You were the first watercolor artist I subscribed to on TH-cam. I have learned soooo much from watching your videos. They are easy to follow and understand, fun to experiment along and a great boon to a person newish to watercolor. Thanks to you I have developed a deep love for watercolor painting. I wish I could afford to be a patron but I do appreciate your sharing what you do with your subscribers. Stay safe in this hurricane season. hugs
Very useful video! One thing a friend told me regarding color mixing ... "Mix red into white and you'll never be blue." What that MEANS is: Mix the dark color into the light color and you will be more "safe." You showed that perfectly when you mixed the very small amount of the (dark) "blue" color into the (light) "orange" color and it affected the outcome DRAMATICALLY. Really - it's just a saying that made it easy for me to remember to be conservative when adding dark colors into light colors. Thanks for all your great tips and tricks ~ keep it up!
You're probably the best watercolor teacher on TH-cam. I've watched so many videos and they all had many likes and subscribers but we're awful teachers, they never explain anything instead just plot down colors and leave out all the details leaving me with more questions than answers.
I am so impressed with this entire series of videos regarding the color wheel, mixing colors, and warm vs. cool. I have never heard anyone explain and demonstrate it so well. Today I will be creating my wheel from my palette and doing some of the same exercises. Your the best Steve.
Hi. When I took up watercolour I just wanted to put colour on paper. How naive! However I came to really get into it and in order to understand how to improve I needed to understand more 'theory' or I guess the mind of watercolour. Your tutorials do the 'theory' painlessly and simply. So, many thanks.
Now I understand how to better work with colorful shadows. I used to just neutralize the color when I need to put shadows on the object. This video is really helpful, thanks!
Thanks, Steve, for demonstrating how the color wheel works with your little view finder to test color against it. Those are some nice golden browns. They remind me of sunflowers when they are just beginning to dry out.
This the best video I've seen on complementary colors (seen many so far, since I get a lot of muddy browns while using and mixing water colors). The way you explained shadows, distance, swatching, moving from a warmer to cooler color was clear and not overwhelming. Much love to your work ❤
Wow, I know what I will be doing today in the studio. I was just struggling yesterday with trying to mix a pale yellow brown. I came to watercolor because I am a color junkie and being able to mix such lovely colors is so exciting! You make it so easy to understand. Thanks Steve!
I love color-mixing videos. It completely fascinates me that certain colors neutralize each other, and that other color combinations--ones I never would have even considered mixing--can create such interesting new shades!
Excellent video! I'll be making my own color wheel now, thanks to you, I have a greater understanding in mixing watercolors! These videos have been so helpful to my journey in watercolors and your hard work is very appreciated! Thank-you!
Unbelievable! This is an episode I had missed, and last week I commented that I needed help mixing my own browns, instead of always using convenience colors! Of course now I own more than a dozen tubes of different brown paints. Anyway, thanks for this, Steve.
Awesome. I have a store bought color wheel, but now I will be making one with my own colors. Those last browns you mixed were yummy lol. You make color mixing fun instead of scary.
Thank you SO much! I accidentally found out that red and green make brown, but had NO idea that I how to get all those other brown shades. I appreciate all your videos, by the way. LOVE your art, and am really enjoying your videos. (I just 'found' you last week.)
Not sure if you will see this question since this is an older video. I have mixed grey browns a couple of times using orange and blue shades only to have them turn orange as they dry. What causes this? Great demonstration and instruction by the way.
I have a 13 year old student and this definitely will help my explanation. Thanx. However I'd love to see a videos on 1- mixing cool and warm colors together. ie: Alizarin and Lemon Yellow v Hansa, and 2- how colors are cool and warm relatively.. while Yellow is a warm color, some are cool and some are warm. ( you kinda touched on this here..) and how both warm and dark colors both recede and come forward. it is sometimes a tricky balance. Love your videos, you are strangely entertaining. ( ps love"ygor's" new knitted cap!. )
+Suzala Suzala Its really pretty simple. Colors may be warm or cool individually but can be different when compared to each other. For example Hansa Yellow and Lemon Yellow are both considered warm colors but in relation to each other Lemon Yellow is slightly cooler. Its all about where they land on the color wheel. As for mixing warm and cool together, the results vary depending on what colors they are. Alizarin, Hansa Y. and Lemon Y. are ALL warm colors.
I realize I'm a year late to this blog but I have to let you know how informative your lessons are. You're answering so many of the questions I've had. Can you tell me how you mixed your greens to use on the color wheel in this lesson, please? Thank you!
sir I want a help from you actually I go to drawing classes I am in dip 1 our drawing sir teaches us the theory of colour I can't explain hope u understand . he first said that the lightest colour of red green and brown is yellow then after that he began to show us the shades first he started with green while making the shades he first took lemon yellow and made one strip and for the second strip he mixed yellow and sap green and so on ....sir that day I was late for the classes and now I am having problem in painting please help sir
Would love to have you demonstrate the application of the warm, cool theory (and complimentary color theory) and give examples in an actual painting. As a beginner that would be really helpful for me. It would kind of like getting into your personal "mind of watercolor" for a brief moment. Hope Reece is well!
Yes, you will see this theory applied here and there in my videos and I try to comment on it. I've found that videos like this have been necessary to answer questions and define what I've been talking about in those specific painting instances situations.
You know Steve, I keep all 4 siennas and umbers (raw and burnt) on my palette, mostly out of convenience, but I find a lot of times, I like the browns, with complements, I mix over those colors by themselves. I like to mix paint on the paper and I like to shift colors in and out of themselves and break them into their parts if that makes sense. Don't get me wrong, I love the siennas and umbers and the quin burnt colors, just saying mixtures (as far as I am concerned) are always more pleasing. Thanks for the video Steve, as always.
I love this video. Taking my colors and painting them in a wheel makes sense. I had always thought of all yellows and reds as warm and blues and greens as cool. When artists refer to lemon yellow, for instance, as their cool yellow it means in their palette, it's cooler than the warmer orange yellow they have also included and NOT that lemon yellow is a cool yellow? Just trying to get a handle on this. I realize some lemon yellows have a hint of green which makes them cooler.... right?
@@mindofwatercolor Though companies like Cheap Joe's give the temperature of some of their American Journey pigments in their descriptions and Jane Blundell supplies a great deal of info as well, it would be nice to find a comprehensive list of temperature valuations for the majority of pigments available. I've looked on the Handprint.com site and it's such a deep dive, I just get lost. ;-) If there is such a list that's easily accessible, would you share that info? Thanks!!
Wow! Amazing! I've never understood the 'warm' and 'cool' of colors. You make it seem so much less archane! I've heard people speak of cool reds and warm blues. Would that mean the red has more blue in it and the blue has more yellow?
Exactly! You got it. Not so arcane after all huh? Primary blue being in the center of the cool side could be warmed with either red or yellow. Orange, same thing, cooled going either direction toward the cool side
This was really helpful. Love all your videos. Can you do a video on mixing shading for yellows? Such as the darker areas of a yellow flower or a lemon. They often turn green. And mixing for any other challenging colors?
Check whats across the color wheel from your yellow. Will probably be some sort of a blue violet. A pale wash of that should make a nice shadow. Or try Paynes gray with a touch of red added.
What about shapes that are innately cool like some local fauna in NM! Does cool foliage in the foreground remain cool but get bluer and lighter in the distance?
Yes, it would get cooler or bluer (sky and atmosphere) as a general rule. It can be darker rather than lighter but given the exact same element it's almost always bluer, lighter and has less contrast. Think of it as adding a bluish haze to what ever elements are there. The same red rocks in the foreground are going seem more purple in the distance.
A very helpful video !!! I made the mistake of buying a small box of 12 half-pans and from what i learn so far from you i should have gone for the tubes, maybe the 3 primary colors, Sepia and Payne's grey! mi bad!!! :( it gets more difficult to mix and even using a palette, it doeskin help) newbie issues!
I've been researching limited palettes to re-start doing landscapes and marine-scapes, so definitely the blues and greens are of interest. Rather than a traditional split warm-cool primaries palette, I saw an interesting limited palette of warm and cool balanced RGB+CMY+Neutral Tint, Yellow Ochre and a Sienna/Umber. He recommended both Phthalos to avoid the granulation of the Ultramarines and the convenience greens and blues. Now I just have to choose between M.Graham and Daniel Smith. 1. Buy Quality Paints. 2. and Quality Brushes. 3. then Paper...
Hello, may i have some help with Red-Violet and Yellow-Green? I'm confused to see some colour wheels around the internet include Yellow-Green on the warm side and Red-Violet on the cool side, but some others include Red-Violet on the warm side, and Yellow-Green on the cool side, could you tell me which one is the truly warm or cool colour? Or at least your opinion about it? Very grateful ^^
They can be either. What is most important is whether a color is warm or cool when compared to another color. Red-violet is warm compared to a blue but cool when compared to a red. Yellow-green is cool when compared to a yellow but warm when compared to a Blue-green.
I was having trouble with some watercolor terminology, but I think I figured it out & wanted to share. Some artists talk about blues like ultramarine being "warm blues" and for me that just did not compute at all. Reason is I'm seeing colors like ultramarine as if they are ultraviolet on the electromagnetic spectrum (like from a prism), and that's the opposite end from infrared, which I'd associate with "warm." I now know that I need to stifle my physics brain, LOL: pigments (i.e., watercolors) are organized in a circle (the color wheel), while color (i.e., light) is organized in a linear manner (the electromagnetic spectrum). If you ever have a student who stumbles over "warm blues," maybe ask them if they're a scientist. ;-)
Could be, but most confusion comes from wanting to identify a color as absolutely warm or cool. Blues are cool as a whole and Reds warm as a whole so a warm blue seems to make no sense. In practice it's how blues compare to each other or how they "lean" warm or cool. I'm reminded of the children's game, cold or hot. When you're getting close to something we would say "you're getting warmer" or "you're hot" if you were right on top of it.
- I am on the verge of buying White Nights watercolor tubes. I took a que from your videos and selected 12 amazing colors that I really need... Single pigment, transparent, 3star lightfast etc. etc. And then, I see a 24 white night palette on Amazone for the same price. Some colors I need, most I don't, some don't have the great ratings. What do you think I should do, be greedy or not?
Thank you for sharing your knowledge of colours, but I need more! QUESTION: For example, how do you know when to use a cool red or a warm red to mix with a cool yellow or warm yellow? I don't have access to many different colours but I would very much still like to know!
There is no specific circumstance for any of them. The best way to know what they'll do is experiment. Mix visually and don't worry too much about formulas or color recipes.
The Mind of Watercolor Oh ok I'll keep at it then. I am still very new at this point and have only limited and inexpensive resources with which to practise. I have a warm and a cool of the primaries. Any suggestion on how to move forward in exploring these colours and their offspring? Perhaps a chart or process to help me remember what I have made and how I have made it? Is there such a thing? Thank you again for sharing your knowledge of how water colours think! :)
My most recent video on Phthalos shows the process I use for experimenting with colors. I personally don't use complex charts or matrixes. You can if you want. Some do but I just like to take a color around the palette and see what happens with any or all of my colors.
Hi Steve. Another great study and tutorial on color study and experimentation. Honestly, I love experimenting with color mixes and how they react or interact with one another as much as actually painting. Do you find certain paint brands mix better than others? Would to hear you thoughts on that. Some paints I've played with don't blend well.
Hi Steve, I'm choosing my first colours to buy and would definitely want the biggest range I can get with minimum investment for my first tubes. I watched your earlier favourite 8 colour videos and you mentioned using sepia and Payne's grey to warm or cool colours. could you not do that with this complementary colour mixing? is it just easier with them?
+Kay Gentry Yes, some watercolor painters do that. I don't personally use white as I prefer a more transparent look, but thats just a preference choice. I've seen white used to mix in skies and distant backgrounds where muted colors are key. It produces a sort of chalky look which is ideal to some painters. Give it a try and see if you like it.
Thanks for the explanation of the warm and cool colors. I now have a better understanding. This talk of color reminds of a questing that has been nagging me for a few years now. And that concerns pure color. At one time, I thought thaylo blue was a pure blue then I read that it had green in it. Well, that disqualified thalo blue (which is still one of my favorites). Then I thought that ultramarine blue was a pure blue, but that fact change when I heard youtube artists claim that ultramarine blue had red in it. So, now, ultramarine blue is disqualified. So, my question is there such a thing as a pure blue, a pure red, and a pure yellow? If there is who makes them? And why aren't the paint companies listing them?
For plein air purposes, most palettes have limited wells. However, I find myself wanting to take as many colors as possible. (just in case! lol) So your video has helped me immensely! Quick question: Alvaro Castagnet (and others) have always said to take a "warm & cool" color. (i.e. Warm Red=Cad red. Cool Red=Aliz Crimson.//Warm Yellow=Cad Yellow. Cool Yellow=Lemon Y....etc...etc... Why does he encourage that? And does he mean that only for the primary colors? What's the purpose of having the warm & cool versions of these? (Especially in plein air world...where our load is supposed to be light!) :) Thanks Steve.
+Sylvia Catalano Shadows most likely. He's a big shadow guy if you look at his work. Cool versions of colors work better in the shadows and warmer works best in the light.
You were the first watercolor artist I subscribed to on TH-cam. I have learned soooo much from watching your videos. They are easy to follow and understand, fun to experiment along and a great boon to a person newish to watercolor. Thanks to you I have developed a deep love for watercolor painting. I wish I could afford to be a patron but I do appreciate your sharing what you do with your subscribers. Stay safe in this hurricane season. hugs
I made my first color wheel and it was more fun than I should admit. Then again, I don’t get out much. Seriously though....thank you!
Very useful video! One thing a friend told me regarding color mixing ... "Mix red into white and you'll never be blue." What that MEANS is: Mix the dark color into the light color and you will be more "safe." You showed that perfectly when you mixed the very small amount of the (dark) "blue" color into the (light) "orange" color and it affected the outcome DRAMATICALLY. Really - it's just a saying that made it easy for me to remember to be conservative when adding dark colors into light colors.
Thanks for all your great tips and tricks ~ keep it up!
Thanks for the input Paul. I actually have not heard that saying. 🙂
Paul Lekang Thank you for that!
Paul Lekang /
You're probably the best watercolor teacher on TH-cam. I've watched so many videos and they all had many likes and subscribers but we're awful teachers, they never explain anything instead just plot down colors and leave out all the details leaving me with more questions than answers.
Thanks so much. Very encouraging!
@@mindofwatercolor No thank you.
I am so impressed with this entire series of videos regarding the color wheel, mixing colors, and warm vs. cool. I have never heard anyone explain and demonstrate it so well. Today I will be creating my wheel from my palette and doing some of the same exercises. Your the best Steve.
Great! Glad to hear it! And thanks!
You're the only one who explains the why warm or why cool. Thank you
Hi. When I took up watercolour I just wanted to put colour on paper. How naive! However I came to really get into it and in order to understand how to improve I needed to understand more 'theory' or I guess the mind of watercolour. Your tutorials do the 'theory' painlessly and simply. So, many thanks.
Thanks, glad to hear it. Yours is a common tale. It's exciting once people discover that color has secrets worth unlocking.
Great explanation. Learned more in these few minutes than from multiple books over several decades! Many thanks.
Awesome! Your welcome.
Awesome. Finally, someone explains warm and cool colors. Usually, everyone talks about this subject as if it is knowledge we are born with!
Thanks. I had forgotten what a lovely colour Indian yellow is.
Loved this explanation of warm and cool colors. Also the yummy browns you can mix are magic. As always, thanks so much!
Now I understand how to better work with colorful shadows. I used to just neutralize the color when I need to put shadows on the object. This video is really helpful, thanks!
Thanks, Steve, for demonstrating how the color wheel works with your little view finder to test color against it. Those are some nice golden browns. They remind me of sunflowers when they are just beginning to dry out.
I like the color viewer idea. I've never seen that before. Thanks.
+Julie Nielsen 👍
I'm coming back to watercolors after years of absence. Your tutorials are a terrific refresher. I use the M. Graham paints as well. Thank you.
I am loving your tutorials. I'm a teacher and I find your instruction excellent and also encouraging for beginners. Thank you!
Am a new comer and really benefitting from your technical stuff made easy . Brilliant. Thanks.
Excellent way to spend a few minutes! You're such a gracious artist to share as you do.
+Pat Gentry 👍
This the best video I've seen on complementary colors (seen many so far, since I get a lot of muddy browns while using and mixing water colors).
The way you explained shadows, distance, swatching, moving from a warmer to cooler color was clear and not overwhelming. Much love to your work ❤
This also applies to Oils. Browns have always been a hassle for me and I tried starting with the warms & got what I needed. Thanks.
Wow, I know what I will be doing today in the studio. I was just struggling yesterday with trying to mix a pale yellow brown. I came to watercolor because I am a color junkie and being able to mix such lovely colors is so exciting! You make it so easy to understand. Thanks Steve!
Thanks so much Kathryn! Glad this was a help.
Thank you for these videos they have helped me grow and learn so much and I keep revisiting and will continue to revisit them
The mixing is so amazing, thx!!
I love color-mixing videos. It completely fascinates me that certain colors neutralize each other, and that other color combinations--ones I never would have even considered mixing--can create such interesting new shades!
Fun isn't it?
Excellent video! I'll be making my own color wheel now, thanks to you, I have a greater understanding in mixing watercolors! These videos have been so helpful to my journey in watercolors and your hard work is very appreciated! Thank-you!
+Hermione Jarvis Thanks for the kind words of encouragment!
Unbelievable! This is an episode I had missed, and last week I commented that I needed help mixing my own browns, instead of always using convenience colors! Of course now I own more than a dozen tubes of different brown paints. Anyway, thanks for this, Steve.
This was excellent! thank you for sharing your knowledge!
This was SO helpful. Thanks for sharing your expertise.
Wow~ What an eye opener. Have never thought watercolour could be explained this way. Thank you for making it so easy to understand!
+Meghan Chin 👍
Fascinating the browns which can be achieved.
this video is great steve!! this will make mixing so much easier!!
Thorough explanation & demo. I missed the color wheel video. Will look for it. Thanks!
+B Cohen 👍
Awesome. I have a store bought color wheel, but now I will be making one with my own colors. Those last browns you mixed were yummy lol. You make color mixing fun instead of scary.
+Rose Ryan Glad to hear it!
This video was very helpful! Thank you!
its great to refresh yourself with colour wheel from time to time
+Sylvia Costello 👍
This is a great video. I hadn’t seen this one. Thank you.
Hi Steve, I so appreciate and enjoy your videos and this is the best explanation of the color wheel and mixing colors. THANK YOU!
Great idea on the window card. I will use it!!
You made this subject easy to understand. Thank you!
Thank you SO much! I accidentally found out that red and green make brown, but had NO idea that I how to get all those other brown shades. I appreciate all your videos, by the way. LOVE your art, and am really enjoying your videos. (I just 'found' you last week.)
+LettieNugent.com Thanks so much! Welcome!
Thankyou for share with us this concepts. For me, are better than gold!
Steve, Thanks again for such an informative ...yet easy...way to understand mixing color. I am eager to mix browns! Blessings, Joyce
👍
Thank you so much!! You’ve helped me a lot in understanding color theory! Beautifully explained and demonstrated!!!
Not sure if you will see this question since this is an older video. I have mixed grey browns a couple of times using orange and blue shades only to have them turn orange as they dry. What causes this? Great demonstration and instruction by the way.
Thank you for sharing these lessons. You are an awesome teacher!
Thanks so much!
I have a 13 year old student and this definitely will help my explanation. Thanx. However I'd love to see a videos on 1- mixing cool and warm colors together. ie: Alizarin and Lemon Yellow v Hansa, and 2- how colors are cool and warm relatively.. while Yellow is a warm color, some are cool and some are warm. ( you kinda touched on this here..) and how both warm and dark colors both recede and come forward. it is sometimes a tricky balance. Love your videos, you are strangely entertaining. ( ps love"ygor's" new knitted cap!. )
+Suzala Suzala Its really pretty simple. Colors may be warm or cool individually but can be different when compared to each other. For example Hansa Yellow and Lemon Yellow are both considered warm colors but in relation to each other Lemon Yellow is slightly cooler. Its all about where they land on the color wheel. As for mixing warm and cool together, the results vary depending on what colors they are. Alizarin, Hansa Y. and Lemon Y. are ALL warm colors.
I realize I'm a year late to this blog but I have to let you know how informative your lessons are. You're answering so many of the questions I've had. Can you tell me how you mixed your greens to use on the color wheel in this lesson, please? Thank you!
This is helping me to love water colours and experiment with them. Thanks a lot for this effort
+Ruchika Juneja 👍
That was the most informative video I've seen yet when it comes to how to mix colors, thank you so much!!!
+etchersplace glad it was a help!
Thank you, extremely well explained. I'm so grateful for your teachings😀
Great help - I'll have lots of fun practicing.
+ml benson 👍
Thank you for this Steve! You always explain so clearly! Appreciate the scriptures at the end too! Never seen that done before. Sure is nice!
👍
+Karen MacArthur Thanks, welcome back!
sir I want a help from you
actually I go to drawing classes I am in dip 1 our drawing sir teaches us the theory of colour I can't explain hope u understand
.
he first said that the lightest colour of red green and brown is yellow then after that he began to show us the shades first he started with green
while making the shades
he first took lemon yellow and made one strip and for the second strip he mixed yellow and sap green and so on ....sir that day I was late for the classes and now I am having problem in painting
please help sir
sir as I came to know that it is used for making trees landscape huts etc
he first taught us to make trees out of it
he began the tree by yellow
I'm sorry. I don't understand the problem you are having.
Thank you so much for this. Very informative, helpful. 👍😊
I enjoyed meeting you on Lindsay's ask the artist show, your videos are just what I need to expand my limited skills. Thank you!
Glad to have watching.
Im glad too . Thanks for sharing what you know :-)
Fantastic. Thanks!!
Excellent help for this wanna be watercolorist!
+Janice M 👍
Great help thanks for the demo. 😊
Would love to have you demonstrate the application of the warm, cool theory (and complimentary color theory) and give examples in an actual painting. As a beginner that would be really helpful for me. It would kind of like getting into your personal "mind of watercolor" for a brief moment. Hope Reece is well!
Yes, you will see this theory applied here and there in my videos and I try to comment on it. I've found that videos like this have been necessary to answer questions and define what I've been talking about in those specific painting instances situations.
This really helpful... thank you for your willingness to teach and share!
+Kay Gentry My pleasure!
Awesome descriptions. So helpful. Thank you!
You know Steve, I keep all 4 siennas and umbers (raw and burnt) on my palette, mostly out of convenience, but I find a lot of times, I like the browns, with complements, I mix over those colors by themselves. I like to mix paint on the paper and I like to shift colors in and out of themselves and break them into their parts if that makes sense. Don't get me wrong, I love the siennas and umbers and the quin burnt colors, just saying mixtures (as far as I am concerned) are always more pleasing. Thanks for the video Steve, as always.
I totally agree Adam. They seem to have more luminosity.
I love this video. Taking my colors and painting them in a wheel makes sense. I had always thought of all yellows and reds as warm and blues and greens as cool. When artists refer to lemon yellow, for instance, as their cool yellow it means in their palette, it's cooler than the warmer orange yellow they have also included and NOT that lemon yellow is a cool yellow? Just trying to get a handle on this. I realize some lemon yellows have a hint of green which makes them cooler.... right?
Yes, its cool as compared to another yellow like say Indian Yellow but not as cool as say a green gold or yellow green.
@@mindofwatercolor Though companies like Cheap Joe's give the temperature of some of their American Journey pigments in their descriptions and Jane Blundell supplies a great deal of info as well, it would be nice to find a comprehensive list of temperature valuations for the majority of pigments available. I've looked on the Handprint.com site and it's such a deep dive, I just get lost. ;-)
If there is such a list that's easily accessible, would you share that info?
Thanks!!
Great demo best I've seen thanks for such detail. I learned a lot.
+skier828 👍
Wow! Amazing! I've never understood the 'warm' and 'cool' of colors. You make it seem so much less archane! I've heard people speak of cool reds and warm blues. Would that mean the red has more blue in it and the blue has more yellow?
Exactly! You got it. Not so arcane after all huh? Primary blue being in the center of the cool side could be warmed with either red or yellow. Orange, same thing, cooled going either direction toward the cool side
another very helpful video, thank you Steve :) I hope you decide to do a video all about aerial perspective, that seems really neat and interesting!
+1234MusicEqualsLife 👍
This was really helpful. Love all your videos. Can you do a video on mixing shading for yellows? Such as the darker areas of a yellow flower or a lemon. They often turn green. And mixing for any other challenging colors?
Check whats across the color wheel from your yellow. Will probably be some sort of a blue violet. A pale wash of that should make a nice shadow. Or try Paynes gray with a touch of red added.
What about shapes that are innately cool like some local fauna in NM! Does cool foliage in the foreground remain cool but get bluer and lighter in the distance?
Yes, it would get cooler or bluer (sky and atmosphere) as a general rule. It can be darker rather than lighter but given the exact same element it's almost always bluer, lighter and has less contrast. Think of it as adding a bluish haze to what ever elements are there. The same red rocks in the foreground are going seem more purple in the distance.
A very helpful video !!! I made the mistake of buying a small box of 12 half-pans and from what i learn so far from you i should have gone for the tubes, maybe the 3 primary colors, Sepia and Payne's grey! mi bad!!! :( it gets more difficult to mix and even using a palette, it doeskin help) newbie issues!
You are a wealth of information! Thank you so much!
I've been researching limited palettes to re-start doing landscapes and marine-scapes, so definitely the blues and greens are of interest. Rather than a traditional split warm-cool primaries palette, I saw an interesting limited palette of warm and cool balanced RGB+CMY+Neutral Tint, Yellow Ochre and a Sienna/Umber. He recommended both Phthalos to avoid the granulation of the Ultramarines and the convenience greens and blues. Now I just have to choose between M.Graham and Daniel Smith.
1. Buy Quality Paints. 2. and Quality Brushes. 3. then Paper...
T. Bunker Steve says quality paper is number one.
Hello, may i have some help with Red-Violet and Yellow-Green?
I'm confused to see some colour wheels around the internet include Yellow-Green on the warm side and Red-Violet on the cool side, but some others include Red-Violet on the warm side, and Yellow-Green on the cool side, could you tell me which one is the truly warm or cool colour? Or at least your opinion about it? Very grateful ^^
They can be either. What is most important is whether a color is warm or cool when compared to another color. Red-violet is warm compared to a blue but cool when compared to a red. Yellow-green is cool when compared to a yellow but warm when compared to a Blue-green.
Thanks!
Amazing
Thanks for sharing
I was having trouble with some watercolor terminology, but I think I figured it out & wanted to share. Some artists talk about blues like ultramarine being "warm blues" and for me that just did not compute at all. Reason is I'm seeing colors like ultramarine as if they are ultraviolet on the electromagnetic spectrum (like from a prism), and that's the opposite end from infrared, which I'd associate with "warm." I now know that I need to stifle my physics brain, LOL: pigments (i.e., watercolors) are organized in a circle (the color wheel), while color (i.e., light) is organized in a linear manner (the electromagnetic spectrum). If you ever have a student who stumbles over "warm blues," maybe ask them if they're a scientist. ;-)
Could be, but most confusion comes from wanting to identify a color as absolutely warm or cool. Blues are cool as a whole and Reds warm as a whole so a warm blue seems to make no sense. In practice it's how blues compare to each other or how they "lean" warm or cool. I'm reminded of the children's game, cold or hot. When you're getting close to something we would say "you're getting warmer" or "you're hot" if you were right on top of it.
- I am on the verge of buying White Nights watercolor tubes. I took a que from your videos and selected 12 amazing colors that I really need... Single pigment, transparent, 3star lightfast etc. etc. And then, I see a 24 white night palette on Amazone for the same price. Some colors I need, most I don't, some don't have the great ratings. What do you think I should do, be greedy or not?
Less is usually better especially if you’re trying to learn more about mixing and color theory.
Another awesome video on color I needed thx
+Steven Michael Fredrickson 👍
You've been very helpful with this tutorial!
+kathy wilden glad to hear it!
This was very easy to understand. Thanks so much !
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Wonderful video! I really need to do this.
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Thank you for sharing your knowledge of colours, but I need more!
QUESTION: For example, how do you know when to use a cool red or a warm red to mix with a cool yellow or warm yellow? I don't have access to many different colours but I would very much still like to know!
There is no specific circumstance for any of them. The best way to know what they'll do is experiment. Mix visually and don't worry too much about formulas or color recipes.
The Mind of Watercolor Oh ok I'll keep at it then. I am still very new at this point and have only limited and inexpensive resources with which to practise. I have a warm and a cool of the primaries. Any suggestion on how to move forward in exploring these colours and their offspring? Perhaps a chart or process to help me remember what I have made and how I have made it? Is there such a thing? Thank you again for sharing your knowledge of how water colours think! :)
My most recent video on Phthalos shows the process I use for experimenting with colors. I personally don't use complex charts or matrixes. You can if you want. Some do but I just like to take a color around the palette and see what happens with any or all of my colors.
what are the watercolor should the beginner use it ?
Very well explained - thank you!
+Judy Cozon 👍
Thank you very much you are perfect instructor :)
thanks for your explanation. it really helps
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I have always been a chicken to mix my own colors but you have explained it very well and now maybe I'll try to be a little braver.😀😀
Really useful, thanks. Now I need to play :-)
Hi there! Dropped over from Lindsay's live video... subscribed!! Emi
Thanks!
@@mindofwatercolor
Kitna aaj ka
Hi Steve. Another great study and tutorial on color study and experimentation. Honestly, I love experimenting with color mixes and how they react or interact with one another as much as actually painting. Do you find certain paint brands mix better than others? Would to hear you thoughts on that.
Some paints I've played with don't blend well.
+Marjolein Vanderhoeven No not particularly. All the paints I've ever used mix about the same.
Hi Steve, I'm choosing my first colours to buy and would definitely want the biggest range I can get with minimum investment for my first tubes. I watched your earlier favourite 8 colour videos and you mentioned using sepia and Payne's grey to warm or cool colours. could you not do that with this complementary colour mixing? is it just easier with them?
Yes you can. Its more predictable with them. Complimentary mixing takes a bit more fiddling. I also use neutral tint but its not in this group.
Hi! Just a quick question: what do you think of using white to mute areas of a watercolor painting or cool down a color? Do you use white? Thanks!
+Kay Gentry Yes, some watercolor painters do that. I don't personally use white as I prefer a more transparent look, but thats just a preference choice. I've seen white used to mix in skies and distant backgrounds where muted colors are key. It produces a sort of chalky look which is ideal to some painters. Give it a try and see if you like it.
+Thanks for the advice... time to experiment!
Thanks for the explanation of the warm and cool colors. I now have a better understanding. This talk of color reminds of a questing that has been nagging me for a few years now.
And that concerns pure color. At one time, I thought thaylo blue was a pure blue then I read that it had green in it. Well, that disqualified thalo blue (which is still one of my favorites). Then I thought that ultramarine blue was a pure blue, but that fact change when I heard youtube artists claim that ultramarine blue had red in it. So, now, ultramarine blue is disqualified.
So, my question is there such a thing as a pure blue, a pure red, and a pure yellow? If there is who makes them? And why aren't the paint companies listing them?
Cobalt blue is close. But for mixing, a green-leaning blue is best. Phthalo blue green shade or a cyan.
Thank you so much, as I am a very beginner it was most helpful. :-)
+Janet Allen 👍
Very helpful, thank you.
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Great lesson...thanks,
Extremely helpful!
Another great informative video! Thanks!
Curious about how you get grey?
Thanks! Check out the video on complements linked in the description.
Excellent! Thank you.
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this is really great!
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Very informative! Thank you!
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For plein air purposes, most palettes have limited wells. However, I find myself wanting to take as many colors as possible. (just in case! lol) So your video has helped me immensely! Quick question: Alvaro Castagnet (and others) have always said to take a "warm & cool" color. (i.e. Warm Red=Cad red. Cool Red=Aliz Crimson.//Warm Yellow=Cad Yellow. Cool Yellow=Lemon Y....etc...etc... Why does he encourage that? And does he mean that only for the primary colors? What's the purpose of having the warm & cool versions of these? (Especially in plein air world...where our load is supposed to be light!) :) Thanks Steve.
+Sylvia Catalano Shadows most likely. He's a big shadow guy if you look at his work. Cool versions of colors work better in the shadows and warmer works best in the light.