I have found that painting fluffy white clouds or shadows or gradients is highly dependent on brush type, type of paint, how dry the paint on the brush is, how dry the paint on the canvas is, etc.

I am trying to figure out how to do this consistently. Is there a type of paint best for this? Maybe one that is chalkier somehow compared to most paints that are heavy bodied?

  • @MiddleWeigh
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    1 year ago

    I haven’t painted in a long time…but perhaps like a gouache, or just get really good at dry brushing?

    I think the thing your avoiding is the thing you should learn. Consistency = skill.

    Learn the touch yknow.

    • @3rdBlueWizardOP
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      11 year ago

      Do different paints dry brush differently? I guess that’s kind of the same question. I’ll just have to experiment.

      • @MiddleWeigh
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        11 year ago

        Yea each paint is different. Even different colors can be slightly different.

        I think you just have to paint lots and lots of clouds tbh.

        I am OK at painting, like I know the process, and used to be pretty into it, but I am out of the loop, sorry.

        Painting is very tactile. There’s little separation between you and the medium. You just have to do it a bunch yknow.

        Just thought I’d pop in.

      • Downtide
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        11 year ago

        Yes they do, and its almost impossible to say which is “best”. There’s one that’s best for your paper/canvas, your brushes and your technique. The only way to find the best for you, is to buy a few tubes of different brands and see which ones you prefer/find easiest. And don’t worry about wasting paints if you don’t like them; stick with white and primary colours and you can use the others for different techniques. You can even mix paint of different brands, to get a balance between them.