Sunday, June 7, 2009

H2o's of a waterfall

Every time I conduct one of my many art workshops, I do the painting first so that I can include it in my email newsletter to announce the workshop and so that I have a total command over that which I am teaching. In this case, I decided to do three half sheet (15"X20") studies. I learned about Mr. Clean Sponges from Mike Bailey and wanted to try them for pulling out cloud vapor and the waterfall. I figured that doing three studies would give me plenty of practice. Mr. Clean sponges have a very fine type of grit that pulls off dried paint like crazy! You dip the sponge in water, squeeze out the water throughly, and apply a gentle abrasive motion to pull off the paint. Drying the paper with kleenex between pull offs is important. If you do all this with a deft hand, the watercolor paper is in no way damaged. This project was a good way to teach the painting of very delicate, light colored values and contrasting them with the final dark foreground of pine trees. I also showed my workshop watercolorists how to render pine trees with the minimum of fuss. I used the Mr. Clean Sponge and some art tape to bring out and mask off the waterfall. The entire watercolor was painted wet-on-dry on 140lb cold press. I do not pre wet the paper nor do I stretch or tape it down on anything. This holds true for all my watercolor painting.

18 comments:

  1. This is a great tip! Especially for a beginner like me! I sure wish I lived near there so I could take your workshops! Thanks for the tip!

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  2. I never head of this technique. I didn't know Mr. Clean was a watercolorist. He was here yesterday but all he did were my floors. I guess I will have to go out and get some sponges. Nice effect. I will let you know how it works for me.

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  3. love these david
    loose and full od atmoshere!

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  4. Wow David,

    These are beautiful. Great idea preparing the painting in advance. I'll have to remember that next time I do a workshop.

    You are such a master in every medium.

    Take care,

    Barbara

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  5. I just got back from a week on the Oregon coast, where it was so foggy I could barely see the ocean. Or anything else. I was snickering when I read your blog this a.m., I could actually use this method to paint what I saw - a couple of dark blobbly things (rocks?) in a gray mist. Seriously, I bet this technique would work well for "dust" also. I'm thinking cows in a corral maybe, with the dust rising.

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  6. David, so wonderfully fresh. bravo! Holly

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  7. I love fog, smog, smoke, and dust to paint, so yes, Mr. Clean is duh ticket, Jan.

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  8. Thank you, Holly. I think painting three studies keeps one loose as a goose, because if ya blow one, ya got others to hopefully NOT blow!

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  9. David, I went and bought some of the sponges that you were talking about. I use those to cleam out the shower. Do they have any cleaning chemicals in them? I will let you know how they work for me. Or maybe I should take my paints into the shower. Cheers!

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  10. Kathy: I don't think that they have any chemicals. You use Mr. Clean Sponges to clean the shower? I thought they were made for watercolors! I'll have to try that.

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  11. I use the sponges to clean the shower because I paint in the shower. Lots of WATER good lighting. lol

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  12. David--
    Beautiful painting. Great post and nice tip on the sponges.

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  13. Great Jawb, Dave. These paintings would make any watercolor painter weep with envy!

    A little bit more info about Mr. Clean "Magic Eraser" sponges: Buy the **Original** version for this purpose. There are no chemicals in this version.

    Again, great work David!

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  14. Hey, forgot to thank you for your comment, Rob!

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  15. But Mike, I like to sop up the spilled milk on my counter top with a Mr. Clean (chem version) sponge and squeeze it out on my morning cereal. I think this explains some of the strange paintings I've done recently. But all seriousness aside, thanks for the compliment! (:

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