• @[email protected]
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      28 days ago

      flat water color

      Might be your paper, getting an even wash has a lot to do with your paper. Your technique might be good but wood-pulp paper is tricky to get an even wash.

      • @[email protected]
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        227 days ago

        I think my paper is good, good catch though been there done that!

        I do the “moving a blob of paint around” on a slightly leaning paper to get that flat look.

        When you say wash, how do you do it, like washing around?

        • @[email protected]
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          327 days ago

          A wash, just being a separate, distinct layer of color or colors which is allowed to dry before a second wash may be applied.

          I must have misunderstood when you said “flat”, just getting that even coat of color. Sounds like you’re using a bead to get an even wash, slowly working down the incline of your surface which is how I do it. On good paper using that method has always given me the most even wash if that’s what I’m going for.

          • @RuttyOP
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            123 days ago

            How do you evaluate a good or bad paper when in a store?

            • @[email protected]
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              222 days ago

              Good is kinda relative. I like Arches cold pressed ($$$) or Baohong academy ($$). Any 100% cotton 140lb paper is probably good. Pulp paper is cheap enough I use it for watercolor sketches or studies which means I paint more but the quality is all over the place. Pulp paper is harder to paint on, it’s less forgiving of moisture control. Jackson’s has some good cheap blocks I recommend.

              • @RuttyOP
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                122 days ago

                Thank you