Colour Wise

Colour and Painting

This unit is designed to introduce you to Painting and colour mixing skills with acrylic paint

Acrylic paint basics and Brush care

BASIC KNOWLEDGE STUFF!

First thing to know about acrylic paint…  it dries pretty quickly! so you have limited "working" time when blending.

*Layering of hues is fine. Wait until first layer is DRY to avoid the "lift” effect (white spot when painting)

Care of your Brushes

Acrylic paint dries very fast. To preserve the health of your paintbrushes it is extremely important to:

During your acrylic painting session, make sure to rinse any residual paint from your brushes before putting them down and keep them wet just in case there is any unseen residue of paint near the ferrule, you don't want it to dry, or your bristles will spread out and lose their shape.

When you change colour paint or you switch to another brush, remove any excess paint with a paper towel or paint cloth and rinse the brush thoroughly, then lay the wet brush flat until you need it again.

How to Wash Your Brushes 

its not rocket science but its important!

colour theory and mixing

The Color Wheel - Primary, Secondary, Tertiary

click image for larger version

other colour coding models are RGD - screens and CMYK  for print . Explained here

Colour Bias

Imagine a time of poster paints and white paper. Of bright colours, chubbie crayons, green grass and blue skies. These were perfect painting days apart from one thing….brown sludge.

Lots and lots of brown.

Your teachers told you ‘mix yellow and blue to make green’, red and blue to make purple. You listened, but the problem was still there.. you created brown sludge. What were you doing wrong?

Nothing, you were just given the wrong paints…

In basic colour theory we learn that the colour wheel can be split into warm and cool colours. This can be confusing when we start to use paint as the primary colours red, blue and yellow alone are not the whole story. Small amounts of other colours are hidden within each pigment – this gives each colour a colour bias. This is often also referred to as a warm or cool bias...  confusing right!  THIS VIDEO gives a really good explanation of colour bias. or you can read more about colour bias here

ACTIVITY

You will now paint a 12 point colour bias colour wheel to show the difference between the two sets of colours.  Print out this template to work on.  Remember the mixing rations -- secondary - 50/50 Tertiary 25/75

Mixing Tints and Shades

Original material and tutorials inspired by Mrs. Tiffany Fox.  Her resources can be found here

Hue: selected colour

Tint: any color (hue) plus varying amounts of white (depending on desired value)

Shade: any color (hue) plus its complement [or dark cool colour [blue/violet/green]

ACTIVITY: colour mixing 

Tints and Shades. Refer to your colour wheel and secondary colour chart when selecting your hues for each box.  *watch the videos for practical demonstration 

** watch the videos to help you ESPECIALLY yellow - its the hard one to not get brown! 

Grey -the neutrals are made by adding a small amount of a shade to a larger amount of white.  

Chromatic Black - Blue Violet + yellow [refer to the secondary squares for what two primaries made your darkest blue violet and add warm yellow] 


Your finished product should look like below.

scan_ogd_2024-05-16-15-14-34.pdf

COLOUR MIXING SWATCH

swatch - COLOUR MIXING.pdf

SKILL DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITY