Take Three Colours: Watercolour Snow Scenes: Start to Paint with 3 Colours, 3 Brushes and 9 Easy Projects

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Take Three Colours: Watercolour Snow Scenes: Start to Paint with 3 Colours, 3 Brushes and 9 Easy Projects
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Grahame Booth
SeriesTake Three Colours
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:64
Dimensions(mm): Height 292,Width 216
Category/GenrePainting and paintings
Watercolours
Art techniques and principles
Painting and art manuals
ISBN/Barcode 9781782216995
ClassificationsDewey:751.422436
Audience
General
Illustrations 400 Illustrations, color

Publishing Details

Publisher Search Press Ltd
Imprint Search Press Ltd
Publication Date 22 October 2020
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

"There's no grandstanding or showmanship, just solid, honest instructions and demonstrations that produce solid, worthwhile results." - Artbookreview.net Snow scenes make wonderful subjects for beginner watercolour artists - all you need is the know-how and confidence to give snow depth, sparkle and just the right amount of colour. Popular artist and author Grahame Booth will show you how to achieve beautiful results, using just three brushes, three paints and nine fantastic projects. Starting with a small but perfectly formed tool kit of three brushes, a mixing palette, watercolour paper and three tubes of paint, Grahame guides you step-by-step through nine projects, starting with a simple scene and progressing on to more complex ones. Even if you have never picked up a paintbrush, you will be amazed at what you will achieve by the end of this book. And along the way you will have learnt all the skills you need to start painting wonderful snow scenes of your own.

Author Biography

Grahame Booth tutors workshops and holiday courses in Ireland and abroad. He is a popular demonstrator for art clubs and his success is reflected in many national and international awards. His work is featured in books, videos and art magazines, including Artist and Illustrators. Grahame is a member of the SAA and is based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. His work is represented in private and public collections including Belfast City Council, Ulster Independent Clinic and the Office of the Mayor of Annapolis, Maryland. He is Past President of the Ulster Watercolour Society. Grahame works in a relatively loose, traditional style. His subject range is international, and his use of colour, light and shadow are particularly impressive. He is the author of Ready to Paint in 30 Minutes: Street Scenes (Search Press, 2017), The Paint Pad Artist: Watercolour Landscapes (Search Press, 2018), and he is a contributing author to Artist's Painting Techniques (DK, 2016). To see more of Grahame's work visit www.grahamebooth.com.

Reviews

Imagine being able to recreate a wintry landscape, using just three colours. Impossible, you might think by artist Grahame Booth reveals how to do just that in his book Watercolour Snow Scenes. Taking you step-by-step through nine projects, you'll be painting masterpieces in no time. * Crafts Beautiful * Using just three colours, Grahame Booth shows us how to paint snow scenes in watercolour in this new addition to Search Press's Take Three Colours series. The pared-down painting kit keeps everything simple. Grahame leads us through nine step-by-step projects progressing in complexity as we work through them. There's a helpful chapter on how to transfer your drawing to the watercolour paper and plenty of useful tips and advice to give you the confidence to have a go and develop your own snow scenes. * Leisure Painter - December 2020 * If the idea of using colours for snow - even if it is only three - seems like a contradiction read on. Snow, of course, isn't white but takes on the colour of the things that surround it, especially the sky or shadows of building and vegetation. Grahame's message is simplify - look, visualise and interpret. Don't overcomplicate your mixes or fiddle with details and you'll soon find that less - a lot less - really is more. In this easy-to-follow guide, Grahame will guide you through shadows, reflections, hills, trees, water and even a sunset in nine straightforward projects. * SAA * Search Press have become adept at producing series that include books that stand on their own merits rather than simply fitting into pre-defined slots. Much of that is down to having as simple an idea as possible. As a result authors don't need to go into contortions to get the correct shape and are free to express themselves as they normally do. This makes the whole idea easy to explain to those same authors so that everyone has a clear idea of what's required. That, of course, is the key to any successful book, but it's surprising (and rather alarming) how often it gets missed. If everyone's pulling in different directions, the dog's sure not to miss out on its dinner. All of which is a preamble to saying that I like this a lot. Snow is as tricky a subject as water: it's one of those things that isn't really there. Water relies on reflection, but snow can be even more difficult. No, it's not just matter of a large tube of titanium white or areas of paper left intentionally blank. Snow doesn't reflect exactly, and it has an identifiable form in a way that water doesn't, but it takes its appearance from the light and shade that fall on it. Cue plenty of opportunities for over-complication and far too many colours in the mix. And, as if by magic - 3 colours and 3 brushes. Less is more, simplification is always going to be your friend. As the nights draw in and who knows what precipitation the weather will bring, here's a guide that will tell you all you need to know. No, not everything - that would be a tall order in just 9 projects - but enough for you to understand what's happening on your palette, brushes and paper and you didn't really need more than that, did you? -- Henry Malt * Artbookreview.net *