About the present
I haven’t
been at my dump as much as I had hoped this year. But this blog is also about
my botanical painting adventures (it just become that...), not just the adventures at the dump. So here we go!
Laburnum
I have wanted to paint laburnum seedpods for some time now. Last year I picked a lot of them and they
have been hanging on my wall all the time under the watchful eye of artist Helene Schjerfbeck. But I did not know how to paint
them. As they are, huh – that would be tricky. I lay waken in the nights and
pondered.
In Swedish laburnum is called Gullregn, gull (guld) = gold and regn =
rain. I like to paint curled up rhododendron leafs, and at a certain point they
are golden – so why not let the laburnum seedpods rain down from a golden rhododendron leaf!
First I did some color testing and to get to know the ins
and outs of the seedpods. Less Raw
Sienna and more Burnt Umber was the solution, and go easy with the gray.
I then
went on with drawing the rhododendron, easy bit, done it before. Then I took
one bundle of laburnum seedpods and started to draw. I picked them of the stem
and draw them one after another. I numbered them on the paper when I draw. And
I put tiny tags on each individual pod. I draw 12.
After that it was time for
composing, I redraw them all on transparent paper and started to move them
around until I found the best composition. It took me 4-5 days, and one more
seedpod, before I was happy.
I transferred it all onto watercolor paper and
started to paint.
To paint a seedpod
I slowly painted one or two seedpods at the same time.
Carefully covering rest of the paper with scrap paper so I don’t ruin the paper with color
stains or smudge from my hand.
I first lay down one wash with Burnt Umber and
immediately took out the highlights. I then painted the first layer on the
small seeds. After this had dried properly I erased my pencil lines.
One more
layer of Burnt Umber and more work on the seeds. After that it was all details,
I painted with my 00 brush! When I was satisfied with the details, the shadows and the overall outcome I let it dry again. Then I lay on a wash of Raw Sienna,
and carefully lifted out the highlights. After that I went over the whole thing
one more time and deepened the shadows and make all lines as clear as possible.
And fixed things that needed to be fixed.
And then there were 12 more …
I painted
the pods behind the rhododendron leaf first, then the rhododendron and after
that the seedpod in front of the leaf. I do so because that is the easiest way
to get sharp forms. Painting behind an already painted form easily lead to
blurred and smudged lines.
To amuse myself I did not look at the entire picture before everything was painted. I covered up the painted pods as soon they where finished. That mean that there were some correction that needed to be done at the end so everything was connected.
But it was fun to surprise myself with a bit of mystery painting!
My colorselection for this painting was narrow
My
gray was mixed of Perylene Maroon, Prussian Blue and Transparent Yellow.
The
brown for the seedpods was Perylene Maroon, Prussian Blue and Burnt Sienna.
Beside
this I only used Burnt Umber and Raw Sienna. The seedpods are mostly painted
with Burnt Umber and the gray.
The inside of the rhododendron leafs is painted with
Raw Sienna and the outside with Quinacridone Gold. Details with Burnt Umber and
the gray.
The painting
Dancing and falling seedpods. From a golden rhododendron leaf.
Tricky to get a good photo though ... But I'm very pleased with my effort this past week.
Tricky to get a good photo though ... But I'm very pleased with my effort this past week.