How to paint water realistic water reflection wave painting tutorial
How to paint water realistic water reflection wave painting tutorial
How To Paint Water in Watercolor, |Waves|Ripples|Reflections
By it’s very nature, water is always changing its appearance. In this post, I’m going to look at various examples of water in typical natural states in the landscape and offer some practical approaches on how to paint water in watercolor.
Some painters have delved deeply into understanding the physics behind the light refractive properties of water, but don’t worry, I won’t be doing that today! Just practical techniques you can start using immediately.
In this post I’ll cover:
Materials List
Brushes
No. 2 Squirrel Hair Mop Brush Buy from Amazon
No.4 Squirrel Hair Mop Brush Buy From Amazon
Synthetic Squirrel Flat Brush Buy From Amazon
Princeton Neptune Synthetic Squirrel Round Brush Buy From Amazon
Da Vinci No.4 Petit Gris Round Mop brush Buy From Amazon
Winsor & Newton Cotman 111 Round No.3 Buy From Amazon
Paper
Arches Watercolor Paper Block, Cold Press, 9″ x 12″, 140 pound Buy from Amazon
Miscellaneous
Misting spray bottle Buy from Amazon
Easy release painters masking tape Buy from Amazon
What Color Is Water?
I know. Obvious trick question. Water has no color. Water is only visible at all because of a) what’s in it, b) what can be seen through it and c) what it reflects.
As a beginner painter, It can be tempting to reach for that tube of blue paint because that’s what we always used as a symbol for water when we were children and it worked for us then, right?
So let’s become mature painters and go beyond the symbol and try and see what’s really there.
When painting water you have to consider the surrounding environment as much as the water itself. Water will only be blue if the sky above it is blue and even then the blue will be modified by the position of the sun, the amount of mud, weeds and other sediment present.
Painting Still Water
Painting a still body of water forces us to look at how it blends with the environment.
I live near the Kaipara harbour in New Zealand. It’s a large natural harbour, full of muddy water, treacherous sandbanks and sharks. As it is mostly surrounded by land, Kaipara Harbour doesn’t get much in the way of waves. The painting below was done from a recent photo I took.
My YouTube video shows the whole process, but for now let’s just focus on the water painting stage.
In the image above, you can see that I had painted a lot of the background already, including a pale wash of burnt umber covering the lower third of the paper, where the water will be.
I allowed the paper to dry completely.
Once watercolor paint is completely dry, it is stable. This means that it can be painted over again and the new layer of paint will sit happily on top of the old without mixing in to form unwanted color combinations.
There were some dark clouds in the sky but plenty of blue too. The water had a distinctly green tinge to it in the deeper parts.
Shades of Turquoise and Olive were present probably due to a high amount of vegetation in the water and the muddy bottom was also visible in the shallower areas, so I wanted some of that Burnt Umber to show through here and there.
Watercolor is for the most part, a transparent medium but not all watercolor paint is equally transparent.
I mixed a turquoise-green from Prussian Blue and Lemon Yellow which is a blue-biased semi-opaque yellow. This opacity allows me to partially hide the Burnt Umber underpainting and also allows it to be partially revealed in selected areas.
I began by wetting the area where I was going to paint the water with a large mop brush and began to paint wet into wet with my turquoise-green mixture.
In order to avoid a hard edge of turquoise forming at the water line, I made sure that I softened that edge with clean water from another brush.
I then lifted out a couple of streaks with a partly dry (Thirsty) bamboo brush. This allowed some of the underpainting to show through.
For the stones and rocks in the foreground, I mixed a cool dark neutral from Ultramarine, Paynes Grey and Alizarin Crimson. The sharp point of a small mop brush was perfect for painting the stones. I also added some spatter for additional texture.
To complete the illusion of water, all that was needed now was to add some gentle ripples and reflections around the rocks with the same mop brush.
Reflections of dark objects in water are usually significantly lighter than the objects themselves and take on the color of the water to some degree.
Watch the full time lapse painting video below.
Painting Ripples & Reflections
The sequence of images above shows step by step how to build up the illusion of reflection on gently rippling water.
Step 1: You can think of water as a mirror positioned on the plane of the horizon reflecting the sky.
Clear blue sky fades dark blue to faint pale blue at the horizon To enhance that effect I first painted a wash that graduates from Ultramarine Blue at the top to nothing then graduates back to Ultramarine Blue at the bottom.
A graduated wash is painted in the same way as a basic flat wash but with more water added to each stroke in order to make the color fade out a bit more with each pass.
Flat washes and graduated washes should be painted with the paper at an an angle so that the paint naturally flows down the paper.
You can turn the paper upside down in order to paint the second graduated wash but make sure the first wash is relatively dry or you will find that gravity will cause your initial wash to start flowing the wrong way.
Step 2: After painting in two land masses. The painting was allowed to thoroughly dry. To create the effect of a blurry reflection, I wet the paper beneath the closer land mass with a Hake brush.
Step 3: Just before the shine goes off the paper, I began to paint a mirror image of the closer land mass underneath it, allowing it to gently diffuse. This was painted with a muted lighter shade of the same purple gray that I used for the land.
Steps 4, 5 and 6: Taking a round brush that forms a good point, I began to paint in curving arcs of Ultramarine. Working from the bottom of the paper up toward the horizon line.
It was important to make the lines of ripples progressively smaller and tighter as I worked my way upwards. This helps to reinforce the illusion of distance by adding perspective. (Things get smaller as they get further away).
Steps 7 and 8: Painting the dead tree poking out of the water in the foreground was the final step. Placing the dark tree in the immediate foreground gave the painting a strong focal point and reinforced the illusion of depth.
All that was needed to finish things off was to lift out some paint from the tree and add a bit of textre to it. I then painted in a rippling reflection underneath it.
Painting Waves & Rough Sea
In the previous example, I showed how you can create the effect of wave movement on the sea by painting curving strokes over the top of a graduated wash.
To give the impression of rougher sea, all that is needed is to leave larger and larger white gaps between the curving strokes to give the impression of breaking waves and rougher sea.
Take a round brush that forms a good point and try experimenting with different wave patterns like in the example below. As an exercise try taping off a series of “Windows” on a sheet of paper and practicing with different brush strokes.
In the seascape below I’ve tried to create the impression of a rough choppy sea by increasing the amount of white as the sea gets closer to the shore when it basically becomes one big mass of white foam.
To create the impression of waves crashing on the rocks I made sure to strategically leave areas of unpainted white paper.
In the detail of the seascape below, I wanted to give the impression of white sea foam spraying between the two rocks. I used a small piece of tissue to dab out some of the wet paint around the base of the rocks.
How To Paint A Breaking Wave
Waves are created by energy travelling from storms. When the wave hits shallow waters the wave it begins to peak, becoming unstable and folding over on itself and finally breaking. The impact of the breaking wave creates a mass of white foamy water and spray.
In the sequence of images below I’m attempting to capture that dramatic moment when a wave folds and breaks.
I began by painting the sky above the wave with a pale wash of Ultramarine. Then, I painted a shadow underneath the wave with a wash of Ultramarine, mixed with a little Paynes Grey.
For the sea and the wave itself, I loaded my mop brush with a mix of Prussian Blue, Paynes Grey and New Gamboge.
Dragging downwards with the brush held horizontally to the paper creates an uneven broken up stroke on the textured paper, giving the impression of crashing foam
Foam from previous waves gets sucked up the face of the next breaking wave and forms “holes” and patches of clear water.
The light source is coming from above so the top of the wave will tend to be lighter than it’s base. To create this effect, drop in darker color wet into wet at the lower section of the wave. You can also lift out color from the top of the wave to lighten it there.
Painting Streams & Rivers
Streams and rivers are very useful composition devices to use in landscape paintings. They are a great way to lead a viewer’s eye into a painting.
The bright reflective nature of water presents a great opportunity for creating drama and visual interest through the use of strong contrasts and negative space.
I began with a variegated wash for this painting from my sketchbook. The stream is simply a white zig zag. I will be leave it more or less untouched throughout.
With the initial washes laid in. I built up the rest of the painting in layers of increasing contrast.
In the final stages of the painting I added the smaller details such as thin branches and small stones etc. As you can see, it wasn’t necessary to add much color to the stream at all. There is just a tiny spot of reflected blue sky in one area. The eye has no trouble interpreting the negative space as a stream of water.
Painting Water: Color Suggestions
Below are some suggestions for color mixing combinations that you can try. Many of these were taken directly from the examples that I’ve been covering in this post. As you can see.
Paynes Grey can be very useful for muting blues and greens which might be a little too bright and garish straight out of the tube. Try experimenting with your own color palettes and see what you can come up with.
My How To Paint Water in Watercolor Videos
If you found this post useful, I recommend reading my post about painting seascapes and beaches, as an additional help.
Also, check out this post about painting reflections on still water, which details a relatively simple and fun example using wet into wet painting techniques.
Kích thước video:
Hiển thị các điều khiển trình phát
NHẬN XÉT • 2 781
I can’t believe how you made it look so much easier than it is. Your voice is also very relaxing. I watched the entire video without skipping one second because I am so fascinated by the beautiful scene you just created in front of our eyes.
I cannot tell you how much I wish we had access to a teaching format like this when I was learning oil painting in the early 1980’s. Thank you, extraordinarily helpful 🙂 A truly flawless demonstration. How do you dispose of your Cadmium Red pigment materials when you’re finished? Is there a way to make them safe?
I just painted this! It was my first time using oils! I’m so happy with my result! Thank you so much, I will do your clouds tutorial next⛅️
I have finally gotten the courage up to attempt to do this piece. Thank you for providing wonderful example and easy to follow method! I’ve only been oil painting for about 6 months. This is really taking me to another level. Thank you from my soul being 💕
Absolutely beautiful. I love it. Thank you for explaining and showing how you created the waves and sparkles ❤️
Breathtaking! Thank you for a fantastic tutorial! I can’t wait to start applying your technique in my paintings
Well I have just started acrylic painting and mostly I spend time on looking at painting videos instead painting 😁
So lovely to watch your method of painting, so calming and you make it look so easy, and it turns out so wonderfully real looking. Truly you are a marvelous painter. Thank you
That looks awesome! Thank you very much for this great video. Just what I needed. 🍀
Love this! I decided to try painting with acrylics so I’ve been watching lots of videos but so far yours is the only one that I’ve really liked that didn’t look like graphic art. Thank you.
Espetacular. Vou tentar fazer aqui nas minhas telinhas no Brasil. Obrigada por nos ensinar
That’s amazing! I love it. I’m a very new painter and excited to play and learn, but this is definitely something I will revisit and aspire to. Thank you for sharing.
Very amazing and super creative and an excellent presentation for beginners!
thank you so much!! i just finished painting this and it turned out to be very beautiful, and very realistic! amazing tutorial😊😊👍
Amazing!! I finally found a perfect tutorial on how to paint realistic water reflection. Superb!! I’ll be sure to save this on my favorites and continue to follow you. Thank you very much for sharing it with us.
This is amazing! The waves look so realistic 🙂
Показать панель управления
Комментарии • 2 781
I can’t believe how you made it look so much easier than it is. Your voice is also very relaxing. I watched the entire video without skipping one second because I am so fascinated by the beautiful scene you just created in front of our eyes.
I cannot tell you how much I wish we had access to a teaching format like this when I was learning oil painting in the early 1980’s. Thank you, extraordinarily helpful 🙂 A truly flawless demonstration. How do you dispose of your Cadmium Red pigment materials when you’re finished? Is there a way to make them safe?
I just painted this! It was my first time using oils! I’m so happy with my result! Thank you so much, I will do your clouds tutorial next⛅️
I have finally gotten the courage up to attempt to do this piece. Thank you for providing wonderful example and easy to follow method! I’ve only been oil painting for about 6 months. This is really taking me to another level. Thank you from my soul being 💕
Absolutely beautiful. I love it. Thank you for explaining and showing how you created the waves and sparkles ❤️
Breathtaking! Thank you for a fantastic tutorial! I can’t wait to start applying your technique in my paintings
Well I have just started acrylic painting and mostly I spend time on looking at painting videos instead painting 😁
So lovely to watch your method of painting, so calming and you make it look so easy, and it turns out so wonderfully real looking. Truly you are a marvelous painter. Thank you
That looks awesome! Thank you very much for this great video. Just what I needed. 🍀
Love this! I decided to try painting with acrylics so I’ve been watching lots of videos but so far yours is the only one that I’ve really liked that didn’t look like graphic art. Thank you.
Espetacular. Vou tentar fazer aqui nas minhas telinhas no Brasil. Obrigada por nos ensinar
That’s amazing! I love it. I’m a very new painter and excited to play and learn, but this is definitely something I will revisit and aspire to. Thank you for sharing.
Very amazing and super creative and an excellent presentation for beginners!
thank you so much!! i just finished painting this and it turned out to be very beautiful, and very realistic! amazing tutorial😊😊👍
Amazing!! I finally found a perfect tutorial on how to paint realistic water reflection. Superb!! I’ll be sure to save this on my favorites and continue to follow you. Thank you very much for sharing it with us.
This is amazing! The waves look so realistic 🙂
How to paint realistic water with confidence
A comprehensive step by step CLEAR WAVE method of painting the ocean realistically
Painting water can be frustrating.
If you are here, you probably know that already.
Have you ever felt overwhelmed by the sheer amount of elusive details of the water without knowing where to even begin? Or what colors to mix?
Ever worked for HOURS on that one special painting only to give up because it keeps getting worse with each brushstroke?
Do your water paintings look like random blobs of blue and white just like mine did?
If you’re anything like me, you probably felt all of those things.
Let me show you this painting I used to be incredibly proud of at the time (2009). So proud, in fact, that I arranged an exhibition in the hall of the medical university I then attended:
I thought that was the most realistic water EVER!
(My mom still thinks so, as she’s proudly displaying it in her living room to this day. I suspect she might be a bit biased, though..)
And here is me at another exhibition, 10 years later.
Miami Art Basel 2019:
All I’ve learned during these last 10 years are neatly packed into a comprehensive step-by-step course on how to paint realistic water to save you some of that time and frustration.
I have no art education.
Everything I’ll share with you I have figured out by trial and error. It took many years of observing the ocean for hours every day, painting it at the beach or in the studio, making a thousand mistakes, and finding solutions for most of them.
Eventually, it all made sense.
Although I’m constantly learning something new, I have discovered several things that work for me every single time.
I will walk you through my entire process, from the way I approach the subject of water, my thoughts on how to choose what to paint and what to look for while watching the ocean, the materials I use and how I mix colors, to the very last brush stroke on the final painting.
In this course, we will take photographs at beautiful Laguna Beach, CA, and choose one to use as a photo reference and edit it for painting.
I’ll talk about my paint, brushes, and other art materials, along with my approach to color mixing for painting water. You will see my palette as I paint so that you don’t have to guess how I got each particular color:
This is not a paint by numbers course.
I am here to help you paint your own water in your own unique style, not just finish one painting.
However, we will finish three paintings together: one of a wave using our Laguna Beach photo reference, one of calm water, loosely based on a video to approximate plain air painting, and one of imaginary water under 3 different light conditions.
Here are the first two paintings we will finish together:
The third painting will be a surprise:)
You can replay these real-time demo videos as many times as you wish. Paint along with me the first time, or watch first and then paint the second time. No rush; practice as much as you need.
At the end of this course, you will have the confidence and mental tools to paint your own realistic water without fear.
This course includes:
How To Paint Reflections In Watercolour Step By Step
Painting watercolour landscape scenes with reflections on water are fairly easy to do. It’s a fun subject to paint and it plays to one of watercolour’s biggest strengths. Loose, spontaneous wet into wet painting.
In this post, I’ll demonstrate step by step how to how to paint reflections in watercolour with a demonstration of a scene of trees and foliage reflected in the calm waters of a gently flowing river.
This kind of painting is a great one for beginners to have a go at. It’s possible to get a great result within a few attempts, it doesn’t require you to have superhuman drawing skills and it’s a wonderful way to explore the wet into wet technique.
Materials List
Paints
I’ve linked to where you can purchase the paints and the other art materials I used from Amazon.
Brushes
Winsor & Newton No.6 Round Bamboo Brush (Great for foliage) Buy from Amazon
Swordliner Brush ( For thin tree branches etc) Buy from Amazon
1″ Flat Wash Brush Buy From Amazon
Paper
Arches Watercolor Paper Block, Cold Press, 9″ x 12″, 140 pound Buy from Amazon
Easy release painters masking tape Buy from Amazon
Pebeo Painting knife Buy From Amazon
Watercolour Palette Buy from Amazon
Step 1: Background Trees & Sky
When painting wet into wet, it’s particularly important to angle the paper at about 30 degrees. This will ensure that the colour flows in a predictable direction, although, half the fun of this technique is that the results are never completely predictable.
I started at the top half of the paper, painting a wash of clean water with a good sized flat brush and working my way down to the line where the foliage meets the lake’s edge.
I’m going to paint a the background first. Wet into wet. i.e painting wet paint on wet paper. This means working quite quickly as the paper needs to be shiny wet not just damp. To facilitate speed, I have my initial colours already mixed and ready to go.
I’m using a bamboo brush for 90% of this painting. The loose floppy hair of a bamboo brush is perfect for painting loose irregular foliage. I could have also used a Hake. A round brush is just a bit too springy and neat, I find. You can drag a round brush sideways for a rougher brush mark but it’s still a bit of a fight to get the kind of irregularity that a bamboo brush offers.
I want to suggest hazy autumnal trees in the background. So after taking my brush and lightly washing in a pale sky with a few strokes of Cerulean Blue I’m going to quickly clean my brush and paint in the trees using Raw Sienna for a nice golden Yellow and purple ( Ultramarine and Alizarin Crimson, you could just use a premixed tube colour such as Dioxazine Violet).
Because yellow and purple are complementary colours they tend to work really well together in a painting (For more on that, please see this post).
Step 2: Painting The Foreground
It’s important to allow the background to dry completely before painting the foreground. Because the trees in the foreground will be painted wet on dry. Wet on dry creates hard edged strokes which will contrast nicely with the soft hazy background.
The colour green can be a bit of a problem. Mixing greens manually will generally produce a more natural looking colour than using a pre-mixed green straight from the tube. I also like to do most of the mixing on the paper rather than on my palette to create a variegated wash of green that contains a multitude of hues and tones.
The process is as follows. I place adjacent blobs of Cadmium Yellow, Ultramarine, Prussian Blue and Burnt Umber on my palette and give them a good spray of clean water from a misting bottle. I simply dip my brush in the yellow and paint it on to the paper then I’ll go from one colour to another and allow them to blend and mix freely.
Once the foreground trees were complete. I took my palette/painting knife and scraped in some thin branches. Timing is quite important when doing this and so is the consistency of the paint.
If the paint is too wet or too thin, the scraped out area will just fill back in and leave a dark line. In fact my paint was a little thinner and wetter than it should have been but I just about got away with it.
Watercolour painting has a lot of these seat of the pants moments, sometimes they work out in your favour, sometimes they don’t!
Step 3: Painting The Reflections
This is the fun part! When everything had dried. I wet the bottom half of the paper and started painting the reflection of the foreground tree by dropping in my greens with the bamboo brush.
When the foreground reflection had been painted in but while the paper was still wet, I dropped in some purple and Raw Sienna and allowed that to spread out.
I took my sword liner once more and dragged in a suggestion of a reflection of tree branches.
The final touch was to take a flat brush and dip it in clean water. Dry it on a clean cloth so that it’s still damp but no longer dripping wet. Drag the flat edge of the brush across the paper and lift out a few streaks of colour. This gives the impression of a slight disturbance on the surface of the water.
I hope you found this tutorial useful. Give it a try!
Watch The YouTube Video
Источники информации:
- http://vnclip.net/video/ngLRlxJCEK8/how-to-paint-water-realistic-water-reflection-wave-painting-tutorial.html
- http://x-vid.net/video/ngLRlxJCEK8/how-to-paint-water-realistic-water-reflection-wave-painting-tutorial.html
- http://www.paintawave.com/p/how-to-paint-realistic-water-with-confidence
- http://www.solvingwatercolour.com/how-to-paint-reflections-in-watercolour-step-by-step/