Watercolor Practice: Leaves

This week I started the second part of Yao Cheng's Beginning Watercolor class on Creativebug. The first session was all about making leaves and here is my first attempt. I've said this before: I really like Yao's teaching style. She is gifted but has a nice way of explaining what she's thinking at a basic level so I feel like it's actually possible to create what she is painting. And yes, mine are a mess compared to hers but at least I have a general sense of how to make the leaves she demonstrates and now it's up to me to continue practicing. 

Learning to paint leaves with watercolor | Amanda Gomes | delightedco.com

This wreath version above is my favorite attempt.

Learning to paint leaves with watercolor | Amanda Gomes | delightedco.com
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What I'm Learning: Angled Watercolor Brush

As I continue learning to watercolor, I am getting ready to start the second part of Yao Cheng's Beginning Watercolor class on Creativebug but don't yet have all the supplies Yao recommends which is delaying my start. (Although in the interim I'm working on a different watercolor class on Skillshare which I'm also enjoying...I'll share more later.)

As I prepare to continue Yao's class, however, I purchased the 10mm angled brush she recommends. I found it at Michaels and used my 50% off coupon for a total spend of $5. Not bad.

I couldn't help myself and started using the brush to see how it feels and thought I'd show you what I'm learning.

Working with an Angled Watercolor Brush • Delighted Creative Co

To test out the brush I drew lines, letters, shapes and just filled up a practice sheet to see how it felt. My favorite discovery was the way it will make thin petal shapes for a basic floral.

Working with an Angled Watercolor Brush • Delighted Creative Co

I also like the straight edges, lines and the possibility of creating structured shapes. I will need to practice over and over to gain control and reduce the shakiness of my lines, but the potential is there. I can see myself using this for painting houses (which I currently love to sketch), florals, geometric patterns, and possibly even letters.

I'll continue practicing with it and and looking forward to seeing how Yao recommends it be used.

Working with an Angled Watercolor Brush • Delighted Creative Co
Working with an Angled Watercolor Brush • Delighted Creative Co

Free Download: Watercolor Notecard

Happy Friday! If you like colorful note cards, I think you might enjoy today's free download. Using one of the practice watercolor designs I worked on this week, I designed a size A6 note card that you can print and cut at home.

Free Download: Watercolor Note Card • delightedco.com

It's super easy: print on card stock, cut (I've included crop marks), and fold in half. I love Paper Source envelopes and am using a fuschia A6 envelope for mine but I think Clover or Royal Blue would work well too. In case it helps, I also used Paper Source 8.5 x 11 card stock in Pure White. 

Another idea...instead of folding in half, you can cut in half and use as A6 flat cards. Have fun and print as many as you'd like!

Free Download: Watercolor Note Card • delightedco.com
Free Download: Watercolor Note Card • delightedco.com
Free Download: Watercolor Note Card • delightedco.com
 
 

What I'm Learning: Watercolor

Watercolor has always felt a bit mysterious to me. While watercolor does have a welcoming feel being that it is often used by kids, there is a complex side in that it doesn’t provide as much control as I’d like. The bleeding and color differentiation can frustrate me because I don’t know what I’m doing.

Learning to Watercolor using Yao Cheng's Beginner Class on Creativebug | Amanda Gomes • delightedco.com

I am a complete novice when it comes to painting in general and until recently, have used the same palette of watercolors and very inexpensive brushes from Michael’s for the past few years whenever I felt a desire to paint. I have had no skill or understanding of how much water to use, how to use the brushes appropriately, or even how to paint anything other than stripes. Seriously. I’ve tried and always end up a little frustrated.

So I am, yet again, very happy for the myriad of online courses available to me during my sabbatical. This week I’m working through Yao Cheng’s Watercolor for Beginner’s class on Creativebug and have found a new respect and understanding of the medium. Even after learning just the basics, I feel much more friendly towards watercolor and I’m having a lot of fun!

A few of my takeaways:

Supplies. Paintbrush, Paper Towel, Watercolor Paint, Two Jars of Water, and Cold Pressed Watercolor Paper (has more of a "tooth" which is that texture you expect from watercolor paper vs Hot Pressed which I think is a little smoother).

Water Jars. Yao recommends using two jars of water to keep the cool colors (blues, greens, purples) separated from the warm colors (reds, yellows, oranges). Separating the cool and warm colors means you can have more flexibility with rinsing and even using some of the water from the jars in your painting while avoiding the dreaded brown, muddy color that so often happens when mixing.

Wetting the Brush. Always start by getting your brush really wet and swiftly move the brush around in the water jar before dipping into the paint. This might sound super basic (it is), but I used to just quickly dip my paintbrush in the water and start. What that meant is that the water wasn’t filling the brush and in turn, the paint wouldn’t go as far on the page. When your brush is really wet (versus simply being damp), you’ll end up with a lot more paint in your brush.

Brushes. Using a larger brush (Yao’s is size 20, I only had a size 6) can get you lots of great effects. Use the point for small strokes and dots or press down for thick lines. The projects I did for the first part of her beginner’s course were all done with my size 6 brush. (Side note: in the art stores there are so many brushes, it can be overwhelming. But brushes are made for different media so find the brushes labeled W/C or Watercolor and get those instead of the brushes made specifically for Oil or Acrylic. The helpful guy at Blick gave me that tip...apparently the watercolor brushes are made to soak up water.)

Work Quickly. Getting colors to blend provides interesting effects and often creates unexpected colors. When you work quickly, there is a better chance of blending before the colors dry on the page.

Colors. When you want a lighter color, add more water. When you want a deeper color, don’t use as much water. But unless you’re going for a dry brush effect in your work, saturate your brush with water before dipping into the paint.

Shapes. One pointed tip round brush can create a lot of different shapes. As I mentioned, all of the lessons I painted were done with the same brush and I ended up with triangles, circles, dots and swashes.

Don’t Aim for Perfect. Have fun and don’t expect things to be perfect. Obviously as a beginner I should know this from common sense but I still always have an idea in my mind that I wish I could execute. However, experimenting with blending, colors, different amounts of water, shapes, etc. is fun and is all I need to worry about right now.

If you haven’t tried watercolor but want to, I recommend Yao’s class to get started or any other class / tutorial available on YouTube or Skillshare. I think you'll like it! (link below)

What I'm Learning: How to Watercolor | Amanda Gomes • delightedco.com
What I'm Learning: How to Watercolor | Amanda Gomes • delightedco.com
What I'm Learning about Watercolor | Amanda Gomes • delightedco.com
What I'm Learning about Watercolor | Amanda Gomes • delightedco.com
What I'm Learning about Watercolor | Amanda Gomes • delightedco.com

Illustration: Aster Flowers

I'm going to sing Lisa Congdon's praises again. I am so happy I discovered both her and Creativebug because she is teaching me so much as I continue my online learning addiction. Her approachable style, encouragement to practice regularly, and reminders that I shouldn't be aiming for perfection are what make her an ideal teacher in my book. Not to mention: her work is really great.

In addition to her 31 Things To Draw Course, Lisa has a Drawing and Illustration Basics class which I'm going through at the same time and feel like a whole world has been opened to me. A world of drawing. Something I never thought I could do...but I'm doing it. And yeah, I'm drawing at an elementary level but I feel like I'm improving each day and I'm completely enjoying myself, which is a good enough reason to continue.

Today I'm sharing the sketches and a bit of the process that I took to make this month's floral tech calendar. (If you didn't get yours yet, you can get it HERE.) Lisa recommends drawing things again and again and in as many variations as possible.

My final piece looks like this:

Aster Flower Illustration by Amanda Gomes • delightedco.com

I started with sketching a page of asters.

Aster Flower Sketches by Amanda Gomes • DelightedCo.com

Chose one, cropped and lightened it in Photoshop. Then brought it into Illustrator and used Live Trace and the pen tool to vectorize and smooth it out.

Aster Flower Sketch by Amanda Gomes • delightedco.com

Then played with color, added stems, and built a page full of flowers. It was fun and I'm happy with the way it came out :)

WIP - Aster Flower Illustration by Amanda Gomes • delightedco.com

Tech Download for September

Hi again! I ended up creating a couple options for this month's tech wallpaper download. My favorite is the floral version but the lettering one makes me smile too. The floral version is a pile of asters which are September's official flower. Use the sign-up form below to download your files.
Happy September to you!

Free Tech Wallpaper by Amanda Gomes of Delighted Creative Co. • delightedco.com
Free Tech Wallpaper for September by Amanda Gomes of Delighted Creative Co • delightedco.com
 
 

Hand Lettering Practice

Hi there! Last night I worked on some lettering and this morning I brought it into Illustrator, traced it, colored it, and turned it into a desktop wallpaper for you (coming tomorrow). I'm sharing some process shots and a quick video to see some of my work. Sign-up below to get the wallpaper directly to your inbox.

SIGN-UP TO GET DESKTOP WALLPAPERS DELIVERED DIRECTLY TO YOUR INBOX

Amanda Gomes Lettering Practice • www.delightedco.com
Amanda Gomes Hand Lettering Practice • www.delightedco.com

Check back tomorrow for the downloads!