It often just comes down to the little things, the details, those finishing touches on a painting that bring the most satisfaction. Here are five paintings that I added little things to on a single morning of painting.
Big Oak: I studied this painting for awhile and decided the dirt patch at the bottom might be too large— “might be” was enough to make me go back to touch it up.
I signed it too. Wow. Was that worth the effort? Maybe.
Square Orange Grove: I thought this was finished but maybe I wasn’t convinced, because I didn’t sign it. Trail Guy asked me why I hadn’t put orange blossoms on the close trees. Ummm, I forgot. . .
Excellent! And now it is signed too. All it needs is a title (I’ve been calling it The 16×16″), photography, and varnish.
Take Me Home: I tried to put a single leaf in tight detail on the road. It looked dumb. So, I put in texture to resemble dirt, rocks, sticks, and basic dirt road debris. Then I signed it. I don’t want to work on this painting anymore. (But I will if someone tells me something that would make a measurable difference.)
Homer Barn: I had forgotten to put the trees on top of the left hills, and the road wasn’t quite right. I worked on the shoulder of the road and added a layer to the field on the right.
Now I have to decide if it should have cows on the right, which will mean it needs a fence. I’ll just wait on these decisions until the road and other new parts are dry.
Dry Creek Wildflowers: more lupine and leaves on the skeletal tree were needed.
This could be signed now, but then again, I might keep “polishing”. I might want to keep this one. . . maybe I’ll just keep working on it so it isn’t ever quite ready to sell.
And thus we conclude another tour through painting the prettiest places in Tulare County.
2 Comments
In all five examples, your “tweaking” improved the paintings!
Tucker, like every other cat, always seeks out the warm sunshine, ahhhhhh!!!
Sharon, I’m glad you think the adjustments are an improvement. Many artists discuss how to not “overwork” a painting; mine tend to look “underworked” unless I revisit them 47 times.
Tucker often seeks the warm sunshine of my love.
Comments are closed for this article!