Watercolor Still Life Painting Step by Step

This lesson is courtesy of Rod Webb. Rod is a veteran Watercolorist from New Zealand. You can learn more about Rod and view more of his work by following this link to reach his Website.


Watercolour Painting  My Way :Still Life

Note from the author: Since authoring “Still Life Painting, My Way!” I have had a lot of emails, from folks all around the world thanking me for the demo. Some have asked for a line drawing. I have created a line drawing for folks who are interested in following along. It is a large image, so a good size printout is possible
without becoming too pixelated.

To view the actual line drawing,  follow this link, or click on the thumbnail to the right. To save it to your hard drive, SHIFT-CLICK on the link, and save it out to your PC. Enjoy!

linedraw 150x150
still life painting lesson 1Set up the still life study outside in the sun. Background and base are pieces of masking board. Adjust items for best  composition and then photograph using a digital camera.You could use a normal camera and have the photo scanned at your local photo shop.
still life painting lesson 2Using your computer image software, first crop the image and then adjust contrast/brightness to give a faded image. When printed in mono this will use far less ink.
still life painting techniques 3Set up your printer to the size required for your watercolor paper you normally use. Mine is set to 34cms wide and 31cms high. As this is larger than A4 the poster and smooth resize will need to be ticked. Set to mono , we do not need a color print.
still life painting lesson 4This is the output from the printer. Four sheets of paper with image divided between them.
still life painting tips 5We now trim and paste together.
still life watercolor 6Glued and lined up, repeat and trim all four ready for tracing.
still life watercolor 7I use “Graphite Transfer paper” which should be available from your local art shop. If not cover the back of the printed sheet with soft lead pencil or charcoal pencil. Then drawn around outlines you want transferred to your watercolor paper.Don’t press too hard or you will damage the paper!
watercolor painting demos 8Here is the transferred image on “Saunders 300gm Not”  paper stretched and held with gummed paper strip. We are now ready to start painting.We have our sketch and the original image can be displayed on the computer while we are painting. This has the advantage that you can now eat the apples while painting.
watercolor painting tutorial 9Masking fluid is applied to the glass, apples and jar to save highlights. The brush shown is an old one. The bristles have been trimmed and washing liquid applied to protect by stopping the masking fluid collecting around the ferrule. With this brush, I can apply fines lines of fluid.
watercolor painting techniques 10Mix up plenty of wash for the background, mixture of ultramarine and touch of light red. With the painting upside down, I applied a flat wash around the objects and to the top of the painting. See the nice bead of paint collecting at the edge? This is typical when applying a fluid wash with the board tilted at 15 degrees. Don’t throw away the remaining background wash, save it you will need it later. Don’t worry if it dries in the palette, water can be added when required.
watercolor painting tips 11We have applied the wash over the glass, as the background can be seen looking through it.
still life watercolor 12Before the wash is dry. A piece of blotting paper is used to lift some of the paint, giving the reflective look of glass.
still life painting lesson 13Using some of the original wash, add Payne’s Grey to darken and paint the shadow between the jar and glass. Shadow of glass was painted using background wash and darkened at the bottom with Payne’s Grey. Shadow inside glass painted with background wash and Payne’s Grey dropped in while wet into the center portion.
watercolour painting tips 14Using the edge of a piece of blotting paper lift lines of paint on glass shadow on a curve, to represent ripples of light.
watercolour tips 15Dry thoroughly using a hairdryer and remove masking fluid from the glass.
watercolour tutorial 16The white of the paper now shows through for highlights, and ripples show in the shadow where paint was lifted.
watercolour painting demonstrations 17Pencil marks erased using a putty rubber.
watercolour tips 18Some edges are softened by brushing on clear water and dabbing with a tissue.
watercolour tutorial 20Computer aid: if a part of your painting is easier to paint from the side, rotate the image on your computer to match. You can’t do this with a normal still life setup!
still life painting lesson 21The fine edge for the top of the glass is added with a sharpened watercolor pencil. The pencil is used dry, but can be softened if you wish by lightly brushing with clear water. Detail is added to the shadow using the original wash. Add the band around the top rim and random curves across from top to bottom.
still life painting lesson 22Shadow inside glass darkened slightly at the middle.
watercolour tips 23Progress so far: background, glass, and shadows completed. The jar will be tackled next!
watercolor paint techniques 24First, we have to define the jar and give it some shape.
watercolor paint tips 25The shading is added using a mixture of burnt umber, Payne’s Grey and a touch of light red. While it was still wet, some extra was added around lid edge to darken. Side handle shown simply by painting in the shadow.
watercolour painting tips 26A light wash of raw sienna painted over all of the jar to give it an off-white china look.

Masking fluid is visible on lid and front edge.

watercolor lesson 27A strong rich blue mix was made from winsor blue and ultramarine. The pattern is painted in and edging darkened before first paint dries.
watercolour painting tips 28When painting detail, magnify the image on your computer. It helps!
beginner watercolor 29After painting the pattern on the side, the left was lightened slightly by lifting some paint with a tissue.
beginner watercolor 30Fine detail added after first was dry using a rigger brush. Masking fluid removed from jar, sparkle can be seen on lid and top edge, where the preserved white paper now shows.
watercolour tips 31Progress so far. Next step is to paint the apples. By the way they were delicious.


View Part 2 of this Watercolor Lesson >>

Watercolor Still Life Painting Step by Step – Part 2

This lesson is courtesy of Rod Webb. Rod is a veteran Watercolorist from New Zealand. You can learn more about Rod and view more of his work by following this link to reach his Website.


This is Part 2

<< Part 1 | >> Part 3

32maskMasking fluid applied to save highlights.
33washWash of light yellow and a touch of sap green painted over apple.
34tissueBefore the wash dries, some areas are lifted with tissue, giving a lighter shade.
35dryResults after applying wash and lifting with tissue.
36wetWet all of the apple with clear water. Using a mix of Alizarin Crimson and Light Red drop in some color wet into wet.
37glazeWash can be controlled, placed and moved around with your brush. If you get paint in the wrong place lift immediately using tissue or blotting paper.
38rewetAlways make sure paper is thoroughly dry before you re-wet the surface. Then it will not disturb the original washes.
39secondFirst glazes have been applied to both apples.
40yellThe color was too weak, so I added another wash of yellow!
41stemMasking fluid painted on stems to preserve lighter shade. Shadows added showing core shape and shadow of stem.
42slantI re-wet the apple with clear water. Lower your head and look across the paper, you should see just a shine on the paper. No sign of surface water.
43wetWhile the paper was wet, I added a reddish brown wash to top of apple and around the core to get a bit more shape. If the paper starts to dry, stop! Let
it completely dry the re-wet it and start again. If you continue to add wash to drying paper, you will get a cauliflower effect.
43pencilA watercolor pencil can be used while the paper is wet. Fine red streaks added this way. Or you can use with paper dry and if necessary softened afterwards by lightly brushing with a soft wet brush.
45appleShadow around stem darkened. I first applied pencil with paper wet then added final sharp lines when dry. The apple stem is also defined using pencils.
46applesThe masking fluid was removed. Larger highlights had edges softened by wetting and dabbing with a tissue.
47progNow I have two apples defying the laws of gravity. Lace cloth will be the next task. That should tie everything down!

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Watercolor Still Life Painting Step by Step – Part 3

This lesson is courtesy of Rod Webb. Rod is a veteran Watercolorist from New Zealand. You can learn more about Rod and view more of his work by following this link to reach his Website.


This is Part 3

<< Part 2

48laceShadows added to show folds in cloth and holes in lace painted at the back. Light grey with a touch of green used.Whoops, I just spotted a mistake. I painted the blue background right down to the cloth over the table top.
49whoopsSoon corrected. I laid a plastic ruler along edge where table should be to protect the background wash. Then used a wet sponge to lift the paint, still left a slight stain but that will be covered with the green.
50wipeBoth sides were sponged off.
51tableGreen table surface painted. Made darker at the back and lightened at front.
52holesHoles in lace painted with the grey/green mix. Remaining graphite sketch lines erased with the putty rubber.
53linesLines following the folds and curves of the cloth painted in.
60dotsDots added over lines for weave effect. Strength and pattern varied.
61shadStronger shadows placed around apples to anchor them down, up to now they appeared
to be floating.
62foldsShadows on rear folds strengthened, pale yellow added to front fold to bring out the middle fold.
58shadSome dots were darkened in the weave, rear shadows touch of blue added, yellow shadow near apple and touch of red added to front shadow. There is only just a hint of each color, although it is difficult to see in the photo.
63finishDecision time, is it finished?. I usually wait a few days and have another look before deciding.
64mattPlacing a tempory matt around painting makes a lot of difference. Find a nice spot for you signature.  Don’t know what color matt or frame I will use, any suggestions? icon smile The image to the left shows what I considered to be my “final painting”.  However, after showing this piece to several of my fellow artists, I discovered that there were a few things I could do to improve this painting.

Want to see those changes? Good, then keep reading!

backgrAdded some color into the background to break up the solid blue.
leftappLeft apple.

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