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Old 04-07-2002, 09:06 AM   #1
Sandy Barnes Sandy Barnes is offline
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question Glazing




I am about to use the prescribed palette for glazing (thanks Karin) I have always mixed everything with some white and am confused about the mixing of paint for glaze. Is the white in my underpainting enough white or do I mix some with the transparent colors? Also I generally paint the lightest lights and darkest darks first. Does this apply to the glaze technique as well?
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Old 04-09-2002, 10:25 AM   #2
Karin Wells Karin Wells is offline
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Quote:
Is the white in my underpainting enough white or do I mix some with the transparent colors?
A glaze is pure color mixed with medium that is translucent. If you add any white (or other pigmented color) to the mixture, it is called a scumble.

Glazing is generally used to enrich/enhance a color that lies underneath...a result that you can't get by just mixing wet paint.

Sometimes I lay down a wet glaze into a dry area of my painting just so that I can begin to paint thick light into it. This makes it convenient so that I am able to paint "wet into wet"...and yes, that destroys the effect of the glaze.

Before you begin to glaze a color, the paint underneath (sometimes an underpainting) needs to be rather finished looking. Glazing does not build or add form to a painted object....think of a glaze as adding more color and "atmosphere."
Quote:
Also I generally paint the lightest lights and darkest darks first. Does this apply to the glaze technique as well?
Not that I know of....
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Old 04-10-2002, 06:57 AM   #3
Sandy Barnes Sandy Barnes is offline
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Thanks Karin. As always, your posts (and replies) are a wealth of information.
I am SO happy that you are willing to take time to share your tips and tecniques on this board.
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Old 04-10-2002, 11:29 PM   #4
Karin Wells Karin Wells is offline
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Check this out. It shows some good examples of glazing technique over an underpainting.

http://glazing.fws1.com/examples.htm
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