Using Masking Fluid / Frisket

I had never used masking fluid or frisket until yesterday. Everywhere I would read though, artists would talk about using it to save the whites and to create these wonderful highlights using it instead of opaque white watercolor paint. Watching Susan Scheewe using it in her DVD last Sunday made it look quite easy to use and wonderful for so many project ideas. I bought some Wednesday at lunch from the local Hobby Lobby store close to my office. I took it back to my desk so it would not be sitting in the car getting over-heated.

I used an older brush without soaping it (that is how I’ve seen many artists & the advertisements recommend using it - Susan Scheewe is the one who recommended soaping your brush first so you can use good brushes to get good lines not the worn out brush coverage types) - it was a brush that I wouldn’t mind if I had to throw it away - most artists generally have one or two (sometimes more) of those laying around in their art supplies.

I let it dry on my 140 lb watercolor paper. I painted over it with a few different colors. I let those dry. I used an eraser to pull the dried masking fluid off the paper. Yes there were bright paper white areas.

First … the masking fluid dried on the brush it seemed before I could even get it down on the paper almost. I did not like that at all. I did throw the brush away after trying to clean it because all the masking fluid did not come off the brush - it is always nice for me to know what actually happens instead of just taking some one else’s word for it - I trust them that they are right but I cannot talk intelligently about something I have not tried). If you are going to use this stuff - soap the brush first - I haven’t tried that yet … maybe tomorrow …. but my guess is that it will at least keep it from drying into rubbery clumps on your brush at least. The rubbery clumps came off on my paper too - perhaps I needed to be using a brush with longer bristles so I would not have gotten those - I have more “okay to pitch after masking fluid use” brushes - those old brushes are finally going to come in handy that I just had not thrown out yet.

Second … I generally do not draw the design on the paper first … I have a plan in my head and work around that … that way of working and using masking fluid DID NOT work well together for me. The masking fluid dried too quickly - I needed to know where to put it right away - it gave me no time to think about where to place it as I applied it. If you are going to use masking fluid - put a drawing on the paper first and know where you want to put the masking fluid BEFORE starting.

Thirdly, I did not like the hard edges that I got from using the masking fluid. It will be awesome in some paintings and really not good at all for others. I am not expecting to be able to create soft or lost edges using masking fluid - perhaps I am wrong … only a lot more testing will let me know for sure if I will ever be able to use it for lost edges. My best guess so far is that it will be best used in a painting to mask places where I want hard edges.

This was an experimental painting that I was fully prepared to throw away if it did not work well for me … yes … I definitely threw it away … but I learned a lot from trying it and I will keep experimenting with the masking fluid to see if I can create paintings that I like and will want to keep … maybe I can and maybe I cannot .. only time and trial & error will tell me for sure.

Review of Susan Scheewe Painting Trees & Leaves DVD Workshop

I bought the DVD a few weeks ago because I like her painting style and how helpful some of her tips in the other VCR tapes / painting books have been for me while learning to paint better watercolors over the years. I watched the workshop this morning - the dog got me up at 5 AM, I couldn’t go back to sleep and decided it was time to clear my drawing table off from the move so I can actually use it to paint with real watercolors again. I found the DVD buried on the bottom layer of my table and started watching it at 7 AM. I was pleasantly surprised to find out that she demonstrated how to use frisket (using a good brush - the key is to soap the brush thoroughly first before dipping it into the frisket plus cleaning it & re-soaping it during the process) AND she showed using the white texture medium as well as tinting it - gave me a great idea for a snow painting … now all I have to do is get some frisket & texture medium to try what I learned this morning.

Another reminder of something I know but tend to forget since I paint so many palm trees instead of oaks or maples etc … it is a great idea to leave blank spots when drawing your your tree trunks - that way you can have foliage there without a tree trunk showing thru the foliage - many trees have bits & pieces of trunk showing - not the entire trunk. In oil, it is easy enough to cover those up … in watercolor - they can show through way too easily and ruin a great painting unless you find a way to solve the problem.

She was also giving do’s & don’ts … and how to solve problems from doing some of those don’ts if you did it before thinking about it. Problem solving in watercolor painting is quite unique to watercolors I’ve found - those accidents are not necessarily going to turn out to be happy accidents unless you decipher a way to work around things that happen … it was a nice reminder to me also that it is too much water on the brush that generally causes those backruns that I do not want happening most of the time :)

Those backruns have their place and work great in some areas, like for tree bark or perhaps some fine clouds or perhaps water ripples … but they look awful in the middle of a pond going the wrong directions.

The cost was quite reasonable and well worth the price. I enjoyed the workshop and no matter that I have been painting in watercolors for several years now … I still do not know everything by any means. Everything was not new to me … much was a great reminder of things I already know but much of it was new and gave me new ideas of how to create different effects in my watercolor paintings. I’d give it a 10 on a scale of 1 - 10. 3 hrs is a long time but the time flew by while I was watching it so I didn’t really notice how much time it was taking from my day. Be sure to plan for those 3 hours though when you watch it. I knew that Sunday morning with no major plans for the day was a good time and being up so early - I got a head start and still have plenty of daylight for painting today.

Tags: , , , ,

Watercolors - Painting - Gifts - Art - Fun