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Sunday, November 13, 2011
Glazing
I believe it helped and I will continue putting several more glazes on hoping it will accomplish what I want!
Will I ever finish...
Another layer added and many more after that. I was not liking the color of my darkest shadow. So I painted over again and again. I also darkened the eyes then lightened them again.
The green background was not doing it for me. I decided to painted over it.
After much frustration, I finally had to put this project to rest in order to come back later with fresh eyes.
Friday, September 30, 2011
Portrait Painting Progress
Thursday, September 1, 2011
The Layering Continues
As the last layer dried it looked a little chalky. I went in and added more warmth and deepened my shadows with a cooler tone.
There is much I have to learn before my painting can be considered "realism"... practice, practice, practice!
I will continue posting my transitions as I complete them.
Hair
Creating the Hair and Highlights
I began by mixing burnt sienna, yellow ochre, and ultramarine blue to build the base tones of the hair. From there, I layered in the highlights, letting lighter strokes sit softly over the darker foundation.
Hair takes practice—and then more practice—because its believability comes from multiple layers, even in a piece that isn’t fully realistic. This painting isn’t meant to look photographic, but I still wanted the hair to lean toward realism. To push it in that direction, I etched fine strands around the hairline, adding just enough detail to suggest texture and movement while keeping the overall style painterly.
| Color block sections |
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| Add lights for dimension |
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Eyes
When I first began my painting the subject's eyes followed me from right to left. Since that time something happened and I lost it.
One of the things I do along my painting journey is photograph each step. It allows me to go back and see what I liked and disliked. Unfortunately, painting does not allow me to select the undo tab and go back. But having past photos of my work can offer insite of what I may have done wrong so that I can fix my "happy mistake"!
Oily Face
As you can see oil creates a smoother finish on the subject's face. The next several stages will be adding one layer at a time. Hopefully, with each layer the portrait will become more realistic. At least that is my goal.
One of the things I anticipate along the way our little mistakes and as Bob Ross states, They are "Happy Mistakes"! Got to love that guy, God rest his soul!
| First layer of oil |
The Painting That Waited
Happy New Year! After a five-month hiatus, I’m thrilled to share what I’ve been working on since my last post in August 2025. Below is a pai...
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Once upon a time, high in the sky, a beautiful red bird soars. Angels shine down from the heavens offering solace to those in need from his ...
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I have been waiting patiently for this painting to dry (which is the most difficult part of this process) before moving to the next layer o...
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Just wrapped up this little cutie! This portrait was painted on an 8x10 canvas using acrylics. The reference photo was quite dark, with limi...



