I have never had color explained so simply to me. It makes sense to me the way you explain it. I too have loved art since a small child. My parents could not keep me supplied with paint by number oil sets when I was young. I had a 42 year career in Intensive/cardiac nursing in Hospitals. Now at 67 I am a Bed and Breakfast owner and operator with my husband. Art has never left my life. I now take some oil paintings lessons and I also do encaustic wax painting. I spent this afternoon watching several of your color videos ( blue color, etc.) and taking notes so that I can experiment with those colors. Thank you.
Honestly, you are the best online instructor Ive ever come across online. Thank you for sharing your outstanding knowledge of the art world with us. Much appreciated
This helped so much. Thank you again Jason for all your hard work , your time and effort in producing all of your amazing videos. I’m watching all of them and taking a lot of notes on all the subjects you made videos on . Cheers !
Dear sir, once again I am fascinated by your knowledge and simple explanation. Thanks for making such great videos. If I may request, can you please do a tutorial for painting PEARLS?
Thank you Jason for this video!! I had previously spent several frustrating hours trying to mix a specific grey until I saw this video. Your information helped me obtain the grey I needed fast. Many Thanks!!
Thank you so much! I am in a class where we are copying a Master and I chose Mary Cassatt’s “ Girl in a Straw Hat” and have been going crazy trying to mix a matching background. This teacher has us only using a 7 color palette, but your video was wonderful because I really began to get it conceptually. Thank you so much! I will now go and check out your website and I have subscribed to you channel. Bottom of my heart thank you!
Thanks so much for the nice comment! I'm so glad you found my video helpful. good luck with your class! Copying old masters is a time honored tradition as a learning tool. I've seen art students at the Met in New York copying the Rembrandts right there in the museum... French easel and all! :)
Beautiful alchemy. One would never know from looking at this palette, that it is actually good ol' ordinary "grey" being demonstrated. The rose and green is a particularly intriguing mixture. Thank you.
I’m learning to 🎨 solely through video podcast tutorials. I’ve been painting a year now, & didn’t know this. Ty so much for the very valuable info I wasn’t aware of. I’m now subscriber!
I watched this video again, really good. Do you ever use Payne's Gray? It's more common in watercolour than in oil, I like to use it to neutralize or darken other colours. I bought one in oil (M.Graham brand) but haven't tried it yet:)
Thanks for watching! I haven't really used Payne's Gray in my oil painting. I think it's very similar to the gray you get when you mix Ultramarine and Burnt Sienna.
thank you again jason, this video is very well explained, you know your stuff!....i used to make my grey by mixing, ivory black, vandyke brown and a little yellow ochre and then white....its a really nicely coloured grey, but i gotta say, i love that pthalo green and quin rose grey....gonna try it now on a zombie unicorn im painting...hahahaha....i make darkart.
Well done! You did a wonderful job explaining the different compliments and showing the different tones and shades of gray. It's interesting, as a color consultant, I tell my clients the paint color by Sherwin Williams called Accessible Beige is a complex neutral and the undertone is pink. If only I could whip out my oil paint kit and show them:) Anyway, thank you for sharing your knowledge:) BTW I just subscribed.
Thanks so much for the nice comment and for subscribing! I'm so glad you found my video useful. It's amazing how maleable neutrals can be and how vital they are to good color schemes. :)
I believe I've told you previously just want to say again . . . YOU ARE A FANTASTIC TEACHER, all of your videos (yep, I've watch all of them) are wonderful, so informative and helpful . . . I watch, then a few months later, watch again. THANK YOU FOR TAKING TIME TO PROVIDE THIS INFORMATION.
Hi. Can I make a good burnt sienna color starting with burnt umber and adding red? (The only 6 tubes I have right now are.... yellow lake, scarlet lake, Ultramarine, and yellow ochre. (and white). Or should I just use my 3 "primaries" ? thanks!
Thanks for watching! You're much more likely to get a color closer to Burnt Sienna by using your primaries...the two lakes and the Ultramarine. It's always possible to take a saturated color and bring it down, but you can't go back the other way.
I'm new to oil painting and my next challenge will be a beautiful scene on the Isle of Skye. Your informative video and wonderful teaching skills have helped me so much in mixing the colours I want. Thank you so much and all the best to you!
It's quite interesting, but actually you're making another purple, brown, blue that tends to gray but isn't actually gray. Gray is actually always boring, but sometimes useful to make them stand out vividly.The colors you create are very beautiful and definitely useful where you better not use 'real gray'
Exactly! Grays can be very subtle and beautiful when some color is imparted into them. That's why they always look better mixed from complements rather than black and white. :) Thanks for watching!
Another great video--very important and useful information well presented, thank you Mr. Walcott. And thank you too for showing us the beautiful flower still life at the beginning of the video. Quality work all around, you are a talented man, sir. All the best!
This makes so much sense, thank you very much, I find myself coming across grays so much in the paintings I want to do and its such a challenging spectrum to get a hold of. I always start with cad red, ultramarine and yellow, but I always make the grey come out too purple, so this simplifies things a lot. It'd be great if you made a vid on mixing with those three colours though just so I can not chicken out and actually know how to do it
I’ve recently pulled back to a three colour palette and I am constantly coming up with new colours but the greys are very fun to work with. I still have other colours so I also experiment with what those combos can produce for grey but I believe that a grey created using only the colours in the palette pull the painting together with some sort of colour harmony.
That is very true! Neutrals can be the backbone of a great painting. It helps the color notes pop but also helps keep it cohesive. Thanks for watching :)
I still come back and review these videos periodically, bc they are so good. I did find an interesting Italian Green Raw Umber from Rublev (PBr 7). It comes as very fondly ground pigment, & one need only mix it well w/ some good oil. It’s a dark kind of olive color that also makes a lovely greyish green 🙂
Thanks for the mixing tutorial for greys. I am a beginner and trying to paint the BACK of a white beach chair. The FRONT of the chair is facing a sunset over water and that naturally causes the back of the chair to be darker. In that situation, I assume the chair would look more real-to-life if the back of the chair was painted a "warm" grey since it is a sunset beach scene. Is that correct? If so, should I lean towards mixing the burnt sienna, Ultamarine blue and a little white?
I'm so glad you enjoyed the video! Depending on the light, generally white objects outdoors in sunlight will have bluish/violet shadows. You can add some warmth with Burnt Sienna and tone down the blue a bit but generally those shadows will be mostly bluish due to reflected light from the sky. Thanks for watching :)
@@walcottfineart5088 Thank you very much for your prompt response. I will watch your video again and attempt to paint the back of the white chair with a bluish look as you suggested.
Yes, grays made from mixing black and white can be a little one dimensional. You'll get much more interesting gray tones from mixing colors. Thanks for watching!
Thank you, this is brilliant! I discovered the power of subtle shifts in greys in digital art, but have been struggling to handle them in traditional media :) This has been immensely helpful, much more so than most color mixing videos around.
I have a grey glass color Paint,But I would like to make a Flat gull grey for model militery aircraft and war ships,A battleship grey if you will, what color should I mix with my dark grey glass color to get my light battleship grey. great video
Just found you on UA-cam. I am a beginner oil painter. You are such a good teacher. Thank you so much for your tutorial on mixing greys. I am currently trying to paint a piece of silver grey driftwood and wondered what advice you might have, Thank you.
Thank for watching and for the nice comment! I'm glad you've enjoyed my videos. :) For the wood I would use a combination of Burnt Sienna and Ultramarine to create your grays. I like that formula because it's easy to vary it towards warmer with more Burnt Sienna or cooler with more Ultramarine.
Lovely video, and very important topic that every painter should master. One aspecto for using your own mixed black instead of a paint tube is that pigments like PBk7, PBk6 or PBk11 are too strong and "kill" organic pigment colors in mixtures. And the character of those mixtures are different, too. Thanks for keeping the videos up!
Thanks so much for the comment! I definitely agree about the black! You can mix your own or use a tubed black that is a mixture like Gamblin's Chromatic Black. That is a combo of Quinacridone Rose and Phthalo Green. I never liked the way Ivory Black looked in mixtures.
sir: Thank you much, for the privilege of your time and sharing your artistic genius. You have explained a concept in art with clarity, efficiency and precision. You teach in a straight forward way absent of any platitudes. Your teaching is teaching not a “profusion of confusion. Please keep doing these videos. Respectfully, R
I was disappointed with my greys your video is the best explanation and uncomplicated and so easy to follow . Thanks for sharing I liked and subscribed 👍🏼
Just watched the video for the second time just to reinforce some info on the mixing of greys. What a resource, now going to apply what I know. Thanks Mr Walcott.
I only knew that drag queens use orange tones - an underlayer of pure orange/red, that is - to cancel out blueish beard stubble. It's nice to see that painters have obviously adapted that technique from them (just kidding)! ;-)
OK I literally just saw this comment! That is too funny! LOL Thanks for watching. :) Yes you are right, in men the lower third of the face tends to be cooler or bluish in tone. Portrait painters need to adjust for that.
Thanks for watching! Yes, Burnt Umber and Ultramarine will make a very nice neutral. If you were to add Cad Yellow to that it would definitely take on a green hue. But that could be good for a natural foliage color or even backgrounds.
I have never had color explained so simply to me. It makes sense to me the way you explain it. I too have loved art since a small child. My parents could not keep me supplied with paint by number oil sets when I was young. I had a 42 year career in Intensive/cardiac nursing in Hospitals. Now at 67 I am a Bed and Breakfast owner and operator with my husband. Art has never left my life. I now take some oil paintings lessons and I also do encaustic wax painting. I spent this afternoon watching several of your color videos ( blue color, etc.) and taking notes so that I can experiment with those colors. Thank you.
Thank you Sandra for such a wonderful comment! I'm so glad that my videos were useful to you and that you enjoyed them. Thanks for watching! :)
This really brought the background of my painting to life, thank you so much.
Nice image of a lady living a good life with added art 🎨 😊
Honestly, you are the best online instructor Ive ever come across online. Thank you for sharing your outstanding knowledge of the art world with us. Much appreciated
Thank you so much for the nice comment and for watching! I'm glad you've enjoyed my channel. :)
All I have to say is wow. I've learned so much in just a few minutes. Thank you for your clear-cut explanations.
Thank you for such a nice comment! I'm glad you enjoyed it. :)
I did a grey sky that was so dull I felt like crying. Then I stumbled upon your instruction and the sun filled my world. Thank you.
You're amazing at simplifying color mixing theory. THANK YOU!
Thank you so much for your teaching classes...I appreciate your skill and tutorlige...thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching :)
This helped so much. Thank you again Jason for all your hard work , your time and effort in producing all of your amazing videos.
I’m watching all of them and taking a lot of notes on all the subjects you made videos on . Cheers !
Thank you so much for the nice comment and for watching! I'm glad you've been enjoying my videos. :)
Dear sir, once again I am fascinated by your knowledge and simple explanation. Thanks for making such great videos. If I may request, can you please do a tutorial for painting PEARLS?
Thanks for watching! That's a good idea. I will add that to my list of video ideas. :)
Thank you Jason for this video!! I had previously spent several frustrating hours trying to mix a specific grey until I saw this video. Your information helped me obtain the grey I needed fast. Many Thanks!!
Glad it helped! Thanks for watching :)
Thanks, I learned something new, the use of a cool raw umber to make grays.
I'm glad you enjoyed the video! Thanks for watching. :)
Oh your demos are excellent as well...spot on..love the accuracy 👍
Glad you think so! Thanks for watching :)
As all the others, most helpful!
Wow. I love how you teach! I've learned so much. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Thank you so much! I'm glad you found the video useful. :)
Thank you so much! I am in a class where we are copying a Master and I chose Mary Cassatt’s “ Girl in a Straw Hat” and have been going crazy trying to mix a matching background. This teacher has us only using a 7 color palette, but your video was wonderful because I really began to get it conceptually. Thank you so much! I will now go and check out your website and I have subscribed to you channel. Bottom of my heart thank you!
Thanks so much for the nice comment! I'm so glad you found my video helpful. good luck with your class! Copying old masters is a time honored tradition as a learning tool. I've seen art students at the Met in New York copying the Rembrandts right there in the museum... French easel and all! :)
Thanks for demonstrating the dimensions of gray.
This has been such a useful, informative tutorial. Came back to it, and it solved a problem!
Thanks so much for watching! I'm glad you found my video useful. :)
Thank you for posting this. Your art is beautiful by the way. Cheers from Canada 🇨🇦
Thanks so much for the nice comment! I'm glad you enjoyed the video. :)
Beautiful alchemy. One would never know from looking at this palette, that it is actually good ol' ordinary "grey" being demonstrated. The rose and green is a particularly intriguing mixture. Thank you.
Thanks for watching! I'm glad you enjoyed my video. :)
Appreciate your sharing this video, for a beginner like me it is very educative. Compareing shades on same page very helpful. Thank you 🙏
I'm so glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching :)
Ty. Can you do one on atmospheric perspective and the use of blue gray green gray in landscape painting. T y
Thanks for watching! Yes, I have more videos coming on landscape and that sort of things so stay tuned. :)
Thanks 😍😍😍 that’s so helpful 😍😍😍😍
Awesome! I'm glad you found my video useful :)
Thank you for this very helpful video. I review it often especially before painting.
I'm so glad you found my video useful! :) Thanks for watching!
Thanks for this helpful video. Great lesson 👍🏼🌸
I'm so glad you liked it! Thanks for watching. :)
Thanks for the the video. Very informative for a person like me who is starting out in oil painting!
Thank you for watching and for the nice comment! I'm glad you found the video useful.
I’m learning to 🎨 solely through video podcast tutorials. I’ve been painting a year now, & didn’t know this. Ty so much for the very valuable info I wasn’t aware of. I’m now subscriber!
You are so welcome! Thanks for watching and for the sub :)
Thank you so much. God bless you. Can u show the boho color mixing? Thanks
Hi Tim, such good information for making greys. Thank you very much for sharing this. From uk
Thanks! I'm so glad you enjoyed the video and I apprecite the nice comment. :)
I watched this video again, really good. Do you ever use Payne's Gray? It's more common in watercolour than in oil, I like to use it to neutralize or darken other colours. I bought one in oil (M.Graham brand) but haven't tried it yet:)
Thanks for watching! I haven't really used Payne's Gray in my oil painting. I think it's very similar to the gray you get when you mix Ultramarine and Burnt Sienna.
thank you again jason, this video is very well explained, you know your stuff!....i used to make my grey by mixing, ivory black, vandyke brown and a little yellow ochre and then white....its a really nicely coloured grey, but i gotta say, i love that pthalo green and quin rose grey....gonna try it now on a zombie unicorn im painting...hahahaha....i make darkart.
Thanks for watching! I'm so glad you enjoyed my video and found it useful. :)
Well done! You did a wonderful job explaining the different compliments and showing the different tones and shades of gray. It's interesting, as a color consultant, I tell my clients the paint color by Sherwin Williams called Accessible Beige is a complex neutral and the undertone is pink. If only I could whip out my oil paint kit and show them:) Anyway, thank you for sharing your knowledge:) BTW I just subscribed.
Thanks so much for the nice comment and for subscribing! I'm so glad you found my video useful. It's amazing how maleable neutrals can be and how vital they are to good color schemes. :)
I believe I've told you previously just want to say again . . . YOU ARE A FANTASTIC TEACHER, all of your videos (yep, I've watch all of them) are wonderful, so informative and helpful . . . I watch, then a few months later, watch again. THANK YOU FOR TAKING TIME TO PROVIDE THIS INFORMATION.
Thanks so much for the nice comment! I'm so glad you find my videos useful. :)
Best demonstration ever! Thank you.
How about painting us a mellow gray landscape?
Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Well done and very helpful!
Hi. Can I make a good burnt sienna color starting with burnt umber and adding red? (The only 6 tubes I have right now are.... yellow lake, scarlet lake, Ultramarine, and yellow ochre. (and white). Or should I just use my 3 "primaries" ? thanks!
Thanks for watching! You're much more likely to get a color closer to Burnt Sienna by using your primaries...the two lakes and the Ultramarine. It's always possible to take a saturated color and bring it down, but you can't go back the other way.
Thank you for the information, very useful 🦋
I'm new to oil painting and my next challenge will be a beautiful scene on the Isle of Skye. Your informative video and wonderful teaching skills have helped me so much in mixing the colours I want. Thank you so much and all the best to you!
Thanks so much for the kind comment! I'm so glad you enjoyed the video and found it useful. :)
Loved this lesson in grays! Soooo helpful.
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching :)
It's quite interesting, but actually you're making another purple, brown, blue that tends to gray but isn't actually gray. Gray is actually always boring, but sometimes useful to make them stand out vividly.The colors you create are very beautiful and definitely useful where you better not use 'real gray'
Exactly! Grays can be very subtle and beautiful when some color is imparted into them. That's why they always look better mixed from complements rather than black and white. :) Thanks for watching!
Another great video--very important and useful information well presented, thank you Mr. Walcott. And thank you too for showing us the beautiful flower still life at the beginning of the video. Quality work all around, you are a talented man, sir. All the best!
Thank you so much for the nice comment! I'm glad you enjoyed the video and found it informative. :)
This makes so much sense, thank you very much, I find myself coming across grays so much in the paintings I want to do and its such a challenging spectrum to get a hold of. I always start with cad red, ultramarine and yellow, but I always make the grey come out too purple, so this simplifies things a lot. It'd be great if you made a vid on mixing with those three colours though just so I can not chicken out and actually know how to do it
Thanks for watching! Good idea for a video too...it will add it to my list. I am hoping to start getting some new videos up again soon. :)
I never knew that "opposite" colours cancelled to make shades of grey. Very useful info. Thanks.
I'm so glad my video was helpful! Thanks for watching :)
That’s all well and good, but, say, you have a landscape (grey) stormy sky’s , barn , hedges etc dark and foreboding
Is there anyway to paint it?
Well it would depend on the colors you see. CLoudy skies can be warm or cool depnding on the light conditions. Thanks for watching!
Thank you Jason. What was the pigment number of the Quinacridone Rose?
Thanks for watching! The PI# for Quinacridone Rose is PV19. :)
Great demonstration, thanks so much!
I’ve recently pulled back to a three colour palette and I am constantly coming up with new colours but the greys are very fun to work with. I still have other colours so I also experiment with what those combos can produce for grey but I believe that a grey created using only the colours in the palette pull the painting together with some sort of colour harmony.
That is very true! Neutrals can be the backbone of a great painting. It helps the color notes pop but also helps keep it cohesive. Thanks for watching :)
Hi Jason.....such a great video. I'm now a loyal follower!
Thanks for the nice comment and for watching! :)
Your video on the different blues was extremely helpful, and that lured me to view this informative video as well. Thank you.
I'm glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching :)
Thank you this was really useful!
Great video and always a good reminder of how beautiful neutrals are... thank you
Thanks for watching and for the nice comment! :)
I am really starting to appreciate Grey's as I get deeper into colour theory. Thanks for the video!
For sure! Neutrals can really help contrast with color. Thanks for watching! :)
Another very informative video! Thank you. I always look forward to your new videos.
Thanks so much for the nice comment! I'm glad you enjoyed htis video. :)
The best and easiest explaination ...finally . Thank you 😊.
Thanks for watching and for the nice comment! :)
I still come back and review these videos periodically, bc they are so good.
I did find an interesting Italian Green Raw Umber from Rublev (PBr 7). It comes as very fondly ground pigment, & one need only mix it well w/ some good oil. It’s a dark kind of olive color that also makes a lovely greyish green 🙂
Good video. Excellent information. thank you.
Thanks for watching! I'm glad you found my video informative. :)
Very very helpful
Many thanks from Egypt
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching :)
Glad I found your channel great video
Thanks for watching! :)
Thanks so much for the fantástico vídeo ! Please make lots of them !!!😉
Thanks for the nice comment! Don't worry...there is plenty more to come! :)
I found the gray color with black and white so flat and so so so boring, thank you master Jason great tutorial
I'm so glad you found my video helpful! Thanks for watching :)
Very helpful tip. Thank you.👍🏻
Glad you found it useful! Thanks for watching :)
Thanks for the mixing tutorial for greys. I am a beginner and trying to paint the BACK of a white beach chair. The FRONT of the chair is facing a sunset over water and that naturally causes the back of the chair to be darker. In that situation, I assume the chair would look more real-to-life if the back of the chair was painted a "warm" grey since it is a sunset beach scene. Is that correct? If so, should I lean towards mixing the burnt sienna, Ultamarine blue and a little white?
I'm so glad you enjoyed the video! Depending on the light, generally white objects outdoors in sunlight will have bluish/violet shadows. You can add some warmth with Burnt Sienna and tone down the blue a bit but generally those shadows will be mostly bluish due to reflected light from the sky. Thanks for watching :)
@@walcottfineart5088 Thank you very much for your prompt response. I will watch your video again and attempt to paint the back of the white chair with a bluish look as you suggested.
Great tutorial thank you !
Very interesting and useful lesson. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching :)
Sir, is it the grey created other than black and white mixing is good for painting grey?
Yes, grays made from mixing black and white can be a little one dimensional. You'll get much more interesting gray tones from mixing colors. Thanks for watching!
glad to have you back! good video!
Thanks! I'm so glad you liked it. :)
Card says virnt sienna but you keep saying transparent oxide which is it?
I don't remember but you could use either one as long as it's transparent. Thanks for watching!
Thank you, this is brilliant! I discovered the power of subtle shifts in greys in digital art, but have been struggling to handle them in traditional media :) This has been immensely helpful, much more so than most color mixing videos around.
Brilliant explanation!! big thanks for sharing.
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching :)
I concur - explained beautifully
Thanks for the nice comment and for watching! :)
I have a grey glass color Paint,But I would like to make a Flat gull grey for model militery aircraft and war ships,A battleship grey if you will, what color should I mix with my dark grey glass color to get my light battleship grey. great video
Thanks. Very informative!
Glad you enjoyed this! Thanks for watching and commenting. :)
will the same technuiqe work with acrylic paints?
Yes! These color mixes will apply to all other paint media including acrylic and watercolor. Thanks for watching! :)
Extremely helpful - thank you
Thanks for watching! :)
Just found you on UA-cam. I am a beginner oil painter. You are such a good teacher. Thank you so much for your tutorial on mixing greys. I am currently trying to paint a piece of silver grey driftwood and wondered what advice you might have, Thank you.
Thank for watching and for the nice comment! I'm glad you've enjoyed my videos. :) For the wood I would use a combination of Burnt Sienna and Ultramarine to create your grays. I like that formula because it's easy to vary it towards warmer with more Burnt Sienna or cooler with more Ultramarine.
Walcott Fine Art thank you so much!
One of the best colour lessons I have learned Thank You
I'm so glad it was helpful! Thank you so much for the nice comment and for watching! :)
Gray or Grey?
LOL Thanks for watching. :) Most Americans spell it "Gray". The British use "Grey"
Very useful video. Thanks !
Thanks for watching!
The pallete knife seems so flexible, i bought many but non of them are this flexible. May i ask what brand pallete knife you are using?
That's a "3T" Painter's Edge palette knife made by Creative Mark. They are sold at Jerry's Artarama. Thanks for watching! :)
Thank you so much! Love your videos and the information you provide. Bless you
Thankyou Jason
his help is the beest. thanks
Mr Walcott - that was excellent! You are the best!!!!!
Thank you kindly! :)
Thank you this was of great help!
I'm so glad you found it helpful! Thanks for watching :)
Thank you very helpful and to the point!
Glad you found my video helpful! Thanks for watching :)
Excellent 😊
Great video Jason. Thanks
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching. :)
Thanks
Great!!
Very helpful.............many thanks!
Glad you enjoyed this. Thanks for watching! :)
Really useful, thank you.
Thanks for watching!
Incredibly helpful!!!
I'm so glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching :)
Thanks a lot for this great video!
Thanks for the nice comment! I'm glad you enjoyed the video. :)
Thank you for this. it was made very easy and not hard to understand. cheers. O.J.
I'm so glad you enjoyed my video! Thanks for watching :)
@@walcottfineart5088 It was very helpful. thank you. :)
Lovely video, and very important topic that every painter should master. One aspecto for using your own mixed black instead of a paint tube is that pigments like PBk7, PBk6 or PBk11 are too strong and "kill" organic pigment colors in mixtures. And the character of those mixtures are different, too. Thanks for keeping the videos up!
Thanks so much for the comment! I definitely agree about the black! You can mix your own or use a tubed black that is a mixture like Gamblin's Chromatic Black. That is a combo of Quinacridone Rose and Phthalo Green. I never liked the way Ivory Black looked in mixtures.
very helpful mr walcott
I'm so glad you enjoyed it :) Thanks for watching!
sir: Thank you much, for the privilege of your time and sharing your artistic genius. You have explained a concept in art with clarity, efficiency and precision. You teach in a straight forward way absent of any platitudes. Your teaching is teaching not a “profusion of confusion. Please keep doing these videos. Respectfully, R
Thanks so much for that very nice comment!! I'm glad you enjoyed the video :)
I was disappointed with my greys your video is the best explanation and uncomplicated and so easy to follow . Thanks for sharing I liked and subscribed 👍🏼
Thanks for the nice comment and for watching! I'm glad you found the video helpful :)
Just watched the video for the second time just to reinforce some info on the mixing of greys. What a resource, now going to apply what I know. Thanks Mr Walcott.
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching :)
I only knew that drag queens use orange tones - an underlayer of pure orange/red, that is - to cancel out blueish beard stubble. It's nice to see that painters have obviously adapted that technique from them (just kidding)! ;-)
OK I literally just saw this comment! That is too funny! LOL Thanks for watching. :) Yes you are right, in men the lower third of the face tends to be cooler or bluish in tone. Portrait painters need to adjust for that.
Thanks for the good explanation! What about Burnt Umber with Ultramarine blue and some Cad Yellow?
Thanks for watching! Yes, Burnt Umber and Ultramarine will make a very nice neutral. If you were to add Cad Yellow to that it would definitely take on a green hue. But that could be good for a natural foliage color or even backgrounds.
a greenish Black is the type of the black crayola marker