10/12: Banana sketch, oil on canvas panel, 3x5 in.
I attempted here to use a bigger brush than usual and suppress my urge to break up the broad marks. I really like the green in the back - I'm still amazed by that discovery.
When I was laying down the ground on some of these recent panels I took the time to smooth the surface with the edge of my long palette knife, getting the little holes in the canvas filled more. It makes a huge difference, needless to say, in the movement of paint across the surface. This is something I should have been doing all the time, properly at the white priming stage, but I haven't always been oil-priming these panels either. I need to get a proper priming knife (or cake frosting spatula) and a bucket of oil ground, and become a real painter one of these days.
Saturday, October 13, 2007
Banana sketch
Posted by Dan P. Carr at 11:37 AM
Tags: daily painting, food, materials, studies
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2 comments:
Hey, I just read your post on the Illustrators Yahoo group, you made some excellent points and I agree with your philosophy! I really enjoy your work and am grateful that you're willing to show us these pieces and the process you go through.
Thanks Carol. It wasn't exactly illustration-related, I know...
Glad you are enjoying these. I'm trying to remember to include more about the process, if it's not too boring...
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