Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Pastel Classes 2020

Video Lessons Through YouTube

Edit: If you are new to my pastel page here, if you look in the side bar you will find my Lerri's Links that have a few of my favorite links there is also more projects with written descriptions and images if you need more things to keep you busy. The links for YouTube and the video picture page are at the bottom of this post, also included is an email address to contact me. 

Also, looks like You Tube has redesigned the way the page looks and that band of videos at the top only revels 12 posts even if there are more. If you look at above the thumbnails you will see "Home Videos etc..." and if you click on the Videos you will see all of my posts. 

Thank you for stopping by. Stay Safe. - L
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We are all painfully aware of the circumstances we all find ourselves in during this unprecedented time in our history. I know how hard it is to stay home and not get together with family and friends but it is what we need to do to keep ourselves, our families, friends, neighbors and people in general, safe, the problem is we need something to do while we are sheltering at home so we don't pull our hair out.

Many of my students contacted me asking, sometimes desperately, when we were to have classes again, my answer is: I don't know. Maybe there will be summer classes, it really depends on this virus and if we can turn the corner, the City of Torrance will let me know.

Videos were something I was thinking of doing though this is not quite the way I had planned to do them. I just wanted to do some basic techniques or studies, nothing real elaborate so I could figure out how to do them, then Covid19 reared its ugly head and my plans changed.

I have been working on lessons for all 3 mediums of my classes (watercolor, acrylic and pastel) and to say there has been a steep learning curve would be an understatement but it has kept me busy and kept my mind focused on something besides a World in a panic. I hope that you find them interesting or, at least distracting, even if they are a bit "rough" right now, I am finding my way and doing it all myself, I have no one else to blame.  Like I said, it has been a steep learning curve learning the aspects of doing a video but I think I am figuring it out now so the next ones will get easier.

Since there will be a videos I won't be posting a written blog until classes start up again but there is a pause and rewind button if you need them.

So for now, stay home, stay safe, call your neighbors and friends and keep painting, I hope to see you in class again real soon.

You Tube: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwdVD-1V3-xKZup98pqtpZw?feature=guide 

Reference photos for videos - https://photos.app.goo.gl/hixy9rKsfzgmSzNL7

New Email - Lerrisartstudio@gmail.com
(Old one still works but its getting a lot of "junk")

Saturday, February 8, 2020

Winter 2020 Pastel Class

Project: Desert Refuge Week 4

This was the last week that I will work on my project unless I can find something I've missed, I think I am done. Don't worry if you are still working on yours we still have time or if you are finished with your project feel free to start something of your own.

In the water  I added some ripples into the reflection area mostly using a light blue pastel and making small "dots and dashes" to suggest ripples.
In the darker areas of the reflections I used a slightly darker blue than I used above, as these ripples may be in shadow and will be a bit darker. I also used my indigo at the base of the reeds and along the shore to create shadows and a separation between the reeds or dry ground and the reflections.

Along the levee I added the suggestion of rocks and weeds as well as shadows from the trees, use the photo to guide you.





The last thing I did was at the suggestion of Di, to add a bit of the purple haze at the base of the mountain and I also strengthen
 the color at the tops of my trees.





This is the finished piece, I will live with this for a few days before calling it done but for now this is a good stopping place so I don't overwork it.

Keep painting and I will see you in class.

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Winter 2020 Pastel Class

Project: Desert Refuge Week 3

Last week we got started on this project with a watercolor under painting before adding the mountain and the distant desert. We started the trees which is where I picked up in our last class.

I like to bring up all sections of my panting at the same time, so once I had the trees based in, I moved on to the levee and the water.


The levee was a combination of 3 colors: a medium umber type color, a lighter tan and a very light tan. I mostly blended with the chalk so it had some texture with very little blending with finger or stub. I was very aware of the angle of the dirt that forms the levee so all of my strokes are at a slight angle.

The water also has 3 different colors: a medium ultramarine blue, a light turquoise and a soft gray blue near the levee.  I applied the different blues in vertical strokes and lightly blended first with the colors then lightly with my finger.

Next I added the reeds in the water and started the reflections. The reeds are a medium dark green.










To the reeds I also added some of the gold color I used in the background reeds and a burnt sienna color for the tops. Yes, in the photo the tops are a yellowish color but it was very hard to distinguish between the background reed and the top of the foreground reeds so I used my artistic license. 

I worked a bit more on the reflections, getting the shapes better, adding color. The key thing to remember when doing reflections is to add your color straight down the smear lightly across. The water is moving so there won't be a sharp reflection.

 I also worked some more on the trees adding shadows, trunks and branches. The trunks were done in an indigo blue type color.











Same on the other side. I also used the indigo as a shadow color where the dirt meets the water.

The top of the levee where the path is was a light blue gray.






This is where I left off. I will probably finish this up next class. I still have some things to do but I don't think it will take me all class.

If you are finished with your project bring in something else to get started on or if you are still working on this project take as long as you need to finish up.



Until then, keep painting and I will see you in class.






Saturday, January 25, 2020

Winter 2020 Pastel Class

Desert Refuge Weeks 1 and 2

Because I was down with an intestinal bug last week I will have to combine the 2 week of this project together.

In our first week, I showed how I make my sanded paper using Golden's Absorbent Ground on 1/4" form core poster board with mounted Bristol paper. 

This ground is similar to their Ground for Pastel but it is a bit finer and is use to turn un-absorbent surfaces like canvases or paper that will fall apart like the Bristol paper into a surface that you can use watercolor on. I am using it so I can use use my watercolor or an alcohol wash on the Bristol paper. Like the Pastel Ground, it has an acrylic base so it seals the paper so it won't fall apart or warp when liquids are applied.

The first week after I gave the demo on how to mount the paper to the board, I talked about sketching and drawing. In pastel it is really hard to get away from either of those but they still can be a bit daunting for some but both are very important if you want to improve your painting skills.

Sketching allows you to figure out how you are going to paint your subject. It doesn't need to be anything more than a few lines or shapes on a sketch pad but it allows you to play with the elements to see how best to approach your subject. Whether you are working from a photo or working plein air, the sketch lets you get down on paper a plan, a visualization of what you want to accomplish with you painting.

Do you want it to be vertical? Or does horizontal work better? How but some to the misc. stuff that is scattered around do you really want to paint all that? Sketching lets you play with your design without having to make a commitment to  it. It is also a great place to see how your light and dark values work. Don't underestimate the power of the sketch.

After talking about sketching and drawing, my prepared board was dry enough to get started, unfortunately, I had left my watercolor at home BUT, all was not lost, I decided that I wanted to tone my paper with an overall color of a yellow ocher and that I could do with my pastel and a little alcohol.

First I went over all of my paper with a light yellow ocher soft pastel. I want the final painting to have an overall warm, morning desert look to it and having a warm under color over all of my paper should help reach that look. Next I took a bristle brush I have in my equipment and some 
rubbing alcohol you get at the drug store, and went over the entire paper. This will set the color so it won't lift off when I do apply the watercolor.

It takes a few minutes for the alcohol to dry before I could add my sketch which will be the guide for my painting. I use a light lavender pastel because it will blend in with the watercolor and the pastels that will follow.
This was the end to week one.

Week 2. I had my watercolors this time so I wanted to under paint the elements I have sketched out the previous week. Keep in mind that at no point right now am if committed to what I have sketched on my paper, it can and probably will change as the painting develops.

The first thing I did was under paint the mountain. I left the sky for now, and will get back to it when I start with the pastel (forgot to take a photo leaving the sky yellow).

Next I added some yellow ocher to the distant plains at the base of the mountain,then added color to the trees. I don't care that it is runny, if any of it shows it will be texture and color in the end.

I based in the trees with a green that had a bit of sienna in it and the reflections I added a bit of ultramarine blue. I wanted to keep things on the pale side because I want the finished painting to be more "high key" in the lighter end of the value scale.

Once the watercolor under painting was dry I started with the sky using a medium light blue at the top a light blue in the middle and a light lavender at the bottom of the sky and also I added some white to all of it before I blended.

Working down my page, I started on the mountain next with soft, warm tans and oranges, trying to keep it light. Softening edges and colors by blending.

The plains at the bottom of the mountain I used the same ocher. Remember when painting the mountain or anything that has a shape and textures, to follow the shapes and angles of what you see, they are not walls.

Colors here get a bit hard to describe because you never have the right one anyway, but I see gray greens not vibrant greens. This is not only the desert but also this image was taken in winter so nothing is really a vibrant color. There are a lot of sienna and orange in the trees and some of the bushy short trees along the edge of the path are almost a pink/lavender color. I blended very little in the trees leaving the chalk marks.

Once I got the basic colors in for the trees, I started adding more color and suggesting shadows in the trees. That is really only a medium gray green I used for the shadows and may lighten it a bit later.

I got the weeds around the trees based in with an orange rust color and that is where I left off for the class. I will continue from there when we meet again.

Keep painting and I will see you in class.



Saturday, October 12, 2019

Fall Pastel Class

Project: Alaskan Fishing Village Week 4

In our last class we finally worked on the reflection. I left this for last mostly so I wasn't dragging my arm over it all the time.

Basically I used the same colors as I used above with the exception of the highlight colors. Reflections are a value or so darker than what they reflect and they are not mirror reflections. Water is moving all the time either from currents, tides, wind or something swimming or moving through it so there will be no straight lines or hard lines, everything will be slightly distorted. Also, you will be seeing some of the underside because water reflects what is above it and it is flat looking up, if you have any doubts, lay a mirror on the floor near a table, stand back and look in the mirror. What to you see? Same goes for the water, it is going to see what is above it like the underside of the front building and a bit more of the underside of the roof eves.

The other thing to keep in mind - and this goes along with the whole moving water thing - is to paint a reflection your strokes go in one of 2 directions: either straight down or straight across. You can make  an angle, like the roof line or the rust patterns on the roof, by using a series of vertical lines. Most of the lines I used to create the reflections were vertical with a few horizontal ones usually because I was working on something small.

Now that you have the basics, I started with the green in the water, using my darkest greens along with my dark indigo blue to start, then adding some of the mid-value green for the shore grasses and a darker tone brown for the little bit of mud that shows. I put that all in before lightly blending, again my blending was straight down. When I had it blended I went gently straight across to blur the straight lines. I then added some lighter greens for lighter trees but not the real light color from above but one just a bit darker. Again, straight lines putting this color in, straight lines blending and lightly across.

The building color was added the same way, what you don't need to worry about is making it perfect especially the pilings it is standing on. If you miss a post or a board, that's okay, just blur the area a bit more. If the reflection is too detailed it will look wrong. Don't forget to blend straight down and lightly across.

Last but not least, I used my lightest blue and made a series of little marks all along the shore where the water and mud meet. There are usually rocks and sticks and whatever along the shore that can cause a sparkle as the water splashes over them, this also defines the edge of the water. Don't make it a solid line, think dots and dashes as you just skip along the shore line.

I then took the same light blue - take the paper off if your's still has paper - and on its side I very lightly went over the reflections just barely skimming the surface of my paper and I only did this once across, working my way down the reflection. This becomes the sheen on the water.

Check your house and trees to see if you need to  do any more like put the rails in for the walkway in front of the red house, or add people or the boats. Highlights on the deciduous tree behind the red house, remember to follow the way the branches grow, it is not a pine tree.

This was the last day for me on this project. If you are still working on yours we still have 3 classes before the end of the semester so there is plenty of time to finish. If you have finished, bring something in that you want to work on and I can help you get started before we break for the holidays.



So keep painting and I will see you all in class.

Sunday, October 6, 2019

Fall 2019 Pastel Class

Project: Alaskan Fishing Village Week 3

This week we worked our way down into adding the lean-to shed/garage to the main building, adding color to the red building and adding some simple detail, under painting the boats, the shoreline and the greenery around the base of the buildings.


The colors for the shed are the gray, cream and indigo for the light ans shadow. You might want to have a separate box to keep the color you have been using for a project in until you have finished it, I find it is a lot easier to find colors rather than staring into all my colors looking for what I hope is the color I am looking for.

The red building is a deep dirty red regardless of what it looks like here, it is just the contrast between the red and the green that makes it look like bright red. If you don't have a dark dirty red, use the darkest red you have and add in some burnt sienna to it (a brick color) and blend them together. I also added a person and some "stuff" in front of the building just to make it look like people actually live here. The ails cam last.

 Before you get all panicky about the boat, keep in mind that it is made up with a series of shapes. The back of the boat has a curved shape, the sides are just broken lines and the cabin is a couple of boxes. I used a light gray, a darker gray, a light and medium gray/blue and the indigo, that's it. Don't over think this it is too small for much detail, it is just a shape.

The row boat again is just simple shapes, curves at the front, straight lines every place else. I used medium, warm gray, light blue/gray and indigo.

I also used that warm gray and a tan to add a shoreline around where the water meets the land, look at the photo, in the front only a little shows, in front of the red building it comes up behind the boat. Be sure that your chalk strokes follow the direction of the slope of shoreline.

The grasses and the bushes have a light yellow green, a medium yellow green and a dark blue green for shadows and some light sienna in it as well. I used the lither greens to blend into the darker green of the bushes using a scumbling (all directions) stroke, while I used a more vertical strokes for the grasses. Don't be afraid to pull the grasses up around the bottoms of the pilings and the boats, that will settle those things down into the grass.

Next week we will work on the reflections and final details of this painting so try to have yours to this point, we - I - may finish this in our next class.

See you all in class.

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Fall 2019 Pastel Class

Pastel Project: Alaskan Fishing Village Week 2

The first week or our project we did an alcohol and charcoal under painting. This established our dark areas and some of the middle grays. Last class we started adding color.

Just a note here: Some of the dark charcoal may show through and that will be a good thing. That dark becomes the deep dark shadows of the forest and other dark shadowed areas so it isn't necessary to cover it all. Let it work for you.




The first thing I did was to add in my sky colors. While I didn't want the gray, gloomy day the photo was taken, I also didn't want a bright blue sky. this is my personal preference, if you want your sky brighter, that is up to you but there are things to remember when painting skies - Skies are darker as the go up from the horizon so use your darker colors at the top and lighter colors as you go down. I used a mid value gray/blue and a very light blue and blended them to get what I hope is a clearing sky color. 

You will have to paint around the tree branches but this is also a time where you can reshape your trees if you got them too solid or if you need sky holes. Remember to look at the photo to see how lacy the tops of the trees are and how they vary in size and shape.

The branches of the  trees have about 4 different colors of green from very dark to a mid value color. Remember, these are the ends of the branches of the trees that are in the light, leave some of the dark and be very sketchy with your strokes so it looks like branches coming out from around the tree not just the sides.

There is a deciduous tree behind the red building that is a bit brighter, lighter green. Be aware that the branches come out from the trees a bit different and it has a very different shape.










I got started on the brown building using a cream color, an indigo (dark gray/blue), a light sienna and a darker sienna and the gray/blue from the sky. the key thing here is to be aware of the direction things are going. the roof slants down, follow the slant. The boards on the side of the building and the top of the front are horizontal, but the lower half of the front is vertical. I lightly blended parts of these colors but tried not to blend too much. For the lines of the boards, I used the indigo because it is a harder pastel, you can use a dark pastel pencil or other cool dark pastel .

This is where we left off but I do want to note that when I got home and was looking at the photos, I realized that the back part of my roof is too high, I will fix it in class so you can see how I fix something I don't like.

Keep painting and I will see you in class.