Re: Painting White
Posted: 12 Dec 2011, o 23:11
Answer posted to our Facebook page by Shane 'Raven' Portelance:
Some tips: Get a piece of white cloth and learn the best skill any artist can ever have... "observation". Lay it smooth, make it wavy, bunch it up tight and observe how the different shadows look over the contours. How deep does the shadow get? How fast does it shift from light to dark? Where does it change tone fastest - along the curve or down the sides. White inherently shades very quickly and most effects can be achieved with subtlety. A tiny dot of colour into the white will obtain the subtle results required for most areas of banners and flatter, slightly undulating areas of robes etc. Only the deepest recesses will have darker shadows. Also, consider what you imagine the fabric or surface to be made of. Not all whites are created equal. Some white material has a slight grey tint to it (like cotton), others have the lightest of beige/tan hues (like linen). This will determine what colour to add to your white. Note that in many cases - 'older' white will yellow with time, so keep that in mind as well. With this in mind - there can be 'cold' whites (like white armour) or 'warm' whites like faded parchment or old bones. Some closing tips are about your choice of paint itself. Purchase a paint that is high in pigment content - this will make coverage a lot easier. Also get an acrylic 'extender' to dilute the paint with - not water in this case. The emulsion that holds the pigments in suspension will tend to separate with water, leaving a slightly grainy surface that can create enough shadow on its own to ruin a 'smooth' effect. A quality acrylic extender will keep the white pigment particles more evenly distributed through the thinned paint, thus reducing some of the grainy, shadow effects. Good luck - and have fun! =)