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Friday, March 18, 2011

Small Bouquet


Today I played with edges until nothing worked and then I was really cranky and just wanted to get a showable painting, to hell with the fun. In this one, I am pleased to say I managed not to overwork the pear blossoms (very small white bits). Also, I was encouraged by my stumbling on a perfect almost invisible grey in my last flower painting and I worked it out again today to imprint it on my brain before I forget it. But of course, it was all different this time.

7 comments:

  1. Oh, I just love your honesty about getting cranky! Well, this painting worked. It's lovely.

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  2. Jean, I love the subtle shift in colors here, the edges throughout are wonderful. Referring to your comment about mixing the invisible grey, In the past I've attempted painting color charts, but that became to rigid for me. However, last summer I had an extra moleskine that I began painting color swatches in, each page is labeled with the name of the painting, it's been a very handy reference for me and I really like that everything is bound in one book.

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  3. That gray is lovely--I can see some yellow tones in there....What did you use to make your gray? I really like the pear blossoms, but my favorite parts are the leaves. Just beautiful.

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  4. Nice painting, Jean! I love the gray...I find it so difficult to find just the right one!

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  5. I get such a kick out of your writing, and comments... the beautiful artwork is just 'gravy'--- ha ha

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  6. Thanks, you guys....kind comments.
    Virginia, that gray is, as Carol Marine says through slightly gritted teeth, yellow, red and blue, plus white. I asked the question a hundred times in the workshop I took with her, and now I believe it. But those grays are so hard to mix because with even the smallest increment of too much of any of the primaries, the gray goes off in the wrong direction. The experience is like herding cats. I think I have done better with mixing grays since I painted the back of my glass palette with gray gesso. I really like it, because I can see better what I have. Not that I can still always get the gray right, but it is definitely easier than when working on a white background.
    Sandy, thanks for that gravy comment.
    And Angela, that is a great idea about the bound color chart. I tremble when I think of devoting the great amount of time necessary to doing it, but maybe I could make it a project that happens after painting time (mornings, usually) and sort of de-toxify the whole idea. Can you recommend a chart to follow?

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  7. Love your comment about not caring if you have fun,just want to paint something presentable. Here! Here! there are days like that, we just need to get through them. My granddaughter taught me how to make the boxes and 're right, they are fun and you were clever to use them in your wonderful radish series.

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