The rookie error for summer is to paint all foliage using the same basic color. You lose more points if itâs sap green.
Bracken Fern, by Carol L. Douglas, 9X12, oil on canvasboard, $869. |
This weekend, the mercury climbed to 70° F., which forced the âwall of greenâ into budding. New England is now in her summer raiment, although it will get a bit deeper and more solid. Itâs time to talk about mixing pretty and varied greens.
Michael Wilcox published a famous watercolor pigment guide called Blue and Yellow Donât Make Green. Itâs where I first got the idea to add back the banned black.
Mixed greens. Almost a salad. |
His point was that there are many routes to the same destination, and that to really mix colors, you need to understand what pigments youâre using, not work from trade names for colors. Consider sap green, for exampleâa staple of many plein air paintersâ toolkit. Itâs really a convenience mix. The same is true of Hookerâs Green in watercolor.
The single-pigment (âtrueâ) greens available are chromium oxide green, viridian, and cobalt green. Chromium oxide green is a lovely, heavy, natural green. Unfortunately, it outweighs everything itâs mixed with. Viridian and cobalt green are lovely, but expensive. Beware viridian hueâitâs just another phthalo in disguise.
Chart courtesy of Victoria Brzustowicz |
The rookie error is to paint all your greens using the same hue, modulating lighter or darker for highlights and shadows. Youâll have much more life in your trees if you know all the different ways you can get to leafy green. One of the most useful greens is black plus cadmium yellow lemon (or Hansa yellow).
The best way to navigate the colors of foliage is to avoid greens out of a tube altogether. A system of paired primaries gives you more options, avoiding the acidity of phthalo, the weight of chromium oxide green, or the soul-sucking darkness of sap green.
In my experience, bad paint mixing causes paintings to go wrong faster than anything else. Constantly over-daubing to modulate the paint color distorts the original drawing and makes a grey mush. If youâre confident of the color, you can apply it fast and accurately.
I make my greens on a matrix, which Iâve shown you both mixed and on a chart. Note that blue/black pigments are much stronger than the yellows. You need about half the amount of blue or black as you do yellow.
Swatches by Jennifer Johnson |
First mix greens according to the chart, and then modulate your resulting greens with tints (meaning a mix of white and a color). The specific tints are unimportant, but the most useful one for landscape is a mix of white, ultramarine and quinacridone violet, making a pale lavender. It is great for atmospheric perspective.
Your assignment is to hit paint swatches as closely as you can. |
Detail of Jennifer's chart, above. |
I also have my students make neutrals using combinations of ultramarine blue with burnt sienna and raw sienna. I use ultramarine blue and burnt sienna as my standard dark-neutral, because it can go to the warm or cool side depending on how it is mixed. Raw sienna plus ultramarine is my go-to starting point for granite and the sands of our northern beaches.
My 2022 workshop schedule can be found here. That includes the beautiful red rocks of Sedona, urban painting in Austin, TX, June and September workshops aboard schooner American Eagle, mountain vistas in the Berkshires, and our ever-popular Sea & Sky at Schoodic in Acadia National Park.