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Canal scene
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Posted
Well I started a canal scene at the Art Group I run . However it was absolutely rubbish ( I am very hard on myself but believe me I hated it it was in gouache which I have only used a couple of times. Anyway rather than try to rescue it I filed it to the bin.
So I have stared a new version in my old favourite acrylic. Here is progress so far.. hope you like to see how it goes!





Posted
Two photos one taken around lunchtime and the second about 5pm today. It’s coming along reasonably well but there’s a lot of work ahead . Having Parkinson’s makes any fine details and lines is a challenge with my tremor but it’s a matter of finding ways to give my hand support. Mahl stick is helpful but smaller pieces are more of a challenge! But where there’s a will there’s a way!



Posted
Nice job here Gillian. Reflections in water are always darker, I’d knock the bridge reflection down a touch with a wash of neutral tint (if you have any), and possibly break up the shape a bit… ripples in the water will distort the reflection!
Obvious I know, but a good job anyway, I like the narrowboat in particular!
Edited
by Alan Bickley
Posted
Reflections challenge me - to the extent that, to be honest, I more often than not find cunning methods to avoid showing them - a handy rock, a clump of foliage.... Secret's out now....
No reflection - other than photographs which have been heavily edited - will be a total carbon copy of the object reflected, and we'd have great difficulty reading them if they were; not only darker, but generally speaking rather more grey, and usually broken up. I painted the Gap of Dunloe some few years ago (and I've just sold the painting!) and avoided the reflection of the main mountain by introducing turbulence in the water. Well - I feel I should do it again, with that reflection, though will have to rely on a photograph to remind me. You may consider that you've shamed me into it, because you've not chickened out of painting the reflection: truth is, my failure to take it on has been niggling away at my leathery old conscience for some time.
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