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The large oil painting commission has taken quite a bit of thought and time. It feels very important to make it the best I possibly can. This is difficult for a non-perfectionist, whose main drive is to complete projects rather than do things perfectly. However, as a grownup, I am capable of overcoming my natural bent when it is the right thing to do.
I photographed the painting while it was upside down on the easel.
Then I flipped and cropped the photo, enlarged it to fill my computer screen, and studied it.
This is a weird phenomenon, one observed and used by my drawing students and me. Things often look fine until you see a photograph on a phone, camera, or computer screen. Suddenly the flaws appear.
The result of my study session is a red oval around each part that didn’t look quite right.
Then I mixed up the right colors and began making minuscule corrections. My plan was to photograph the corrections for you, but all wet paint was shiny and looked terrible in the photos. So, never mind that plan.
I lifted it off the easel to sign it and saw that the bottom looked terrible.
Then I looked out the painting workshop door and felt happy in spite of the little hitch in my git-along.
Here it is on the easel, ready for the official photograph. In spite of looking tiny in this setting, it is way too big for my scanner.
Wait! You haven’t seen the edges yet!
Finally, paint the bottom of the canvas, and the painting is finished. (Still wet)
I think you need to see it in person to truly appreciate this commissioned oil painting of my current favorite scene of Tulare County to paint for the very patient and accommodating Mr. Customer.
2 Comments
I love the way you continue the painting around the corner of the canvas instead of just painting the edge a solid color. I’m sure Mr. Customer will be very happy with the results, and I hope you are, too!
Mr. Customer is very pleased, and his wife too. Sometimes I wrap the image if the canvas frame is thick enough or if it is a custom job and the customer has told me they will be hanging it frameless. For general work, I don’t put that much effort in because I don’t know if it will be covered by a frame.
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