be filming our opening tonight so I will edit a portion and put it on the site. It is the largest exhibition of my wife's work that we've ever had. It takes her so long to do a painting she rarely has more than four or five paintings in the studio.

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  5. What medium / glaze did you use to temporarily lighten the paint so it would not be darker when dry? I couldn't quite see the bottle when you held it up on the video. You did mention " glaze " but Golden has several mediums that you could have been using. Windsor Newton claims that their new Artist's Acrylic paint doesn't darken; have you tried it? Your videos are very calm and clear and show the actual brush work without the typical speeded-up activity; it's much appreciated.

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  6. Steve,

    I was using Golden Acrylic's Acrylic Glazing Liquid. It is specially formulated to be slow drying. It might have been replaced by their Open Acrylics medium now.

    I haven't tried the Windsor Newton acrylics. It does seem intriguing that they have somehow formulated a perfectly clear medium which is a huge breakthrough. Let me know how it works if you ever try it.

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Thanks for your comments!

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