Improving One, Fixing Two

If you receive this in your email and want to see the photos, click on the title “Improving One, Fixing Two”.

When a painting doesn’t sell for awhile, I evaluate it, trying to figure out what isn’t resonating with possible customers. Yarn and Dutch iris are two things I love, but something was preventing the sale of these two paintings. Never mind that I kept them in the house instead of putting them out in the public—they started in the public and when they weren’t purchased, I took them home.

The yarn on the left is a favorite color combination of mine. (Doesn’t it remind you of the beach?) Apparently, it isn’t a favorite combination of other knitters. So, I added red and yellow. The teal is still teal, not blue, but the painting doesn’t photograph as well as it scans, and it was wet. I will add some green and some purple next, maybe orange and blue too. People love color. Me too, especially if it is brown with teal.

Dutch Iris might be my favorite domestic flower. I’ve sold several of these, but not this particular painting. I studied it awhile and decided it needed a darker background. And as with the yarn, it will scan more accurately than it photographed in low light while wet.

Those two paintings were a warm-up session before returning to this painting.

The plan was to detail the ferns, and as I was getting into it, I decided to fill in more in the greenery, improve the distant trees, just dance all over the canvas as I saw things to fix.

It’s better, but not finished yet. For some reason, the paint was misbehaving, making precision more difficult than normal. The paint was either clumping off the brush, or it wouldn’t come off at all. Walnut oil (this is my choice instead of linseed) didn’t seem to make a difference. So, this will need to just dry for awhile before I continue detailing.

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