Narrows Pour Off
Basically a watercolor painted in acrylic medium using watered-down pigments. Saturated the paper with water and kept it wet in this one. You have to work fast and see it through in one session or it won’t work. I use a plastic hotel key to begin the painting in the middle and drag around the central colors to form the cliffs. Then, I use a medium size water color brush loaded with water to drag the pigments on the paper into puddles of water below the painting. I used an eyedropper to add a tiny line of blue on top of the rocks and let it bleed upwards into the sky. The sky was already in place using my favorite blue mixed with titanium white and a lot of water. I thought this one turned out to be real unique. It would be hard to get the same effects twice so it’s a unique piece of art. I used a black Stabilo woody and 8HB pencil for some added drama on the lower contours.
Basically a watercolor painted in acrylic medium using watered-down pigments. Saturated the paper with water and kept it wet in this one. You have to work fast and see it through in one session or it won’t work. I use a plastic hotel key to begin the painting in the middle and drag around the central colors to form the cliffs. Then, I use a medium size water color brush loaded with water to drag the pigments on the paper into puddles of water below the painting. I used an eyedropper to add a tiny line of blue on top of the rocks and let it bleed upwards into the sky. The sky was already in place using my favorite blue mixed with titanium white and a lot of water. I thought this one turned out to be real unique. It would be hard to get the same effects twice so it’s a unique piece of art. I used a black Stabilo woody and 8HB pencil for some added drama on the lower contours.
Basically a watercolor painted in acrylic medium using watered-down pigments. Saturated the paper with water and kept it wet in this one. You have to work fast and see it through in one session or it won’t work. I use a plastic hotel key to begin the painting in the middle and drag around the central colors to form the cliffs. Then, I use a medium size water color brush loaded with water to drag the pigments on the paper into puddles of water below the painting. I used an eyedropper to add a tiny line of blue on top of the rocks and let it bleed upwards into the sky. The sky was already in place using my favorite blue mixed with titanium white and a lot of water. I thought this one turned out to be real unique. It would be hard to get the same effects twice so it’s a unique piece of art. I used a black Stabilo woody and 8HB pencil for some added drama on the lower contours.
Medium: Acrylics, acrylic inks, Stabilo marker, and pencil on acid-free paper
Size: 11 in X 14 in
Status: Unmatted, Unframed