About Doris Joa
My name is Doris Joa and I am an artist from Germany.
My mediums are watercolor and oil. One of my special favorite subjects are Roses and figurative work. I paint roses and also other flowers in oil and watercolor. Beside Pansies, Rhododendron, Peonies, Daisies and Tulips, there are a lot of roses in my gallery on my website like Heidi Klum Rose, Sangerhauser Jubiläumsrose, Rose “Mein schöner Garten”, Rose Golden Celebration from David Austin, Rose Innocencia, Rose New Dawn, Rose Clair Renaissance, Rose Queen Mother, Rose Bonita Renaissance and more.
My goal is to paint in romantic realism. I am also doing figurative work, portraits, still lifes and in 2005 I have started a new series of colourful Horse paintings in oil. I also have started with doing postcard paintings in 4?x6? and other small studies .
I have a great passion for nature and her beauty and try to capture this in my paintings. The sunshine, the shadows, the light and the glittering of a raindrop I find most captivating.
I love it when people tell me that when they view my paintings they can smell the flowers, feel the velvet of the rose-petals and have the feeling of standing in a garden.
Please be sure to visit Dori’s website to learn more about her and to view more of her work.
Her websites:
http://romanticrosesinwatercolor.blogspot.com/
How To Paint a Rose in Watercolor Step By Step
The Star of this painting and Demonstration will be the Rose painting “Open Arms”.
It is a beautiful climbing rose, which I bought new this year for my garden and I was lucky to see a lot of blooms.
I love the colours in this rose and I am looking forward to paint this rose.
Since I need time for doing a rose painting, I cannot paint from life, no rose would live such a long time.
Another reason is that I have two small kids, so I usually only have time to paint in the evening when they are sleeping – so I work from photos. Since this rose is in my own garden, I had enough time to really observe it and understand more about the colors.
I work only from my own reference photos.
I used a digital camera, Olympus C -750 Ultra Zoom to take the photos in this demo. It’s a great camera. I am able to see the details on the wings of a bee. I can zoom up to 40 times.
Now let us get started:
What do I need for a watercolor painting?
I need:
- watercolor paper
- brushes
- paints
- paper towels
- and of course water.
And I will show you later some helpfool tools.
I am using only hotpressed paper. Most of the time I use 300 g (140 Lb) Arches hotpressed watercolor paper, but I am also using Lanaquarelle, also 140 Lb (300 g) and also hotpressed.
I do not see a difference between both brands, only that one is more expensive than the other.
I like the surface of this paper, it is wonderful for describing the finest detail and it is possible to paint the whole spectrum of texture. Hotpressed paper allows you also to paint in layers without disturbing underlayers.
One thing: As you know, I am a german girl, so please be kind with me about my english. When I do not explain good enough or when you do not understand things, what I am saying, please let me know. Thank you.
Back to the first steps:
I always stretch my paper.
You will need: your paper, a board, stretching tape, jar of clear water and paper towels.
I wet my paper in the bath or shower , place it on the board and wet the measured pieces of tape by wetting them in the jar of clear water. I then place the tape around the sheet of paper (it is half over the paper and half over the board). With the paper towel I go along the stretching tape to absorb the moisture.
Do not worry if there are still some buckles in the paper. When the paper starts to dry they will disappear.

I have a lot of colour tubes in my paintbox, but I do not need them all. Also I work with different palettes.

In the next photo you see these small porcellain palettes. These are my favorite. I always use a small palette for my flower colours, one palette for the leaves and one for the background etc.

My favorite brushes are Da Vinci Maestro brushes. I have them in several sizes, but most of the time I work with sizes 2, 3, 4 and 6. The points of these brushes are excellent.
Before I start, I would like to show you some helpful tools. I am sure you know what masking fluid is. I prefer to not use it as I do not like the hard edges that you will get. Also it is easy to ruin your brushes with it. When you use masking fluid, use only old brushes. When I have tiny highlights in my painting, which are very hard to save, I prefer to use Masquepen. It has a very fine point applicator.

Another helpfool tool is Aquacover.
Here is the excact description: Aquacover is a revolutionary new product from Creative Mark! Aquacover is a versatile product that will provide new avenues of creativity and alleviate a problem that has plagued watercolorists since the beginning of time. It is available in 5 shades of white that perfectly match the most popular watercolor papers used today. Aquacover is the perfect cover up allowing you to fix small or large areas quickly and painlessly. Once applied it dries in seconds and is permanent, non-cracking and non-yellowing. You can then apply color directly over it without bleeding! Aquacover is sold in 1oz bottles with dropper caps and is sold with our unconditional guarantee of complete satisfaction. Get a bottle today. We know you’ll love it! (Due to its thick consistency, Aquacover is best applied with a brush. We do not recommend the included dropper for direct application.)

I use Aquacover rarely, but it helps me to get highlights back. You can use it with your brushes, it doesn’t ruin them.
The next helpful tool is an eraser from Faber Castell called the Perfection 7057. It is a very hard eraser, which helps you to get highlights back when you later decide to add dewdrops and you have not saved the highlights before. It is a great tool.











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Lynn Marlowe on Wed, 22nd Oct 2008 10:22 pm
What lovely roses and a good grasp of the English language. I especially was impressed with the step by step and what tools to use and how to from how to wet the paper to remembering to sign it. Beautiful work.
June Smith on Fri, 24th Oct 2008 10:58 am
Thank you so much for this article
I am taking lessons in watercolor and I printed all the pages
I really appreciate the time that it took for you to document all of the instructions
You have made them very easy for a person like myself to understand
very sincerely
June Smith
Lucan – Ontario – Canada
Doris on Sat, 25th Oct 2008 10:51 am
Thank you Lynn and June. To get such response gives me a wonderful feeling and I hope the Demo will be helpful for your watercolor journey.
Doris
Doris’s last blog post..New Rose Painting – Heidi Klum Rose
Watercolor Tutorial Links — Craft Stew on Sun, 23rd Nov 2008 2:56 pm
[...] How To Paint A Rose In Watercolor [...]
Marlene Griffin on Tue, 13th Oct 2009 1:07 am
What a wonderful rose painting you have done and shared with others step by step so carefully how you proceeded. Thankyou for your careful teaching. It will be exciting to follow your instructions. It is the season for roses just now here in Australia so i have bought a lovely bunch to make a start !
Sincerely
marlene Grfffin
New South wales
Australia.
KJones on Sat, 28th Nov 2009 8:01 pm
Thanks for sharing the tips about fixing mistakes. I haven’t heard of Aquacover or the Perfection eraser. I’ll be looking for those items. Your paintings are beautiful. I have a friend at work who is German and have German ancestry, but don’t speak German.
How long have you been painting?
Anushka on Sun, 30th May 2010 3:44 pm
That is so awesome. I really respect your art. I’m not a good artist though, but i’m trying my level best to make such a great art work. I know i cant compete you.
Pantea on Tue, 8th Jun 2010 9:10 am
Hi Doris; I love your works, they’re amazing and so passionate. Now I have a quastion:”Do you wet whole the paper before the painting? Why is that for? How wet you can have the paper and not ruining it? Do you start the painting while whole the paper is totaly wet?”
It seems a little bit more than one quastion, right?!
Thanks!
Simon on Wed, 16th Jun 2010 6:03 am
I am amazed at the things artists like you can achieve Doris. I have tried several times to enhance my artistic abilities (I even took a night class for 3 months) but I think you either have the gift or you don’t…
suzan on Wed, 23rd Jun 2010 6:47 am
I appreciate your work this very nice post & simple to understand but i have one question it is necessary to do wet the paper? & Thanks for sharing this information.