Artist's Drawing and Inspiration

ARTIST’S HINTS AND TIPS

• Don’t be too ‘precious’ about your pastels. Remove the wrappers, they get in the way. Don’t be afraid to break them into smaller pieces if that makes them easier• Fresh white bread squished into a ball works really well as an eraser, and doesn’t affect the paper surface – especially good for papers such as Canson; whereas the sanded surfaces such as Colourfix can take more punishment and a putty eraser will work fine.• Make a chart when buying new pastels, by putting a sample of the colours onto a sheet of pastel paper; and write the brand, colour name and reference number beside each colour. This is invaluable when you want to obtain replacements.• Work from dark to light. Have a damp cloth handy for wiping your hands, as pastels are quite messy to work with.• Have a piece of carpet underneath your easel so that if you drop a pastel it won’t smash to smithereens!• I never use black or white pastels, as I find the effect too harsh. I prefer to make my ‘darks’ from warm earthy colours, such as burgundy or dark red mixed with dark blue. There is also an endless range of light pastels to use, without needing to use white. For the same reasons I don’t use black or white pastel paper – preferring to use Burgundy or Terracotta Colourfix.• Harder pastels work well for ‘underpainting’. Keep the softer ones for finishing touches and highlights.• Keep fixative spray to a minimum, as I have found it can change the colours slightly. I use it very sparingly a couple of times during a painting, with a very light spray at the end.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Artist's Drawing and Inspiration

Artist's Drawing and Inspiration6 min read
The Path Back
I have been painting since 1975, using in order: oils, watercolours, pencils, and more often nowadays, pastels. Painting for me started at primary school, along with a few Saturday morning classes after my teacher said I should take some formal lesso
Artist's Drawing and Inspiration5 min readVisual Arts
Tyler
• Prismacolor Premier coloured pencils:– Eyes: PC916 Canary Yellow, PC941 Light Umber, PC943 Burnt Ochre, PC948 Sepia, PC935 Black– Fur: PC1051 Warm Grey, PC1074 French Grey, PC941 Light Umber, PC943 Burnt Ochre, PC948 Sepia, PC946 Dark Brown, PC947
Artist's Drawing and Inspiration3 min read
Passion for Portraits
Tracey was born in Melbourne but relocated to Brisbane as a child in the late 1980s. Her fondest memories from this time are the countless hours spent in the family art room, drawing with her brother. Like most siblings, Tracey recalls how they were

Related