Studying Portrait Techniques of The Masters
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- čas přidán 19. 08. 2023
- In this video I make a copy of a John Singer Sargent portrait using the sight size method and a book reproduction. The painting was completed in one three hour session, working wet into wet.
I used Linseed oil as my medium and Canson oil paper (9 x 6 inches) as my support. The palette I chose consisted of titanium white, cadmium yellow light, yellow ochre, raw Sienna, cadmium red light, burnt Sienna, alizarin crimson, raw umber, phthalo turquoise, cobalt blue and ivory black.
If you enjoyed this video and want to support my channel please like and or subscribe. Thank you for watching! - Krátké a kreslené filmy
Excellent!
💯👏
Siempre espero tus videos, muchas gracias. Exelente copia.
Excllent painting, thank you for the upload. Amazing texture and detail given the speed and scale your painting. Fantastic
Thank you @JapanJimmy:)
Love watching how you apply the paint with the bristle brush
Thank you again for posting this great tutorial! It's very much appreciated 😊
Thanks for checking it out:)
Another great study. I just bought the same Sargent book that you have. I’m going to give this one a try. I recently did a master study of a Sargent painting. I forget the title but the subject was an old socialite. I did it 4 times, because I would become inpatient and wipe it down. The last time I attempted to paint her I pushed through despite the overwhelming desire to wipe it down. The result was a pretty fair study. I felt that what I learned with the copy really helped with the next portrait I painted using a photo reference.
Isn’t it a good book? Good for you sticking with it. I learn a lot from the ones I have to abandon.
Thank you! So love it😍
Awesome work.. 💯🤯. Thank you for sharing!!
What type of brushes do you use?
I use medium or terpentin?
How do you set the light. I always have a problem with light glare
Depends on whether you are using window or lamp light. If you’re using a lamp it might be too low behind you. It helps if you can have it up high and projected down at a steep angle. A typical ceiling light in the center of a room can create glare if you are working at the edge of the room.
Excellent!
Thanks!