we can see those colours should go overlaid on the sketch
Now just put the right colours in the right places.
Considerations for the order of attack
Colour mixing speed
At first it may take a long time to mix colours.
Depending on our choice of materials it may not be possible to mix everything we need and then just paint.
The first mixes will start to dry out before we're ready
(I'm looking at you acrylics).
Opacity and coverage
If we cannot properly cover our canvas in a single pass we are forced to do multiple layers.
At its simplest this means repeatedly painting over the same colours until it's completely covered.
Layers
Consider using multiple layers each with a different role.
Layers to consider
Preparation
Consider using gesso to smooth and protect the surface and to provide some grip for the paints.
Tone, imprimatura
An initial colour stain over the whole surface.
This can make colour judgement easier than working on a white canvas.
Sketch
A minimalist sketch to position the elements should be sufficient.
Underpainting
A good way of simplifying the normal painting process
is to focus on only one dimension of colour in the underpainting.
Choose either hue first or value first:
If we trace the page alignment markers it is easy to retrace any lost sketch lines once this is dry.
Value first
The tonal underpainting is often a
grisaille (grey),
verdaccio or verdaille (green/grey),
brunaille or bistre (brown) or
dead (blue/grey) layer.
This gives the artist the chance to refine the drawing without worrying about hue and saturation.
It gives a chance to compare the values across the whole picture,
which is much more difficult in full colour.
Either way, don't paint over any alignment markers.
Live Colour layer
Adding colour to a monochrome underpainting
If the underpainting is good then it may be possible to use transparent washes and glazes to it without doing much more modelling.
I haven't had much success with glazes and washes over a value modelling layer
and I end up painting opaquely over the top.
Refining a colour block-in
This is largely more of the same.
Choose a colour, mix it up and paint it in.
Simples.
Glazing
Final adjustments to the colours using transparent paints.
Finishing
The final opaque additions to the brightest highlights and deepest shadows.
Varnishing
It's best to leave oil paints for a few months to cure before varnishing but it's not always possible.
Apply two layers brushed in different directions.
Drying time considerations for layering
When painting in layers I struggle to put new paint on unless the old layer is thoroughly dry.
Each layer should leave room for the next.
Before each new layer the canvas (ideally dried during 7 weeks) is carefully wiped with a half of an onion
(in order to prepare the dried surface to absorb better) and then with linseed oil
Alexei L. Antonov
Textured paint
We may want to paint with a thick impasto texture.
It is difficult to work in an iterative way unless the early layers are thin and smooth.
It's also very hard to glaze over textured paint to perform any final adjustments.
Large flat areas of colour can sometimes come across as dull in a painting even when they are like that in reality.
Consider adding some variety to such areas.
Slight variation of hue and saturation can add interest.
Varying the value may make a surface look uneven or textured.
Don't vary the value so much that an area in shadow becomes lighter than an area in the light or vice versa.
Refine verses render
We have previously mentioned the different approaches of the refiners verses the renders.
The first requires layers with their associated problems.
The second requires multiple colours be available at the same time and has opacity and coverage problems.
Here is a general list of opaque pigments that should work very well to help you easily paint opaquely:
Titanium White (PW6)
Flake/Cremitz/Lead White (PW1)
Titanium Buff or Unbleached Titanium (PW6:1)
Genuine Cadmium Reds (PR108, 108:1)
Genuine Cadmium Yellows (PY35, 37, 35:1, 37:1)
Nickel Yellow (PY53, PY157)
Bismuth Yellow (PY184)
Chromium Titanate Yellow or Naples Yellow Deep (Pbr24)
Cerulean Blue (PB35, PB36)
Venetian Red (PR101)
Mars Black (PBk11)
Carbon Black (Pbk6, 7)
Terra Rosa (PR101)
Indian Red (PR101)
Some brands of Burnt Sienna (PBr7), Raw Sienna (Pbr7, PY43), Yellow Ochre (PY42, or 43), and Burnt Umber (PBr7)
Mars Yellow (PY42)
Mars Red (PR101)
Mars Violet (PR101)
Chromium Oxide Green (PG18)
Some brands of Cobalt Green (PG19, PG26, PG50)
Ivory Black (PBk9)
Manganese Violet (PV16)
Cobalt Turquoise (PB36)
Cobalt Teal (PG50)
Other opaque paints are rumoured to include Payne’s grey, lemon yellow, scarlet lake, Indian red and Vandyke brown.
Generally, if the paint comes out of the tube shiny, it's transparent.
If it comes out of the tube dull, it's opaque.
Painting process considerations
Brush stroke visibility and economy
Less is more.
Many of the great painters I admire,
masters like Sargent, Velazquez, Zorn and Rembrandt,
created powerful, bold paintings, combining realism with looseness.
They had excellent brush stroke economy.
Deliberate and telling.
Make every stroke count.
Mixing plenty of paint saves a huge amount of time.
Brush size
Use the biggest brush you can get away with for a particular passage.
Or bigger.
Paint consistency
I like my paints to be as liquid as possible but still cling to a vertical palette and canvas.
Adding medium usually makes paint more transparent but the first little bit can,
counter intuitively, actually aid coverage.
Sometimes I add a little dab more medium when taking paint from the palette to the canvas.
Overworking
At the opposite end of the brush stroke economy is overworking the paint.
It's not so bad with acrylics and oils but pushing paint back and forth
can cause it to ball up and look gritty and dirty.
There is a tendency for adjacent areas to bleed into each other until all contrast is lost
and the painting becomes murky and flat.
Make one or two paint strokes,
stop, scoop up some fresh paint on your brush,
and make another one or two strokes.
Repeat.
Do not make too many brush strokes before you stop to reload.
David Limrite
Every stroke should serve a purpose.
Every touch should make the painting better or it shouldn't be done.
Edges
Hard, soft and lost.
Be conscious of your treatment edges.
Variation of techniques can be used to lead the eye.
Our eyes tend to be drawn towards hard edges so use them near the focal point.
Leading the eye
Choose a focal point where you want to lead the viewer's attention.
Emphasise lines and paths that lead the eye there.
Elsewhere be sparing with details, high contrasts, sharp edges, saturated colours and tight rendering.
Comparisons
There are many stages of the painting process when it's useful to compare our work in progress with our reference.
From checking the placement of the lines of the initial sketch
to the finding the colour differences during painting.
When we transferred the sketch or outlines to the canvas we should have also transferred
the image alignment markers.
These should be visible in our photos of our work in progress.
When a new canvas image is loaded the
Canvas layer is shown centered and rescaled so we can see all of it
and we can reposition the alignment pointers.
drag to position the pointers
Hold down the key and drag the pointers to the approximate positions
of where their corresponding image alignment markers were traced.
{cursor key} to zoom to a pointer
With the the key still held down press a cursor key for the view to become centred on a
pointer and zoomed in to the
centre_on_pointer_scale
so we can make finer adjustments.
drag to finely position a pointer
Continue to hold down the key and position the pointer on the marker.
Press different cursor keys to focus on each of the pointers to adjust them all.
A to align the canvas
When we are happy with the pointers we call the canvas alignment filter:
Once the canvas image has been aligned switch between the Canvas layer and
the other layers to check the alignment is correct.
If the preference
align_on_new_canvas
has been set to true the next canvas image will automatically be aligned
using the previous marker positions.
The view layer, pan or scroll won't change.
Canvas inclusion in the paint layer
As previously discussed in the virtual palette,
when the Paints layer is updated it is rendered the from colours of the
the enabled palette entries that are nearest to the filtered subject.
But once we have loaded an image of our work-in-progress we're really interested in working on
those areas where the palette entries are a better match than what is already on the canvas.
We can allow the good bits of the Canvas layer
to be included in the the Paints layer
using the Canvas weighting slider control
on the Palette 2 tool tab.
When it is set at zero the canvas is not included at all.
Slide it up to one and the canvas is shown at those places
where it is a better match than any enabled palette entry.
If you have a good selection of entries this is still a big ask
and it's probable that not much will be of the canvas shown.
In order to show up the physical painting has to be better than the entries that were probably used to paint it!
When the slider is set above one the Canvas layer is being given some leeway,
a palette entry has to be significantly better to be used instead of the canvas.
It can be hard to see where the canvas is used and where the palette entries are.
Showing the seLections layer above
the Paints layer and selecting all the
palette entries so they are highlighted just leaves the canvas contribution showing.
The reverse can be shown by highlighting the canvas contribution on
the seLections layer with:
The Comparison 4 tool tab allows us to select any two layers
and perform comparisons between them.
The slider controls the sensitivity of the comparison.
Comparison types
The comparison types can be selected from
a drop-down control
or from
the menu
The colour of the glaze that would get the canvas closer to the subject.
Colour difference extended and exaggerated by a slider value.
Pay particular attention to colours that aren't simply an exaggerated version of the subject.
Of course, just because the comparison layer is showing a difference doesn't mean you have t do anything about it.
It's just information to be used or ignored as you see fit.
It's just an artists's helper but you are the artist.
If you make any mistakes and muck something up just carry on.
Always finish every painting.
There is more to learn in the final stages and detailing and if you only get there once or twice
for every half dozen starts then it will take you three times as long to hone your skills.
Mistakes are never as bad as you think.
Acrylics and oils are both very forgiving.
If it's still wet scrape it off if it's dry just paint over it.