Showing posts with label underpainting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label underpainting. Show all posts

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Pale Feathers Oil Painting Portrait


Here's the underpainting for the oil painting version of Pale Feathers that I'm working on. Like all of my underpaintings, I painted this sepia portrait in raw umber and titanium white, and will be adding layers of color to it during the next couple of weeks.


The painting is based on one of Marali Sadykhov's photos of  itsvalerieguys

Saturday, May 4, 2013

How To Add Layers of Color To An Underpainting

This is typically how I go about the different stages of adding layers of color to a painting. I start with an underpainting of Raw Umber and Titanium White, and I start adding in the layers from there. Sometimes I start with the background, and sometimes I don't. It really depends on the painting itself, but most artists will say to start with the background first.


Raw umber and Titanium white.


I paint most of my skies with just Payne's Grey and Titanium White.


Believe it or not, the trees for this background are done only with Sap Green. What gives them the 3D look is the underpainting showing through the green. Sap Green is a very transparent color, and when applied over an underpainting it can have some very interesting effects. 




The grass is done with combinations of Sap Green, Yellow Ochre, Gold Ochre, Naples Yellow, Raw Umber, Vandyke Brown, and Titanium White. 




The skin is mainly Burnt Sienna and Titanium White, with a small amount of Naples Yellow.



The dress is done in with Rose Madder and Thalo Red Rose.


The hair is only with Burnt Umber; the highlights in the hair are just highlights from the underpainting showing through.


Oil paint becomes more transparent as is dries, so when painting with an underpainting the artwork looks better with age. After six months of drying time, I varnished this painting with Gamblin's Gamvar Varnish. Varnishing an oil painting not only protects it, but saturates the colors, giving them that extra pop.





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Monday, April 15, 2013

How to paint an underpainting and add layers of color

This is how I go about painting an underpainting, and adding layers of color. The process was for "By the Wall," a figurative oil painting I created last year.


After doing a quick sketch in pencil, the first step is painting the underpainting in one to two layers of raw umber and titanium white. There are many different colors and techniques that artists will use for this stage of the painting, but I have found that this way has worked best for myself and the effects I want to achieve with my work. I paint mainly with raw umber, and only use small amounts of the titanium white for the highlights in her skin and dress. The rest of the white seen is just raw canvas for now. The reason I do this is because raw umber dries very quickly--in a matter of a couple days--while titanium white dries very slowly.

If you're asking why I do an underpainting in the first place, it's because it gives me a chance to get all of the proportional  problems worked out before complicating things with more color--and also because as the painting dries the layers become more transparent. With using an underpainting first, the shadows in the painting will deepen with age, making the subject seem more alive. For me, a painting that seems as if it's alive, and that it could move at any moment, is the most important aspect of the creation. Artwork needs life, and feeling. Lifeless artwork doesn't stir the viewers curiosity. It gives no feeling.


In the past, I did most of my underpaintings in one layer, but this one I did in two layers. I think it helped deepen the shadows a little more, and gave a little extra depth and expression in the eyes.


As far as the process of painting the underpainting itself, I will usually first paint in the shapes with a coarse hogs hair brush, and then blur and/or soften what I put down with a larger soft brush--usually a broad, flat sable brush. I'll then draw in everything again in more detail with a fine tipped brush, softening it again with a large soft brush, and keep repeating the process until the basic idea of the painting feels right. I'll then paint in highlights on the skin and clothing with titanium white--but not using very much of the color. I'll blend everything again briefly with a large/thick flat sable brush. Then I'll touch up the highlights and shadows once more, and then begin the hair.

I paint the hair fairly quickly with a round synthetic mongoose hair brush. Although I use mainly cheaper brushes for most of the painting, I use expensive brushes on the hair because the more expensive brushes tend to hold paint better, allowing for longer, more consistent brush strokes. It's important for the hair, because I want the lines I paint to flow freely.

For this painting, after everything had completely dried, I added the second layer to the underpainting very thinly using just raw umber.


I add in layers of color using somewhat the same process as the underpainting, painting in the shadows, and softening them right afterwards each time. I'll typically blend the highlights and middle tones after the shadows  because I find that the colors get less muddy that way.

I'll then go back and forth between adding shadows, highlights, and blending until it looks right.



Shadows the for the skin are mainly burnt sienna and raw umber, with very small amounts of sap green, thalo blue, and paynes grey in the darker parts. The highlights in the skin are made up of titanium white, naples yellow, burnt sienna, and an extremely small amount of cadmium yellow deep. The red in the middle tones is an extremely small amount of rose madder brushed in after everything is dry.


For color, I will paint as many layers as it takes for the painting to look and feel right. I put three layers of color on this one before deciding that it was finished.

After letting the painting age and dry for around 6 months, I'll varnish it using Gamblin's Gamvar Varnish. Out of all of the varnishes out there, I like this one the best. It doesn't smell as strong as other varnishes, and it doesn't darken, yellow, or crack with age.

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