Watercolour Leaf Design…. Try sketching some Organic Shapes… Leaves! Look at real leaves to...

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Transcript of Watercolour Leaf Design…. Try sketching some Organic Shapes… Leaves! Look at real leaves to...

Watercolour Leaf Design…

Try sketching some Organic Shapes…

Leaves!• Look at real leaves to observe the shape or

outline;• Think about what kind of line will help you

draw the shape (Curvy? Angular?);• Practice sketching the basic shape of different

leaves on newsprint or in your sketchbook;• Include some detail, such as lines to show the

veins in the leaf.

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Planning Your Design…

Choose one leaf ‘style’ from your sketches, to use in your watercolour design.

Lightly draw your leaf shape using pencil onto watercolour paper, and remember to try:

• Vary the SIZE (large, medium, small…)• OVERLAP• OFF-THE-PAGE• Use of space… Balance the design

Next, trace over your leaf shapes with a waterproof marker.

This is just part of a leaf design to show the black outline…

Introducing Watercolour• A watery medium (the Prang ‘pan’ watercolours

require lots of water to be added!)• Watercolour brush – holds lots of water! (Tip: Hold

the paint brush just like your pencil in your printing hand!)

• Watercolour is transparent (can see through layers!)

Try a small ‘wet-on-wet’ sample first to practice the technique…

Wet-on-Wet Technique1. Wet the paper/shape (use clean water!);

2. Apply the first colour to fill in part of one leaf shape. (Wash = even area of watery colour);

3. Apply a second colour (wash) to fill in any remaining areas of the leaf shape.

TIPS… Use the brush to guide the paint; when the two wet colours touch, they will ‘run’ together, creating interesting blends. … Know when to stop and let the paint blend end and work its magic! (Don’t

‘over mix’!)

Wet-on-Wet Technique

After a practice/sample, start filling in each leaf shape using the wet-on-wet technique.

TIP: Work around the page so that one leaf has time to dry BEFORE you paint any leaves touching it so the paint doesn’t run.

Wet-on-Wet Samples

Watercolour Leaf Design

• Paint each leaf shape using the ‘wet-on-wet’ technqiue

• Limit colours: 2 colours per leaf works well for wet-on-wet

• Use imaginative colour combinations if you’d like!

• Next day… Paint the background using only 2-3 colours with the wet-on-wet technique