January 14, 2008 at 8:53 pm
· Filed under Watercolor Paintings, Watercolor Supplies
This is my first attempt at painting on the watercolor canvas sheets. I only used my watercolor pencils.

The sheet did not buckle anywhere near what I was expecting. The first layer I laid down using the watercolor pencils, I used a lot of water (I thought anyway) using a mop brush and it did not run & scatter like paper does … I liked that. The colors were darker than usual and I liked that also. I put the tree on next - I let it dry then lifted some color out here & there on the tree. I also put in the grass … the bottom left corner grass is not good - I did that on purpose .. I want to play with this some to see if I can fix it to make it better. Next I will be putting in some leaves on the tree … seeing if I can fix the grass into something I like or not .. it will be fun. According to Tom Lynch - we don’t ever have to throw one of these away because we do not like how it turned it - he said he has reworked on these up to 30 times. We’ll see … once I get to 20, I will let you know
I give the watercolor canvas sheets a 10 on a scale of 1-10. I am still not giving up paper painting at all though … both have their place in my watercolor painting … I want a roll of the watercolor canvas - I have a mural project in mind that I would rather use watercolors than oils - that is the main reason I decided now was the time to try the watercolor canvas. The texture of watercolor paper is different than canvas of course so I can do different things with each. I’m looking forward to it. I enjoyed using it and am looking forward to getting better at using it … I hope you enjoy it too!
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January 12, 2008 at 9:25 am
· Filed under General, Watercolor How-To Articles, Watercolor Supplies
ISBN 8170207195 - Tom Lynch’s Secrets of Watercolor Painting on Watercolor Canvas DVD
ISBN 8170203485 - Fredrix Acid Free Watercolor Canvas (sheets)
ISBN 8170205532 - Fredrix Archival Watercolor Canvas (stretched)
I have not painted on watercolor canvas at all yet - I bought a tablet of watercolor canvas sheets as well as one stretched watercolor canvas - I didn’t happen to see any of the watercolor panels or I would have bought one of those to try also. I bought the video because I wanted to have an idea of what another artist had to say and how they were using it. I watched the video this morning on my computer. The video on my computer was rather jerky, tended to blur a bit sometimes and was a bit distracting from the material covered. I then played it on my Playstation 3 which is also a DVD player hooked up to the TV - same issue - this is a technical filming issue!
I was impressed so far with how Tom Lynch is using the watercolor canvas and the tips and techniques he shared. One of the most important to me was that you use a juicier beginning and a softer second layer. The reason to lay down more color in the beginning is that it is not paper - paper pulls the color off the brush and the canvas does not and there may well be more beading depending on how you paint. The lifting techniques are incredible, very exciting and you can almost, if not entirely, get back to the white of the canvas.
Since I started out as an oil painter working with stretched canvas painting wet-on-wet, I am expecting to like it after watching the video. The colors are supposed to be brighter and you do not have to frame them but you do have to use an acrylic sealer on them (3 coats). I didn’t know that so I have not bought any yet - the sealer does not have to be applied the minute you finish a painting though - he said he generally waits a week or so in case he may want to make changes to a finished painting (it is always a good idea to let a painting sit and not even look at it for awhile so that you come back to it with a fresh eye - you can then see things that maybe are not quite right that you couldn’t see during the initial painting stage). There is a Tom Lynch Tips & Techniques brochure packaged with my canvas sheets and the stretched canvas.
I opened the pad package and felt the sheets - they are thin and lightweight as I expected - they WILL buckle when painting so the brochure recommends stapling to Gatorboard® or taping to a solid surface - I am used to painting on paper that buckles since I do not stretch my paper so my plan is to use them as is on a flat surface (my drawing table - it can be raised but I generally use it flat for watercolor painting.) I plan to start my first painting on the watercolor canvas sheets using watercolor pencils.
Do I plan to give up painting on watercolor paper to paint only on watercolor canvas? NO - I have plans for different projects I want to do on the watercolor canvas sheets than what I want to paint on the watercolor stretched watercolor canvas and I like how many things turn out on watercolor paper - there is room in my art for both surfaces. I think the watercolor canvas rolls may be just what I was wanting though for a large wall mural project.
Fredrix has a 10 minute YouTube video online you can see at http://www.fredrixartistcanvas.com/ - it is also on the DVD. They also have a Tips & Techniques PDF brochure - it is not the same one that is packaged with the products I bought. There is also an audio visual Flash presentation that is different from the Tom Lynch video. Good information.
On a scale of 1-10 - I rate the DVD content by Tom Lynch as a 10.
Technical issues - from a filming point of view - I give the videographer/editor or whoever was responsible for the final DVD movie a 5 … they did not do a good job in my opinion but Tom Lynch did a good job of helping me be ready for painting on watercolor canvas.
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