Saturday, May 20, 2017

Ten Tips for Watercolor Pencils

   

  Finals week is coming up for many people (including me), and with that comes lots of stress. I never really fell into the coloring book craze, but art has always been a way for me to de-stress- especially watercolors and watercolor pencils! Watercolors are known for being very fast and colorful. But often they can be intimidating. Whereas colored pencils make it less intimidating and less easy to slip up, but take much longer. Watercolor pencils are the best of both worlds! You get the ease and control of colored pencils, but with the simplified, colorful look of watercolors. And because you don't need to worry about getting tiny details right, it takes about as long as a watercolor too! Here are a ten quick tips for anyone just starting out with watercolor pencils.

#1. Draw the outline of your subject lightly with a pencil before you color. I respect anyone who can draw colored pencil drawings without an outline. Seriously. If you're one of those people, you can ignore this.But if you're used to making an outline using regular colored pencils, make an outline. It won't hurt anything. Just make sure you do it very lightly.

#2. Don't press too hard with the pencils. This is important with colored pencils too, but it can ruin a watercolor pencil drawing (painting?). The pigment gets ingrained into the paper and the water won't blend it as smoothly, leaving either it looks just like a colored pencil drawing at best, or a watercolor with an ugly scar line that's darker than the rest. Go softly. if you want to make a color darker, go over the section more than once.

#3. Use watercolor paper. Even though these are colored pencils, to begin with, when you put the water on the pigment acts like watercolor. You know how watercolors warp copy paper and thin drawing paper? The same is true for watercolor pencils.

#4. Don't go for realistic. Maybe other people can get watercolor pencil drawings to look like real photographs, but it's much easier to go for the same artistic, simplified look used with watercolors. Don't be afraid to use lots of colors and don't worry about that many minute details- they might be lost when you wash the whole thing with water. Even in dull, monotone subjects, there are usually some surprising colors if you look close enough! An apple can have hints of yellow, orange, pink, black, and purple alongside the red.

#5. Be okay with not controlling the color. Like watercolors, when you begin to wash the picture, don't overwork it. if a color doesn't more how you'd like it to and the green section runs into the orange section, don't try to fix it. Usually, you'll end up liking it better once it's dry! If you over-work the paint you can hurt the paper and take away from the watercoloresque effect.

#6. Rinse out your brush in between sections. If you wash the firetruck-red section of your drawing first, be careful all of the red pigment is out of your brush before you move to a lighter color.

#7. Only load your brush with a tiny bit of water. Dip it in your cup/ bowl/ water-holding item of your choice and then drag or blot some water out of your brush. This way there's not a pool of water on your paper.

#8. Sometimes it helps get the pencil strokes out by making a zig-zagging motion (such a technical term, I know! :P) with your brush. This gives a more authentic watercolor look.

#9. Don't worry about what it looks like at the end! This seems like overkill, but trust me- it's very useful. For large sections of sky or background, a wider flat brush or round brush is a good idea. Can you imagine trying to cover a large area with a super fine brush? I've done it- I wouldn't recommend it. But for the fine lines of red spidering over an apple? You'd want to use a fine brush. If the red spreads too much it could be bad- of course, you should have a little bit of spreading, but be careful not to cover any other beautiful colors! 

#10. Use multiple kinds of brushes. Either way, watercolor pencils are a fun and addicting way to pass time. If you worry about it, you won't have as much fun in the process! And after all, it's only a picture! Have fun! :D

The question of the week: Have you used watercolor pencils before? For those who have, how would you compare them to watercolors?

Have a foten week!
-Elly Toast

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