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The Watercolor Book: Materials and Techniques for Today’s Artists Features
The Watercolor Book: Materials and Techniques for Today’s Artists Overview
The most thorough guide to watercolor materials and techniques ever assembled in a single volume, this is the book for anyone working with watercolors, from beginners to experienced artists looking to develop more professional skills. Starting with a comprehensive, up-to-date review of the tools and techniques required to master the art of watercolor, the book then presents detailed lessons in basic drawing skills. Design concepts are explored: line and shape, light and dark, perspective, and composition. All the major watercolor painting techniques are shown: methods for laying washes, preserving white areas, glazing, establishing form, creating textural effects, lifting color, masking, and using resists. With color the driving force behind the author’s whole approach to painting and his distinctive “organic” handling of the medium, color theories and strategies are clearly explained and applied to a wide range of subjects-still life, figures, landscapes, and architecture-some of which pair watercolors with other mediums such as gouache, pastel, and collage. An ongoing reference source, this is a book that watercolorists will turn to again and again for guidance.
The Watercolor Book: Materials and Techniques for Today’s Artists Review
I have way too many watercolor books (buying WC books is addictive, although not as addictive as buying new colors). This book is one of my absolute favorites, and one I find myself returning to over and over. I am a very big fan of the entire “Materials and Techniques for Today’s Artists” series, and I own their Drawing Book, Pen & Ink Book, Pastel Book, Acrylic Book, and Oil Painting Book.
All of the books in this series seem to follow the same basic format. The first third or so of the book cover materials in great detail. The emphasis is on the types of materials that you need, options available, and characteristics of specific brand names. If you’re a beginning watercolorist lost among all of the brands of brushes, paints, and paper available then this will be a great resource. The middle 3rd of the book focuses on general techniques, followed by a series of discussions related to specific subject matter. The final third focuses on mixed media – and in my opinion this is the area where Dewey’s books really shine. I think he’s a great pastelist and uses pastels and watercolors together to do some amazing stuff.
I view this is a great book for folks that know at least a little bit about watercolor painting and are interested in getting into more depth and detail. I probably wouldn’t recommend the book for absolute beginners, because I think absolute beginners would find the book a little overwhelming. Some initial questions that absolute beginners might ask (like “What colors should I have on a basic palette”) aren’t really addressed until pretty deep into the book. For an absolute beginner, something like Jack Reid’s “Watercolor Basics: Let’s Get Started” or Charles Reid’s “Painting Flowers in Watercolor With Charles Reid” could be a better choice. But if you’ve seen enough of watercolor to know that you want to know a lot more about it, this book is a great resource.
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