January 2023

Looser barns

I liked the barns at Hunter Farms that I painted in my last post, so I decided to paint them again, but more loosely. This time I sprayed the front and the back of the paper with water until it was saturated, then I applied the watercolor washes and let them run. The idea is to get a misty, watery feel to the painting. After letting the initial washes dry, I came back in with a dry brush and painted the darker shapes with harder edges. That way hopefully I would get some soft edges to the shapes and some hard edges.

I painted this scene twice. The first time I let the barns look watery and soft. In the second painting I firmed up the shapes of the barns.

My first painting. This is probably too loose.
My second painting. Some of the colors from above flow down into the lower area, tying the painting together.

I submitted the second painting to Eric Wiegardt, my watercolor teacher, for our Saturday class critique. He liked the how the blue from the side of the center barn flowed down into the grass. He liked the variation of colors in the trees also. But again he remarked that the shadows in the barn doors and on the silo are”dead.” They need more of the meadow colors brought into them.

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The barns at Hunter Farm

Every Sunday on our way to church Katy and I drive past Hunter Farm, located on the grass flats next to the outlet of the Skokomish River. It’s a diverse farming operation, with hayfields, dairy cattle, a pumpkin patch, corn maize, organic produce, and a retail operation that is packed with cars from Halloween to Thanksgiving. They have a couple of old barns that are quite striking for their location under the wooded hills above the Skokomish River.

I made a pencil sketch of the barns, then a value study, then I painted three watercolor paintings. I wanted to show the light rooflines of the barns against the dark background of trees, with the silo as the focal point. I also wanted to use the reflections in the standing water and paint some soft edges. Although I’m not satisfied with these paintings, I think each one got a little better and I learned some things.

First attempt 7×10 inches
Second attempt, 7×10 inches
Third attempt, 11×15 inches

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Fishing boat at Port Townsend dock

A few years ago I took a photo of a fishing boat at a dock in Port Townsend. Yesterday and today I made two paintings of this boat. On my first attempt, I was dissatisfied with the pilings under the dock. They’re just grey, without any local color. My teacher, Eric Wiegardt, has told me twice to add color to my shadows. Also the proportions of the cabin on the boat aren’t quite right. So I decided to paint it again. On the second attempt, I got more color in the shadows and the proportions of the boat are better.

First attempt
Second attempt

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Painting the marsh

In his demo last week, Eric Wiegardt painted a marsh on Willapa Bay. He emphasized the importance of adding a complementary color to a background wash to make it come alive. The actual color isn’t as importance as the vibration that comes from the two colors together. In his painting, he started with a yellowish wash, then he added strokes of purple, the complement. In this painting, he also showed how to use the mop brush with its bristles splayed out to make the texture for the trees and the grasses.

I made a copy of his painting, then I made another painting from my photo of a marsh on Brownsville Road.

My copy of Eric Wiegardt’s painting
Brownsville Road marsh

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Snow Creek farm series

For my homework for last Saturday’s watercolor class with Eric Wiegardt, I painted a farm I visited a couple of summers ago on Snow Creek near Discovery Bay. I wanted to show the hills behind the barn as misty, cloud-draped shapes, and keep the barn and silo as my center of interest. I wasn’t satisfied with my initial attempts, so I kept trying. I did a series of eight paintings all together. Here’s my best attempt and a photo of a bunch of the others.

Eric commented that this watercolor has good separation of values (light grass and dark trees), and he liked the lines showing the curve on the road. He liked the way the green tree color fades into the right side of the shed in the front, and he suggested that I add some color into the shadows of the barn. These gray shadows need to be warmed up with color from the grass.

My best attempt, 9 x 12 inches
Some of my many attempts to paint this scene

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