Portrait Painting

Soft sticks of black charcoal are often staples in introductory drawing Learning. The smooth, brittle material is both forgiving and challenging, and so it’s ideal for honing drawing skills. Manufactured in various levels—from vine charcoal for swift, light strokes to compressed charcoal for thick, intense marks—charcoal is very useful for discuss light and contrast, and it enhance artists to develop rich tonal values. At the beginning, however, the material can be tough to harness. For water colorists, another use of wet charcoal painting is the richness that can be achieved. I personally don’t care for any of the black watercolor options. Mars black does darken enough but it looks flat to me, so I opt for wet charcoal. The painting, In below images, has a combination of black watercolor and wet charcoal for the shirt and the belt. When I paint with watercolor, I always keep some powdered charcoal on my palette


Leela Arts students are trained on diverse painting forms which gives scope for various kinds of techniques. So What are you waiting for? Get along with our experienced Painting trainers and draw out your imagination on the paper. For the further information, kindly visit our Institute: Leela Arts , melbourne, australia - mobile:+61 444583648

portrait painting
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