20 Minute Painting! #10, Boulder Flat Irons at Sunrise in Oils with Anna Rose Bain
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- čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
- In this short, 20-minute oil painting demo, Anna demonstrates her use of thumbnail sketches and photo references of a wintry Colorado foothills sunrise to create a composition for a studio painting. The twenty-minute painting in this demo can then serve as a color study for a larger, more detalied work.
If you like this video, please comment and subscribe to my channel. 🔔 And if you are looking for more full-length content about painting peonies (and much more!), consider subscribing to my entire instructional video library at LEARN FROM ANNA ROSE BAIN (with more content being added monthly) ➡️ bit.ly/3r9WBVZ . To get my FREE downloadable guide on Mixing Skin Tones, click here ➡️: bit.ly/3LcvaS4
Follow along using the reference photo of Anna's subject by downloading it here ➡️ bit.ly/3zxe8LH
Additional photos: ➡️ bit.ly/4eVA6Ik ➡️ bit.ly/3LkVaKF ➡️ bit.ly/3VQpeTz ➡️ bit.ly/3VSJpjM
And remember, you can set a time limit that works for you… 25 minutes, 30 minutes, 40, etc.
Here’s my supply list for this painting, “Flat Irons Sunrise”:
Colors used:
Transparent Oxide Brown (Rembrandt) ➡️ bit.ly/47iOiq1
Vivid Magenta (Utrecht) ➡️ bit.ly/41XORnU
Cadmium Yellow (Michael Harding) ➡️ bit.ly/3TNp0x6
Warm light yellow (Michael Harding) ➡️ bit.ly/4aHgOEz
Titanium White (Michael Harding) ➡️ bit.ly/3S6KfIS
Vivid Blue (Utrecht) ➡️ bit.ly/3LewPX1
Radiant Turquoise (Gamblin) ➡️ bit.ly/3WdHtnp
Pthalo Blue (Sennelier) ➡️ bit.ly/4ctUMp7
Ivory Black (Rembrandt) ➡️ bit.ly/47vveol
Brushes:
Vine charcoal ➡️: bit.ly/3uMpTvE
Rosemary and Co. Ivory Filberts size 4 and 8
Gamsol ➡️: bit.ly/3hMzNCP
Canvas: Centurion oil-primed linen panel, size 4x8"
Please note, some of these links are affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. This allows me to continue creating helpful and entertaining free content! I only recommend products that I use and love.
Beautiful painting thanks Anna Rose, we can only marvel at God's creations , you have really captured it .Greetings from Australia 🇦🇺.
Great video! Thanks very much for sharing your process! I learned a lot!
Glad it was helpful!
Love your videos. Thank you
Thank you for watching!
Looks great. Miss Colorado so thanks for sharing.
Thanks for watching!
I appreciate your video, having grown up in Boulder I lived on the mesa trail threading through those flatirons. As a painter I have been on a never ending quest to represent the essence of of those huge slabs of granite, my last few attempts were done with the knife , using aerial photographs as my reference-I am obsessed with with getting the placement of those rocks as close as possible to reality. All though I certainly do struggle with my painting looking cartoonish, on occasion I strike that magical balance.
Thanks for the lesson and the trip down memory lane.
Thank you for sharing! The Flat Irons are magical. 😍
Fantastic demonstration. I really enjoyed how you showed the entire process and included the reference photos for us. You’re a wonderful teacher.
Thank you so much! I’m glad you enjoyed! I do love to teach.
Wow. I like it
Thanks for watching!
Lovely
Thank you!
Super enjoyed that!!! I am learning as you talk your way through it and the colors and shapes. What you’re thinking I find very beneficial and I find I’m thinking and looking around the pictures also. Thank you!
Love it! Thank you for watching!
Always great to watch, thank you for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you Anna Rose! You've really helped me ramp up my discernment and technique. Do you have a preferred varnish or final coat you recommend to preserve your work? There are so many things and I want your expert opinion. Thank you so very much!! Ginny
Thank you! I use Gamvar for a final varnish; a spray on retouch varnish does the job in the mean time. 😊
I have a question for you. I haven’t done a lot of oil painting lately because I don’t know what to do with all these paintings. Some of them are beautiful and some of them are just average. They all have memories for me and I don’t like getting rid of them. I need to allow myself to just wipe them out and paint over them again. But I think to myself how do I know the next one is better than the one that was on it before. I don’t know what to do with all these paintings. I don’t have roomto keep storing them. Yes I have sold some but nowhere near enough. What do you do with all of your paintings even a little sketch like the one you’re doing here which is very pretty and someone would probably buy. But if it doesn’t sell, what what do you do with them?
Hi there! To be honest I do sell some of my studies but I also have stacks of them piled up in my studio. That’s all part of being an artist. Even the world-class painters I know have stacks and stacks of studies and don’t sell everything they paint. Sometimes I paint over ones I don’t like very much, and 9 times out of 10 they turn out to be much better paintings.