In the last photo, there seems to be great deal of orangey, reflected light on the ceiling and walls of the porch. This would leave me wondering what to do. Would you paint that as it appears or make it darker and cooler as you would expect it to be under there?
Hi Rich, I would first block in the shadow with a cool, muted color, blue or blue violet with a little orange. Then while it’s still wet, I would scrub in a little more orange slightly lighter to show the reflected light. Hope that’s helpful.
'Value is more important than colour'... Well said. Value does all the work, but colour gets all the praise.
Well said Lloyd
I love it when something that I might view as complicated can be broken down into simpler elements. Thank you!
Thanks Pam glad it was helpful
Wonderful explanations, no nonsense
Very helpful. Can’t wait to try..
You’re welcome Denise glad it was helpful
Thanks Phil. This makes so much sense. 🙂
Glad it was helpful Bonnie!
This is a very interesting, well explained lesson and easy to put into practice. Thank you so much.
Glad it was helpful!
a fantastic approach!
Many thanks!
Super helpful, thanks!
Glad it was helpful!
Great tutorial thanks very much!
Glad it was helpful!
I really needed this one. Thanks so much 😊
You’re welcome, Mary, glad it was helpful
Do you have links to these example images? Thanks!
In the last photo, there seems to be great deal of orangey, reflected light on the ceiling and walls of the porch. This would leave me wondering what to do. Would you paint that as it appears or make it darker and cooler as you would expect it to be under there?
Hi Rich, I would first block in the shadow with a cool, muted color, blue or blue violet with a little orange. Then while it’s still wet, I would scrub in a little more orange slightly lighter to show the reflected light. Hope that’s helpful.
@@philstarke.artist Yes, it is, thank you.
👍