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coletteernst
Mar 23, 2023
In Painting Discussion
Ah Spring,
The sun is out longer each day,
the snow is melting all away,
soon we'll see colours at play,
as spring puts on her bright display. Ok so I am a better painter than poet :) but it's always a joy to see colours in nature. This winter I have been painting using lots of colour in my animals, yet the colours are often hidden, subtle just like they are outside. I have been studying if any of the rocks in our area have pigment, but while it seems that on the coast there are many, here there are few to none in any in any amount. So I looked to nature. I went for a walk and noticed pale green beard lichen on the trees and collected it to see if I could draw the colour out to make paint or dye. It's a painstaking process as after steeping the lichen, i have chosen to allow the water to evaporate naturally to leave the coloured residue behind, I didn't know if heat would damage the pigment colour. With the few colours I have found so far, all light greens and browns, I will be lucky if I get enough pigment to paint a small 5X7. I am hoping spring will be more fruitful, yet while the colours are easier to spot they may be equally as elusive. Pigment is not dye, it's easy to draw dye from flowers and growing things, but this water soluble colour is not the same as paint pigment. Weirdly, watercolours use as their base powders that don't dissolve in water, but instead suspend in a solution that binds them to the paper. Who knew! I have never been limited by colour. I love to add vibrancy to images even when there is none (or little) in the original photo. But finding the colours that resonate with my home, then using them in non-traditional ways, will bring a new sense of authenticity to some of my works during my new series "Celebrating Tumbler Ridge Photography and Wildlife". Meanwhile, check out my latest work - Wild Wolf - where my love of using surreal colours is definitely on display. Maybe this wolf is also dressed out to celebrate spring?
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coletteernst
Jan 26, 2023
In Member Perks
I am celebrating the start of a new year by expanding my art to new venues. My original art posted is now available on Etsy for even easier ability to order, As always my originals come matted (unless you request otherwise) and signed with archival quality products, and packaged to safely arrive at the buyers home. Visit my store at https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/ColetteWatercolours Member Sale! You may notice that prices on Etsy are higher that what currently posted on this site. Member - I got you covered! From now until February 14th, all original works on this site are available at the 2022 price when purchased through this site's contact form for members. Contact me through this site by February 14th and receive the Members only promotion, as my Valentines gift to you. Wait there's More! I have a lot of fun with abstracts and playing with the flow of water and colour on paper. These images lend wonderfully to printed gift items. Select abstract and floral works are now available on printed merchandise through Redbubble, maybe something will catch your eye as a Valentines gift for a loved one? You can find this and other merchandise by clicking the link below REDBUBBLE SHOP I am excited to venture into more avenues of beautiful products, including printed tapestries and satin shawls and wraps and other wearable items, as I continue finding joy in colour and movement as water interacts and creates drama to the images. For now enjoy exploring the new stores and let me know what you would like to see more of! Just a few wonderful items available on Redbubble you can order as gifts for loved ones this Valentine's Day! Thank you for supporting me in my journey - members I love you all!
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coletteernst
Dec 31, 2022
In Painting Discussion
The size of your success is measured by the strength of your desire; the size of your dream; and how you handle disappointment along the way. Robert Kiyosaki Christmas Gifts This year for Christmas my ever-encouraging husband gave me a 16X20 pad of watercolour paper with the implicit instructions that I was not allowed to cut the pages into smaller sizes. Recently I had finally made the bold move of opening my professional 300 pound watercolour sheets that I purchased. These sheets are 20X30 each, but I wasn't bold enough to use a whole sheet - no - I cut off a small 6 inch strip and made that into three even smaller pieces before using them. For experimentation and practice purposes small is lovely, because watercolour dries quickly and I could work within that time on anything under 12X18. And I feel oddly guilty over spending money on my art since I rarely sell any - so for me it was mostly a hobby. And who is going to pay for a big item - right? Sometimes, small is lovely. It's quaint, it's affordable, it's consumer friendly. Until I tried to create scarves and other larger items using digital copies of my work - the small is, well, rubbish. Print copies of real art can be always be made smaller than the original, but can only be enlarged about twice the size for most high end art prints. My dream for 2023 is to see my new work, the more fluid and abstract creations, on fabric as a blanket or large scarves and my paintings in art galleries. So if I am going to dream big, I need to start painting big starting with those new 16X20 blank sheets waiting for me on my art table. Eeek! I have found that capturing a sunset, a giant cedar, or a looming mountain lose something of their beauty and awe when I try to capture them in small scale. And while only God has the vastness of the Universe as His canvas, going bigger has clear advantages when it comes to portraying the detail and magnificence of nature. Even a tiny water droplet or a single leaf gain power and beauty when painted at 200 times the original size. ARTDEX, Free Digital Archive And Social Destination For The Global Art Community, says this about the why size in art matters. Ultimately, size in art matters because of its power to impact the way audiences respond. Investing with High Hopes There are three ways that artists can make money, according to the business course currently being offered in Tumbler Ridge for young entrepreneurs. One is to sell their original art, the next is to teach others to make art, and the third is to sell items with your art on them. Currently I have sold 1 commissioned painting, maybe 6 original paintings to family and friends who know my work and love me (and I love you back!) and a dozen or so prints. I also host an art group, but being self taught would never think to charge for the small nuggets of knowledge that I hold as I gain more than I give by being a part of this group of amazing people. I have recently launched my redbubble store hoping to provide more opportunity for my art to get out into the world, this took no upfront investment, but without big paintings most of the products available are simple small items like mugs, spiral notebooks, iphone cases and such. My husband's real gift to me was the encouragement to invest in my dream. In order to sell prints - you gotta have them to sell. We sat down and I got the whole family involved in choosing my print offerings for the Winter of 2023 (check out the page here) and which original images I will be selling (either framed or matted) at the upcoming art/craft fair in Tumbler Ridge, and then I put together an print order and stared at the cost. Eeek! I have over 30 prints on order as well as mattings and frames for the chosen few originals selected to offer at the art/fair and while I feel like I went big with my investment, the truth is that I went small. The majority of the prints I ordered were single copies at 5X7 and 8X10 with the knowledge that most people wandering through the event don't bring hundreds of dollars to spend (especially right after the Christmas season). But prints are not like lettuce (which is also costly right now). They don't expire. So, I will continue with the next step of my dream and join the Dawson Creek Art Gallery and submit some of my works to be considered for a future showing, call local restaurants and see if they would be willing to display one of my works, and chat with the local tourist shops to see if they may like to sell some of my prints there. Small Fish, Smaller Pond I read and article my Melissa Chu, about the difference between thinking big and thinking different. She sums up her article with the following statement. Everyone wants to be a big fish in a big pond. But that might mean excelling in a little pond first.
And sometimes, the best opportunities come from making your own pond. It reminded me of the marketing strategy by Seth Godin about being the "Purple Cow". It is not always how huge one dreams, but how one chooses to achieve those dreams. My dad carves and paints loons. It is a very specific art form, with a very specific audience, yet he ships loons all over the continent (and possibly beyond) and has had loons in shops all over BC. He does it because he is loony for loons. He loves his art form, speaks to others about it passionately and isn't afraid to get out there and show his work off. He has an etsy shop called LoonLoverStudio, an even had some loons tucked away in he and mom's tiny camper when they came north to camp, saw an opportunity to show off his work and now has some in the art gallery in Dawson Creek. He's kind of a small fish - but he's feisty and his own kind of purple cow. One of the wonderful things about finding your voice in art is finding what is unique about your art form. As I find my voice I hope to become my own kind of purple cow, distinct from other artists in my little pond and while I may be small, I too am feisty. So 2023, don't count me out - I'm jumping in swimming!
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coletteernst
Dec 18, 2022
In Painting Discussion
It seems to me that those who try watercolour fall into three categories: Those who dip their toe in, find it frustrating, and move on to other forms of art; those who wade in, don't mind the hobby but it stays at that; and those who get in up to their necks (or deeper!) and realize that there is so many choices of paper, paint, brushes that they soon realize they may be drowning in either options or debt (or both). Ok I think I have pushed that metaphor as far as I can. "It's the poor craftsman that blames the tools?" No. Watercolour can be frustrating when beginning for many. Watercolour is a liquid medium designed to flow on the paper, but the quality of the paper and the paint will affect how it moves and plays and how it looks when dried. Most beginner student varieties of paint have some form of filler that inhibits the flow of the paint, how it mixes with other colours, and how it reacts as it dries. Similarly, many papers call themselves "watercolour paper" but when a beginner tries a technique shown by an experienced artist nothing seems to work right. To thin and the paper rips or buckles, made of the wrong material and it may not be absorbent enough. Even the brushes can affect the quality of the strokes. Using the best you can afford, for what you want it to do. My husband is a photographer. Like watercolour art, there are numerous choices and not enough money to own all the equipment that could be acquired in the attempt to follow a dream. He once told me to purchase the best I could afford in camera equipment for what I wanted it to do. For my husband that meant specific brands of printer, paper, camera and lenses. I wanted to take pictures for fun so a medium range lense and more basic camera were the best choice. For watercolour it specific qualities of paper, paint and brushes, will mean you can do different levels of art, however starting with some good base products will decrease the frustration in learning the art and may encourage the continuation of such an amazing form of creativity. The Paper Watercolour paper is now made in hot press (smooth), cold press (textured) and torchon (very textured) varieties, and made from either celulose (wood) or cotton in three main thicknesses (90 pound, 140 pound and 300 pound). The goal is to find an paper that absorbs watercolour slowly without causing the paper to warp too much. The best quality is 100% cotton based watercolour paper in 140 pound or higher that is cold pressed. Prices range depending on the store. There are student brands that are part cotton part cellulose based that are a good compromise for beginners at the same thickness. I still use these often for my practice work. As you become more proficient the higher brands made with 100% cotton will allow more manipulation and both sides have a similar texture allowing one to paint on both sides, since paper is expensive. Watercolour paper comes in blocks (sealed around all sides to prevent warping), pads (bound on one side) and loose. Don't waste money on the blocks - it's just as easy to tape down your paper to a board to prevent warping. Best student pre-cut paper in bulk: Opus Student Watercolour paper. 7.5X11, 11X15, 15X22 Best pre-cut paper: Strathmore Ready Cut. Comes in three sizes: 5X7, 8X10 & 11X14 Best beginner watercolour pads on a budget: Canson Montval Cold Press 140 pound 9X12 (12 sheets) Best value 100% cotton (block only): Winsor Newton Professional Watercolour paper 7X10 (20 sheets) Best 100% cotton: Arches Aquarelle Cold Press 9X12 (12 sheets) also comes in other sizes. The Paint The choice of the paint you choose will be key to what you can achieve with your painting but choosing a good brand is only the start, as deciding on the colours you can live without will be what keeps your watercolour painting - especially at the beginning - from breaking the bank. First, let's look at what makes up a watercolour paint. Watercolour paint is made from pigment, or a blend of pigments, and a binder. Pigments are either natural, made from ground minerals, or synthetic. The binder is either gum arabic solution, glycerine, or honey. To learn more about pigment check out these great articles: Artist Network: what you need to know about pigments juliabausenhardt.com/An introduction to watercolor pigments Don't buy low end paints. Student grade paints often contain chalky fillers which fatten up the bottle, but also stop the flow quality of the paint making it act more like acrylic paint (easier to control) and leaving the dried painting more chalky looking. These paints are also brittle if dried in small portions out of their bottle, and are harder to rewet making them frustrating to work with. I quickly moved from student grade to professional grade paint when I began painting as I was not able to replicate the tutorials I was watching as I learned the art. Artist quality paint brands I would recommend are: Winsor & Newton Professional quality & Daniel Smith however this is only because I haven't had the finances to research further. Once I found Daniel Smith I stopped looking. To get started many choose to purchase a set of paints. Here are some I would recommend: Good mid priced set 20-10 ml tubes: Van Gogh Watercolour set My pick for best starter set 6-5 ml tubes: Daniel Smith Essentials Mixing set Best price for professional paints half pan set of 24: Winsor & Newton Professional set Best budget student quality paint set with 10 base colours: Winsor & Newton Cotman paint set Each of the above are great options but the price for an artist quality set range from $80 to $200 and some of the colours in the set you may find you don't really enjoy using. The Winsor & Newton Cotman set was my first decent paint set I purchased, it was a great go between the cheap tubes I first bought that crumbled and dried out soon after opening, and the professional grade paint brand, Daniel Smith, that I settled on. Cotman paint has a chalk filler that makes it great if you are struggling lack of control and wanting a paint that stays where it's put. When you choose to move to a professional paint, you can invest in a set, but I suggest starting with a select few colours and decide what brand you like to work with. Most professional artists will mix their own colours working with single pigment paints to get the range of colours they enjoy using in their paintings. It is worth noting that watercolour, unlike acrylic and oil, dries lighter and sometimes will look slightly different in tone and hue then when it was wet. One of the biggest challenges for me was learning how much pigment to place on my paper during each stage of painting to get the effect I wanted. So what colours to pick? We all learned that red and blue make purple. But when there is a choice of 10 or more reds and the same number of blues to decide from then what? Each pigment will mix differently with other pigments depending on the composition and hue of the pigment. Some pigments are opaque while others are transparent, some are granular and float on the water used to dilute them while others are so finely ground that they dissolve in the water, some will stain the paper while others will lift off easily when rewet. Pigments will be warm, cool or neutral. So let's look again at that red and blue. A cool blue and cool red will make a gem toned purple similar to an imperial purple, while a warm of each pigment will make a more neutral violet like a plum. Mixing one cool and one warm will result in something between. By picking up a warm and a cool single pigment paint you can begin to create a huge variety of colours just by varying the amount of each paint, and by choosing the warm or cool options when doing so. This is why my pick for a paint set is the Daniel Smith Essential Mixing set listed above. Each paint in the set is a single pigment paint, with a warm and cool choice in the three basic colours. Oh, and to make grey or brown, mixing red, blue and yellow in the right amounts will get you there. The only downside is that the 5 ml tubes don't last long. Brushes There are more brushes than paint choices, I think. Brushes vary in use, size, shape, and composition. The most important thing to remember is purchase watercolour brushes. These brushes are designed to hold liquid watercolour paint, be soft enough to paint smoothly and release the paint slowly onto the paper. Depending on how detailed you choose to paint, the size of the brush tip will matter. This plays into the shape, as a mop brush will either have round tip or a pointed one, a flat brush will either be straight, rounded or diagonal and each shape has its own name. Brushes can be made from synthetic fibers or natural fibers. I started my painting journey using synthetic brushes, but found that they lost their shape when left too long in water or when used too forcefully. I then heard about squirrel hair brushes which I fell in love with but the cost of a brush was extremely high, they are very soft and the options for brush shape were limited. Lately I have moved to sable hair brushes which hold their shape and have a lovely snap giving me more control of where my paint flows to my paper and have experimented with calligraphy brushes made from wolf hair and goat hair as well as mixes of squirrel and sable brushes. For more information on brushes check out this site by solvingwatercolour.com - what brushes do I need. Brushes, like paint, are very personal. Many watercolour artists will have a variety of brushes, including some odd choices that allow them to be more creative with their strokes. I have head of artists who use small old paint brushes just to get the texture they want. In my kit I have feathers, an odd shaped stick, a tooth brush, some yarn tied to a pencil as well as some synthetic and natural brushes. Today there are many synthetic sable and squirrel hair brushes that have almost the same qualities as the natural versions. And since brushes do eventually degenerated no matter how careful we are, it is best to be wise with your investment and choose brushes you enjoy working with first and foremost. Good round sable hair brush starter brush kit: Round 9 piece set Good mixed sable hair brush kit: Round & Flat 8 piece set Best squirrel hair set: Pointed mop brush 3 piece set Fun alternative brush set: 8 piece Chinese calligraphy set Best value synthetic squirrel hair brush set: mixed 9 piece set Nice selection synthetic sable hair brush set: Kingart 8 piece set Nice Little Extras Now that you have the basics there are a few additional items that make painting more fun that are nice to have around, but fortunately none of these will break the bank. The most important are: painters tape (just the green stuff from any hardware store will do) a small spray bottle, at least two water containers for washing brushes (one to wash the paint off and then one to rinse the brush clean) a hard surface or two (old binders work great, so do old board games if you can find some at a thrift store) paper towel (great for blotting brushes & removing excess water pooled onto your paper) pill organizers (if you are working with paint in tubes - squeeze out a small dime sized amount then let it dry before using, this will prevent using as much paint as the rewetted paint allow more control of how much pigment you want to use) a few white plates for mixing colours (porcelaine is best as it allows the diluted paint to cling to the surface) Some fun things to experiment with found in your own home Salt, rubbing alcohol, dish soap, saran wrap, rice, crayons, sponges, and tooth brushes all have been used to create interesting effects when used with watercolour. There are loads of fun videos on youtube that can give you a creative break when feeling a bit frustrated. My favourites are salt and dish soap (very tiny drop watered down with plain water) which create amazing patterns on paper when used with some of my pigments. However this is where play and experimenting is so important as not all pigments will react the same and not all experiments will work out in a way that allows for a masterpiece (or even a amature piece!) Art stores will have many other enticing options that could enhance your art, however these are not necessary nor even advised until you understand the use of paper, paint and brushes and you can get a lot of joy in just watching what paint does when quality paint touches quality paper and melds, flows and changes as it dries.
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coletteernst
Nov 14, 2021
In Painting Discussion
Old man winter has hit in Tumbler Ridge - and as the number of daylight hours decrease my painting hours increase as does my time to get a bit organized. I have been posting images I painted over the spring and summer in my blogs. Last week I pulled up four paintings done using a reference photo of a snowy mountain with beautiful striations giving the mountain character. I had chosen this mountain image to practice negative painting, allowing the white paper to be the snow, and to develop my style. Artists interpret a picture, choosing what to include in a painting, the details to paint, and what to leave as simple shapes or shades. This is easier for me when I have been to the site experienced the image as my style leans towards expressionism, so I painted four images before getting the white peaks and striations the way I had envisioned them. At that point I put the pictures aside happy, moved to other things and forgot to note the name of the mountain. When looking at this picture some have said it's somewhere in Tumbler Ridge and maybe it is. The mountain was my key focus and I remember choosing to paint dark forests of pines mixed with patches of green. The snowy mountain transitioned to rock and dark patches which I decided to paint in blues reflecting the sky. The fact that I remember the process, and yet forget the name of the mountain says a lot about why I paint. I paint almost everyday, not to create amazing pieces of art or even images I can show others, but just to for the process. I think I have said before that I chose watercolour because it is cathartic. I tend to paint very wet, allowing the watercolour to move and blend on the page, gently guiding it by choosing where I wet the page. I also paint to break the rules. In daily life we are always conforming in some way to what is expected of us in any situation, at home and at work, but when I paint I allow my own sense of adventure and exploration to decide what colours I choose, how far from reality I will depict the scene to convey the message and arouse the emotions I hope to capture. And then I am also a scientist - seeing painting as an experiment in colour, movement, texture and shape. It is one of the reasons I will paint more than one attempt at an image, not to meet some expected perfection or standard but to see what else I can do with paint and paper. Instead of throwing away the images from my process I use them as learning tools, seeing what I did that I thought would work and did (or didn't), refining my style with techniques that were interesting and worth doing again. And because each person's idea of beauty and value is subjective - these images are worth sharing. The beauty of watercolour is that the glow of the white page is visible through the paint, but this doesn't mean that is always the outcome. In the above image my paint striations flowed into each other and left nothing white. So plan B, use watercolour like an acrylic medium painting thick opaque lines of gouache and adding salt to create the sandy texture of the mountain lines. The white is a different tone than the paper, and when painted on in full strength right out of the tube covers everything with a blue/white glow of its own. There is value in this, as the mountain has more texture and almost jumps off the page. Below are some of the other versions of the painting that I did trying to see if I could find the balance of light and dark, experimenting with purples for shadows in one and yellows to show the sunshine on the peaks in the other. I had not noticed the difference in the greenery, the shapes and shades yet so the midgroud is less intense, less detailed. Yet if had to choose my favourite sky? It would be from one of the first images, where the clouds are fuller, the sky lighter. The experiment was how to create white mountains against a light cloud filled sky without the mountains needing definition by paint strokes or the sky needing to be blue where it meets the peaks. Could I have kept going, tried for a fifth and perfect painting - maybe. But the goal of painting would have changed from enjoying the process to trying to meet some expected standard - and that would have sucked the joy from the process. I would love to hear from you. What image do you like best? What does it evoke? What mountain does it remind you of?
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coletteernst
Apr 13, 2021
In Member Perks
Hi Everyone! Welcome to the site to all the new members who have joined in the last few days! Some of you will have clicked join the community which allows you to comment and also start discussions on the site. Others chose to be private members which is also great - as you can still see and read everything, you just cannot comment. I am wondering how you would like to be informed of new pictures I post on the blog or new galleries I launch. As a member you have the first look at new galleries - I will launch them to the public a week after posting them. As a member you also have access to the blog and to the seasonal selection of works that I am selling. Send me an email or comment here letting me know if you want to get a quick update when I post new stuff so you get the first peek at it, or if you would rather check out the site on your own when you choose. (I may post an image once or twice a month on a blog, but will probably only post new galleries every three or four months as they take time to complete a painted collection).
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coletteernst
Mar 25, 2021
In Painting Discussion
Old Man Winter is again throwing snow! Spring has a long battle before final victory in the north, and we poor humans don our winter gear in the morning then pulling off hats and gloves when the warmth of sun hits in the afternoon. Meanwhile, in warmer parts of Canada where Spring has won the battle, crocuses bloom. I am done with that "cold old man" - I seek colourful inspiration for my next set of paintings - landscape images I can play with - if ya'll would be willing.
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coletteernst
Mar 19, 2021
In Painting Discussion
Spring is on it's way! Up north spring is a slow progression of starts and stops, warmer days still interspersed with Old Man Winter trying to make a comeback. Reminds me sometimes of my painting life - a day of happy dabbling interspersed with regular life's needs, some days more forward progress than others. But progress there is! I am very excited about the paintings in my new series - an evolution of the solid silhouettes into blacks and whites and a movement from people to animals. Here is a sneak peak!
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