Brave New---Well, re-visited, World
It isn't a very good photograph of it...But people have asked me if it is a photo. :D Except Mom, the astronomer, who looked at it and said "That can't be a picture! The full moon can't be on the same side as a setting sun!" Little did I know... and thus collapsed my beliefs about the photos in my day calendar...
Anywho, I decided a few days ago that I needed to pick up the brush again, and make another Dara Masterpiece (Which is a degree lower than, say, an artfully scooped pile of kitty litter or the unknown smears on my walls.).
I found a website that shows you how to do certain things with acrylic paints, and they had a demo for a seascape with a breaker. It is gorgeous! And, since the artist did it in five easy steps, well, golly, so could I!
Let's just say that I wasted three hours and two pieces of canvas paper, and just for the record, adding more paint doesn't help a picture along. Amidst my anxious painting attempts, Jeremy called me up and asked how it was going. I grumbled something and he said, "Well, Da Vinci took a long time with his paintings..." to which I replied "You aren't helping..."
A few hours and a few gallons of paint later, I decided that, yes, I needed to take my time if I didn't want to go crazy. I decided that even though the artist had five steps, he obviously spent quite a lot of time making sure each step was done correctly (apparently, Bob Ross is a one-of-a-kind super-speedy painter. Perhaps it's all those "happy little trees!").
So, currently, on my counter is my five step painting, at stage one. It has some promise, but I don't intend to waste my efforts by speed-painting. Mom told me once that while painting I should have fun with it, and while I may not be having fun yet, at least I am semi-non-stressed about it.
Comments
"press" = Stop the...
colderee: she who throws cold water on everyone's enthusiasms
I took an oil painting class during college and loved it. It's funny how you learn things that you never would have concidered before. I had a similar experience on my first picture I ever made. It was of a ship sailing on a cold ocean among some iceburges. (I only had a picture of a ship to help me, the rest I was attempting to imagine. When I did the blue sky, I kept thinking "this doesn't look right", but couldn't figure out what it was that was wrong. Finally I asked the teacher and she pointed out that the sky's color changes the into a darker hue the higher up you look from the horizon. Duh! How could I have missed that one? It just goes to show how observant I am at times!