https://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/combining-watercolors-and-acrylics-for-depth • Posted by sarah.trumpp
The thing I love the most about combining watercolor and acrylic paint is that it is so completely forgiving. Mistakes in shading can be erased with water or painted over with a thin glaze of acrylics. I use FolkArt brand because it's got more grit in it and gives more of a tooth for the watercolor to grab onto. Bizarrely, this technique doesn't work well on anything but canvas. I've tried it on many other supports with varying degrees of success, but I hope you'll post your successes if you find something that works fabulously!
The thing I love the most about combining watercolor and acrylic paint is that it is so completely forgiving. Mistakes in shading can be erased with water or painted over with a thin glaze of acrylics. I use FolkArt brand because it's got more grit in it and gives more of a tooth for the watercolor to grab onto. Bizarrely, this technique doesn't work well on anything but canvas. I've tried it on many other supports with varying degrees of success, but I hope you'll post your successes if you find something that works fabulously!
I start out light and apply acrylic paint with a waterbrush. Waterbrushes have water in the handle and a sponge above the brush that feeds water into the bristles as you paint. I like using waterbrushes for application of both acrylics and watercolors as they give me greater control over the amount of paint I'm laying down. Once that's done, take a break, walk the dog, bake a pie, work on another piece of art, do something that will keep you from staring at your canvas trying to will it to dry with your mind.
Use watercolors for the shadows in the face. I use a lot of purples and greens in this process. She looks like some freaky mutant. Let's move onto the next step quick! (after the watercolor dries. Stupid paint).
Using "vintage white" (sort of a bone color) and a waterbrush, smooth out those layers of watercolor until she's shaded and doesn't look quite so much like something that should be shambling around in a George Romero movie.
For hair, I slop on full-strength acrylic with a cheapo brush and usually completely ignore my charcoal sketch lines. That's completely okay, rub them with a wet brush and they disappear completely!
Using watercolors again, give her hair some shading and work some more deeper shades back into her face
Using white acrylic (wicker white this time, a much brighter white), work in highlights and give her hair some dimension. This is usually when I add teeth and the "shines" to her eyes.
This is when I decided she needed a beet crown. With burgundy acrylic, I dabbed on some random beet-shaped blobs and then used "thicket" (dark green) for the shadows. I do a lot of shading with complementary colors as it give greater depth and dimension to your work. That almost sounded like I knew what I was talking about, right? Awesome. I do the watercolor treatment on dark colors too, it's just harder to see until you....
ADD WHITE! Ta-daaa!! At this point I worked some more darks into her hair, added a wash of white to the beets and then blobs of dark green watercolor for the deeper shadows. I also used random spots and piles of white to bring the crown and hair together into one cohesive mass.
Finally, I mixed a deep turquoise acrylic 1:1 with water and splattered the entire canvas with a toothbrush. Messy! Fun! The final scanned version is at the top of this post.