Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Watercolor

by Marian Appellof (Editor)

Paperback, 1992

Call number

751.42 A

Collection

Publication

Watson-Guptill (1992), Edition: First Edition, 400 pages

Description

Imagine an art school where more than 15 popular watercolorists teach, and you've imagined Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Watercolor, a full-to-the-brim 400-page anthology of Watson-Guptill's finest watercolor instruction from recent best-selling authors. This treasure trove reviews the tools and materials of watercolor, then proceeds with the color palette, color mixing, and applied color theory. The full range of painting techniques is presented--the fundamentals of brushwork, laying in a simple wash, working wet-in-wet, drybrushing, masking, pouring, scratching, glazing, and more--as well as techniques for achieving various textures like tree bark and grass. Unconventional approaches such as painting with sand, collaging, and monoprinting are also covered. Different artists explain how to understand and work effectively with value, form, light, and shadow, as well as how to achieve good design and composition. The basics of perspective are also explained. The book includes sections on specific painting subjects, many with detailed step-by-step sequences. Some are based on working from photographs and sketches, others on painting on location and from live models. There are demonstrations of how to paint landscapes, figures, and flowers. Each lesson focuses on a particular technique or artistic principle, such as "Underpainting to Capture a Certain Time of Day" and "Linking Basic Shapes to Build Your Painting."… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member digistyle
This book touches on numerous aspects of painting with watercolors by many different artists and is a good general reference. A favorite section of mine is Don Andrews' notes on figure painting.

Pages

400

ISBN

082305649X / 9780823056491
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