It dries with roughly the same amount of gloss as Amsterdam acrylics. However, the level of gloss also depends on which mediums you add with it, and of course you can change the finish with a varnish. I hope this helped! :)
@@Royaltalens1899 I assume the quality of Amsterdam Acrylics is a bit better since the price difference? Or can you also use Talens Art Creation for like murals?
While the artist doing this video is talented, this demo is forwarding the wrong way to build a painting, with respect. The canvas could've been toned with either an analogous or complimentary color first, to provide a greater depth of overall color and interest. Second, the Flamingo should've been sketched over the "ground" or toned canvas after the toning was dry. THEN paint the darks of the Flamingo FIRST,adding each incrementally lighter shade as you go. Paint the darks of the legs first, highlighting with lights, second. What you've illustrated in this video is certainly a way to create a painted work, but more suited to occasional crafters than serious painters. What you've shown is the method for building a watercolor, and although acrylics are water-media, since they're almost uniformly opaque, should be handled like oils. Good job demonstrating color-mixing, though.
That was amazing😍
Perfect
hello, does this paint dry with more gloss than Amsterdam acrylics?
It dries with roughly the same amount of gloss as Amsterdam acrylics. However, the level of gloss also depends on which mediums you add with it, and of course you can change the finish with a varnish. I hope this helped! :)
@@Royaltalens1899 I assume the quality of Amsterdam Acrylics is a bit better since the price difference? Or can you also use Talens Art Creation for like murals?
While the artist doing this video is talented, this demo is forwarding the wrong way to build a painting, with respect. The canvas could've been toned with either an analogous or complimentary color first, to provide a greater depth of overall color and interest. Second, the Flamingo should've been sketched over the "ground" or toned canvas after the toning was dry. THEN paint the darks of the Flamingo FIRST,adding each incrementally lighter shade as you go. Paint the darks of the legs first, highlighting with lights, second. What you've illustrated in this video is certainly a way to create a painted work, but more suited to occasional crafters than serious painters. What you've shown is the method for building a watercolor, and although acrylics are water-media, since they're almost uniformly opaque, should be handled like oils. Good job demonstrating color-mixing, though.
Hi! Thank you very much for your contribution.
CUANDO SEA MAYOR............... QUIERO PINTAR COMO VOSOTROS................
brava e bello
Good job. But remember to pain the background first before the object
What paint color you use pls say fast