Tag: color

Color Paint

| February 1, 2010 | 0 Comments

Color Paint
4/28: Full Moons, Antipasti and Paint Chips
Celebrate the full moon for a good cause, enjoy a one-of-a-kind happy hour or see what our paint choices say about us.
How to draw and paint Gold color Armor Art tutorial.

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Color Pencil

| December 25, 2009 | 0 Comments

Color Pencil

Art Materials and Tools: Drawing – Pencils

Drawing is probably the most immediate of all art forms. It allows you to put down your observations instantly. In addition, all you really need to draw is a pencil and a sheet of paper (even a napkin will do).

Unfortunately, drawing is also one of the more demanding art forms and it takes a lot of practice to become really good at it. However, drawing is a real basic art form, i.e., it is a prerequisite to learning many other art forms such as painting and sculpting.

Above all, drawing is an excellent vehicle for learning to see the world as it “really” is. It is a way to overcome the often greatly simplified memories of everyday objects we have stored in our brains since childhood.

Finally, drawing also allows you to put your own interpretation on your observations and ultimately lets you produce your very own art.

In this article we will discuss the various pencils used by the professional artist.

1. Graphite Pencils

Graphite pencils are the most direct and simplest of drawing tools. They are made from graphite and come in grades from very hard to very soft:

9H 8H … 2H H F HB B 2B 3B … 8B 9B
Hardest Softest

The F-pencil is somewhat of an odd duck in the series. It produces a fairly fine line and is often used to draw hair. The HB-pencil separates the hard pencils from the soft ones. In practice, you do not really ever use all 22 grades. I personally use mostly a 3B, a 5B, a 9B, and an F. For really fine lines I sometimes use a 2H pencil. But this is more of a personal preference and you should make your own choices.

Pencils do not cost much, so buy the best you can find. It is more than worth it. A good graphite pencil currently cost about a dollar.

2. Graphite Sticks

Graphite is also available in sticks. These sticks are usually wrapped in a plastic film. They are graded just like ordinary graphite pencils as we explained in Section 1. They are ideal for large-scale projects. They are also inexpensive so don’t be stingy and buy the best.

3. Colored Pencils

Colored pencils cannot be blended and must be built up in layers. Blending is achieved by putting one transparent layer of color on top of another. This way it is possible to obtain very interesting optical effects. Colored pencil art has made great strides in the last twenty or so years. Great pieces of art have been produced with colored pencils. Today, colored pencil art is very well respected and many artists specialize in creating very detailed and intricate drawings.

4. Water-soluble Pencils

This is the latest variety of pencil to come along. Water-soluble pencils provide a valid alternative to watercolors. The pencil marks turn into a watercolor-like wash when they are brought in contact with water. This wash can then be manipulated with a paint brush.

These four types of pencils are the most basic and have been used by most drawing artists. Of course, pencils are not the only tools that can be used to draw. Other drawing materials and tools will be discussed in future articles.

About the Author

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. He is also the author of a popular Pencil Portrait Drawing Course. Get Your Free copy here: Remi’s Pencil Portrait Drawing Course while supplies last.

Stampendous Colored Pencil Techniques

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Art Tool

| October 15, 2009 | 0 Comments

Art Tool
what was the name of the tool company’s catalog that has a industrial art deco look?

I saw an article about a tool dealer that its catalog had a sort of awesome industrial art-deco look to it. It was like Graham or something like this, can some help me?

INDUSTRIAL TOOL, Northern Tool Supply

Line-art with Paint Tool SAI

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Cadmium Orange

| July 15, 2009 | 0 Comments

Cadmium Orange

American Impressionism. Part 2

DOUGLAS SMITH

“Because Weir Farm has remained relatively undeveloped, a visit here can transport you back in time,” said Douglas Smith, an artist who has recorded the Connecticut landscape for several years and found it easy to begin a painting on the first morning of the magazine’s outing.

Starting in his usual way by making pencil studies of potential painting subjects in a sketchbook, Smith then brought out a pochade box to make an 8″-X-10″ oil study of one of those scenes. He designed and made the box and, in fact, has started a business of crafting them for other artists.

The pochade box, which can be made for either a right-handed or left-handed artist, has compartments for brushes, paints, and prepared panels. The panels Smith uses are made from rag board (one-hundred-percent-rag mat board) coated with shellac, and his brushes are either short-handled tole-painting brushes or round bristle brushes whose handles have been cut to a shorter length.

Smith said the smaller oil sketches allow him to quickly record the changing pattern of light and shadow in the landscape. He uses them as a reference when painting the scene on a larger canvas, resting the pochade box on the metal compartment in his French easel.

“I begin the large painting with a big bristle brush using a mixture of ultramarine blue and raw sienna thinned with turpentine,” the artist explained. “I hold my palette when mixing colors so I can turn it toward the light to judge the color of the mixtures against those already on the canvas. I start by painting in the masses, averaging the color, and quickly covering the entire canvas. From there it’s a matter of modifying the warm or cool color temperature, dark or light values, and soft or hard edges while I continually refine the drawing.”

The palette of colors Smith used at Weir Farm included lead white, cadmium yellow pale, cadmium orange, cadmium red light, permanent rose, alizarin crimson, ultramarine blue, King’s blue (Rembrandt), permanent green deep, and raw sienna.

JOSEPH KEIFFER

“My idea in creating this picture was to walk the line between realism and abstraction,” Joseph Keiffer explained after completing his painting of the pond at Weir Farm. “I wanted to make viewers look twice at a familiar scene to show them that reality is as weird as it is pretty.”

This theme is one that has motivated Keiffer as an artist, as a dealer, and as a critic. In a recent issue of American Art Review, for example, he wrote that “… any good ‘realistic’ painting, of any period, also contains within it a good ‘abstract’ composition, and, conversely, any good ‘abstract’ painting is only considered ‘good’ because it makes reference to the viewer’s experience of reality.”

He went on to say, “I use the same criterion to judge both realistic and abstract painting: Does it feel real? Does it make me feel like I’m ‘there’? Does it make me feel anything at all? If so, what?”

Keiffer is well respected in New York City for the exhibitions of realist paintings he has mounted in the office-gallery on East Seventy-second Street that bears his name. His activities as a collector, dealer, and artist have given him a background that few practicing artists can boast. Knowledgeable about the great American landscape painters of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Keiffer often paints near his weekend house in the Catskill Mountains at sites that have attracted many of America’s best-known artists.

In Weir’s time, cattle trampled down the vegetation surrounding the pond. But today, the trees and bushes form a dense ring around the water, making it difficult to set up an easel. Keiffer had to position himself precariously on a sloping patch of rocks and dirt to get a clear view of the reflective water. Once he began painting, however, he worked intently for several hours until he had established the picture.

DONALD JURNEY

“I work this way because no one taught me anything different,” Donald Jurney said jokingly as he described his techniques for landscape painting. “Most of what I know about painting I discovered by looking at the work of artists I admired and by reading about their approach.” These comments help explain why some of the methods he uses are quite different from those of other landscape painters.

Of the artists gathered at Weir Farm, Jurney certainly had the most extensive palette of oil colors. He seemed to have a dab of every possible blue and green you can buy in tube form, including some of the Compose colors that Holbein offers. “I suppose I could mix all of those colors myself,” Jurney said, “but I don’t see any reason to bother.”

He had a fistful of paintbrushes ready as well, most of them small-size rounds. The artist chuckled as he admitted that he is not usually quite so well equipped–his wife, Joan Griswold (who also attended the Weir Farm outing), had purchased a large quantity of bristle brushes for him when she last visited New York City.

Jurney kept his paint rather thin as he began each painting, allowing himself to build up to thicker and more detailed presentations of the landscape. The round brushes also gave him a degree of control that would not have been possible with larger flats or filberts.

Although it took Jurney longer than some of the others to get settled into the painting activity, he produced three impressive small paintings during the two-day outing. What was particularly interesting about these pictures was that they were, in large part, inventions only loosely based on the actual appearance of the farm. Furthermore, Jurney was able to articulate a lot of detail in a relatively short amount of time. The artist’s tiny brush-strokes captured subtle transitions of light on trees and grass in a field that only suggested the Weir property.

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About the Author

Профессиональный дизайн интерьера и дизайн квартир от компании Д-Стайл.

Cadmium Orange – The Last Basement Show

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Pastel Set

| May 25, 2009 | 0 Comments

Pastel Set
I have a precious moments comforter set for my son’s crib, but no mobile to go with. What one should I buy?

the set I have is of pastels; greens and yellows. I have a little boy and was wondering if anyone knew of any mobile that would match that

I’m not sure what would match your set, but i would suggest a battery operated mobile. I got the mobile that matched the bed set, but it was a wind up and never played for very long. It may look cute, but was just not practical at all. I’m a fan of the Rainforest mobile because it has different song setting, a rainforest noise option, and plays long enough to usually outlast my daughter. I know that isn’t exactly what you are looking for but i hope it helps.

Pastel Set

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Yellow Ochre

| May 6, 2009 | 0 Comments

Yellow Ochre
what type of egyptian remedy would this be? herbal, supernatural surgery or other?

“Two pigs eyes with the humour removed, galena, yellow ochre, fermented honey. Crush, reduce and inject into the ear of the patient who will be cured immediately”

what type of treatment is this, is it herbal, supernatural, surgery or other? please state thanks:)

This is obviously NOT surgery. Why would you even ask?

There are some active ingredients in there so it is sort of a herbal remedy except for the complete lack of herbs. It is a poultice for whatever ailment the ear is having.

There is no supernatural power being invoked so it isn’t that either.

In fact if you read this link it is a cure for blindness. Although Egyptian medicine was remarkably effective, I doubt that this remedy would have done anything.

Yellow Ochre

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Spectrum System

| March 26, 2009 | 0 Comments

Spectrum System
What about a spectroscopic binary system’s spectrum identifies it as such?

What about a spectroscopic binary system’s spectrum identifies it as such?

The spectral lines are always red-shifted
The spectral lines are shifted twice what they normally would be shifted
The spectral lines are split, with a slight blue-shift AND a slight red-shift
The spectral lines are always blue-shifted
The spectral line are sometimes red-shifted, sometimes blue-shifted

The spectral lines are split, with a slight blue-shift AND a slight red-shift.

Assuming the orbital plane is not perpendicular to line of sight, the split lines will oscillate between red-shift and blue-shift, based upon the orbital period of the system.
The link below provides an animation of this type of shift.

3D Full-Spectrum High-Vision Camera System : DigInfo

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Colour Cobalt

| March 14, 2009 | 0 Comments

Colour Cobalt
What color flowers go well with cobalt blue bridesmaid dresses?

Hi and congratulations!

That was the color of bridesmaids dresses that my daughter had in her wedding. What we did was go with very vibrant colors….oranges, yellows, etc. It really “popped” in the pictures.

I would NOT suggest to go with any “blue” (baby blue) etc., unless you really have your heart set on it. Go with vibrant colors….oranges, yellows, pinks. It WILL look great…trust me!

PHJchem: Cobalt Confusion!

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Burnt Umber

| November 14, 2008 | 0 Comments

Burnt Umber

Art Education: Basic Techniques of Classical Realism Oil Paintings

What is oil painting? Oil paints on the canvas. It’s an indisputable definition. I thought that oil painting is more than that.

Any kind of figurative art (including oil painting) is thought of beforehand. The basic rules of studying drawing and painting are very closely connected with the laws of the discipline.

Tip 1. Brushes

You should have many brushes so that not to lose time washing them while working. Take a new brush for every new mix. Use round kolinsky brushes, No.1 to No. 10. To cover larger surfaces, you will need a few #20 to #35 brushes. For final strokes PRIPLAVLENIYE (final blending) you will need a few very soft round and flat average size squirrel brushes. Brushes should be treated very carefully. After every session they should be washed in turpentine and after that in warm water with soap.

Tip 2. Canvas

The canvas should be primed additionally a few more times and in conclusion it should be ground with fine sandpaper. After that the canvas should be scraped with a razor to remove the canvas texture till smooth dead surface similar to the egg’s surface is achieved.

Tip 3. Palette

The palette must be made of hard dark wood, best of all, of pear wood. After work wash the palette with turpentine and scrape it with a razor. Before work wipe the palette with linseed oil.

Tip 4. Paper

The

drawing is made on paper life-size to the smallest details. Then it is transferred to the canvas by carbon-paper. After that the drawing is outlined with brown ink because the first oil layer – IMPRIMATURA (transparent coat that is equal to the middle tone of largest, lightest object in painting) – will wash away the pencil, but the ink will remain visible almost through the last layers.

Tip 5. Still Life Objects

It is very important to have objects for still life in the studio. Don’t be stingy at garage sales and flea markets, you may regret it later.

Tip 6. Lacquer

The lacquer for

IMPRIMATURA is made of 2% of dry DAMAR CRYSTALS and 98% of turpentine. The lacquer for painting is made of 5-10% of dry resin and 90-95 % of turpentine. A couple of lavender oil drops are added directly to the oil-can. Scientists say lavender oil stimulates the brain. However, I think that old masters added it to eliminate the heavy turpentine smell. The lacquer for the final step consists of 30% of DAMAR CRYSTALS, 3% of linseed oil, and 67% of turpentine.

Tip 7. Canvas Cleaning

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. After that the canvas is wiped with a soft piece of cloth.

Tip 8. Mixture

IMPRIMATURA, or the first paint layer. The canvas is covered with a liquid mixture based on Red Ochre, Yellow Ochre Light and Ivory Black (the mixture should have an olive hue).

Tip 9. Basic Set of Paints

The basic set of paints is the following: “Rembrandt” oil colors: Flake White, Yellow Ochre Light, Red Ochre, Burnt Umber, Raw Umber Ivory and Lamp Black (7 Basic Colors), and 4 extra colors (when necessary) which I use in the last layers: Flake Yellow (instead of it also can be used Cadmium Yellow Deep), Madder Lake Deep, Chinese Vermilion, Prussian Blue. But be careful to use these last 4 colors very sparingly.

Tip 10. TEL’NII PODMALYOVOK

The

first and the second TEL’NII (flesh tones: main life colors) PODMALYOVOK (5th and 6th layers). The first TEL’NII PODMALYOVOK is made half a tone lighter and two tones lighter in colors; and half a tone darker and two tones lighter in shadows. The same is true of the second TEL’NII PODMALYOVOK.

Tip 11. PODMALYOVOK

The dead layer – the fourth PODMALYOVOK – is made with white lead, light ocher, red ocher, and burnt bone. The aim of this PODMALYOVOK is penumbra. The picture must look as if its objects were lit with moonlight – olive cold gray color. Colors are applied thickly, half a tone higher, shadows are very transparent, half a tone lower.

Tip 12. LESSIROVKA

The seventh layer — LESSIROVKA : Details of textures, thickly applied highlights, bright reflections, and signature. In this layer you may use additional paints: Prussian blue, red cinnabar, yellow flake (cadmium yellow deep), madder lake deep.

Tip 13. Shadow PODMALYOVOK

The shadow

PODMALYOVOK (the process of creating intermediate layers) is made with Burnt Umber in two layers (2nd and 3rd layers). In the second layer all details are made excluding the texture. In the third layer LESSIROVKA of the main tone masses is made with a big brush.

Tip 14. Music

Many painters get an energy charge from music. Stop listening to any modern music and begin listening only to classical music. Try to begin loving it.

Last, stop looking at modern art and stop loving it. Modern bright colors and hue contrasts destroy the subtle vision of the painter who took risks to study classical painting in our time.

From the 16th century to the beginning of the 20th century artists used the seven layer technique. Like music where there are seven notes, seven keys, and within each there are seven more. 7 days in a week. 7 Layers of Paint. Each layer in oil painting must dry for seven weeks. The energy which we receive from old paintings in museums, like ghosts in old castles with old paintings, is related to this magic figure.

About the Author

* I’m a Chinese girl, I love all beautiful, fashion and artistic things, and I’d like to introduce and display an excellent selection of China fine art, gifts, traditional Chinese handicrafts, jewelry, toys, home decorations and fashion accessories to you, also give you great suggestions about gift ideas and introduce you the latest fashion trends in China.

Rhapsody in Burnt Umber

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Colors Pastel

| September 15, 2008 | 0 Comments

Colors Pastel

Color Terms You Need To Know When Decorating

Color is the key to successful decorating. You can have the most expensive furnishings you can find, but without the right color scheme, they mean nothing. Color can work magic in a room by taking disparate furnishings and uniting them with color.

Adding color to a room is quite inexpensive. A new color of paint and fabrics can totally change a room.

The human eye can perceive approximately 10 million different colors. Just imagine all of the different color combinations that can be created. Even so, some color combinations are definitely better than others.

When looking at colors, there are eleven different terms that you should know:

1. Primary colors are the three main colors that every other color is made from: red, blue and yellow. Primary colors are often used in children’s rooms because they are bright and will catch a child’s attention.

2. Secondary colors are the colors that are created when you combine equal parts of the three primary colors. The color orange comes from red and yellow; green is from yellow and blue; and violet is from blue and red.

3. Tertiary colors are the result of combining a primary color with the nearest secondary color to it on the color wheel. The colors would appear as blue-green, yellow-green, yellow-orange, red-purple, and blue-purple.

4. Related color schemes result from combining secondary and tertiary colors. For instance, the colors blue-green and green will evoke a calming effect because there are no jarring changes in color.

5. Complementary colors are located directly opposite each other on the color wheel. They would turn gray when they are mixed together in paint, but they can be used together – carefully – when decorating a room. Sometimes these color combinations can be too overwhelming so care is needed when using them.

6. Hue is a descriptive word for color, such as leaf green, robin’s egg blue or burgundy.

7. Saturation means how saturated (how much color) there is in the basic color. For example, light blue and navy are both still blue. Navy is more saturated with the blue color.

8. The value of a color is how light or dark a color is. White has the brightest value and black has the darkest value.

9. Tints represent the colors that are closest to white in value. These would be pastel colors.

10. Shades are the colors that are closest to black in color, like hunter green or deep purple.

11. Neutrals are the “non” colors, like black, white, gray, brown and beige. They can produce a pleasing color scheme on their own or mixed with other colors.

Color plays an important part in decorating. The entire feel of a room can be changed just by changing the color scheme.

About the Author

Jude Wright is the owner of DecoratingSimple.com where you can find great decorating ideas for those on a budget. Stop by and get your free ebook, ”Home Decor Ideas for Those on a Budget.”

Pastel Painting Lessons : Complimentary Colors in Pastel Paintings

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