05 March 2022

Another Ukrainian woman

About two-thirds of the way through yesterday's painting, I wished I had done it in watercolor—so much easier to get nuance and shadow into the flowers, and her face, being rather small, was kind of a pain in the acrylics as well. (I keep looking at that mouth—there's something wrong with the angle.)

I didn't want to make a complete do-over, though (I mostly dislike painting the same subject twice), so I found another reference photo and painted a different Ukrainian woman in traditional dress, although without the flower crown this time.

I painted this loosely with my #12 Silver "Black Velvet" brush, and did the small details with a rigger, so it stayed wet and soft. The tangled heap of necklaces came out a little messy, which felt cartoony next to the face details, so I used my Arteza felt pens to do a very little bit of shaping up of some of those. Other than that, just pencil and watercolor, and a few touches of gel pen. I used a pale wash of my favorite Daniel Smith turquoise for the background, because it granulates so nicely; otherwise, all Paul Jackson watercolors. I'm much happier with today's result.

My plan for the day was to clean up the kitchen; but wouldn't you rather have a new painting? (I'll still work on the kitchen.)


"Ukraine Woman"—pencil, watercolors, Arteza pens, gold gel pen, on Fluid 140-lb. coldpress watercolor paper, 9x12 inches. Available.

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