'Summer Bounty' 10x8 pastel ©Karen Margulis available $145 |
I was very happy to have her come to my studio and share some of the things I have learned along the way that have helped me become a better painter. We chatted. We test drove some pastels and paper...Terry Ludwig and Diane Townsend seemed to be favorites! We did thumbnails and talked about easy ways to start a painting. After my demo we painted together following the steps I had shared. It was wonderful to share pastels with an enthusiastic artist!
As I prepared for this class I wanted to give my student some good advice....something that would be helpful and encouraging. I came up with four things that helped me when I was new to painting. I'll share two today and two in tomorrow's blog post.
- Get to know your medium. Research and purchase the best materials you can afford. Learn all you can about pastels and the available brands. Artist quality materials really do make a difference. So often artists tell me they don't want to spend money on the expensive or 'good' pastels and paper until they know they will like it ...or are good enough. It's a catch-22. It is harder to have good results with cheap materials. It can be downright frustrating to paint with cheap hard mid value pastels on unsanded or regular drawing paper. I've met artists who gave up on pastels because they were not having success ...it wasn't their skills....it was their materials.
***Before investing in good supplies try them first! See if you can find another pastelist or
instructor in your area and ask to try out the 'good' pastels. And if you do choose to invest
in better materials and change your mind...Ebay is your friend.***
- Get Comfortable with your medium. Once you have good supplies you need to get comfortable with them. Use them! Pastels can make a variety of marks. Learn how to hold them so that you can get wide marks, thin linear marks, light strokes, heavy strokes and so on. The best way to get familiar with them is to use them.... a lot! Make marks. Experiment and play.
***A great way to learn how to make marks is to paint without trying to make a good painting.
Paint skies or simple objects...something that allows you to just make marks and
get comfortable with your pastels.
Not sure which brand of pastels or paper to buy? Take them for a test run with a sampler set from Dakota Pastels. Click here for details.
Painting Notes: Today's painting is on Uart 400 grit sanded paper with Terry Ludwig pastels. This was one of the demos painted in my class.
Excellent advice!! I was one who held off getting good pastels and almost gave up. With Karen's advice, I got good material and am showing progress.
ReplyDeleteExcellent Anne! Thank you for sharing and keep on painting!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for sharing your advice!!
ReplyDeleteExcellent advice!!
ReplyDeleteWhat paper would you recommend for beginners? Do you have any personal favorite pastel brands?
ReplyDeleteHi! Thank you all for commenting! To answer the question about the best paper for beginners.....it really is what you get used to but my favorite paper is Uart 400 or 500 grade. My favorite pastel brand are Terry Ludwig pastels.
ReplyDeleteComposition book....I'll be blogging about it but Edgar Paynes book on composition is the standard. I also like Mastering Composition by Ian Roberts.
ReplyDelete