Showing posts with label Descent From Mobius Wood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Descent From Mobius Wood. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 March 2016

The Process Behind 'Descent From Möbius Wood' #2


People often comment on or ask me about the depth in this painting and how I created it. With difficulty is the short answer. But let's have a look in more detail. (Sadly I haven't got any work in progress photos for this painting so I will illustrate the text with details from the painting itself.)

I started painting the background first and I used a watercolour style to create the lightness and blur, two things that help it to appear further away. I used thin washes of paint and worked wet into wet, that is wetting the board first before adding the wash, allowing the paint to blur and blend. The effect achieved is shown here in this thin strip:


The next stage was to add in the layers of trees furthest away from the viewer. These needed to be slightly darker and slightly more detailed. But I still kept these trees very loose. The lack of detail and paleness is what makes these trees recede in the final painting. Plus I added a thin blue wash to accentuate the effect.







This all adds up to what is aerial perspective and here is a fine example:



Notice how the mountains in the background become paler and bluer the further back they go. This is the technique I was applying to the trees.

The next layer of trees were painted in a more traditional acrylic style with thicker layers of paint. This helped me to make them crisper. Again you can see this layer becoming darker.


This process continued through the remaining layers, each one darker and more detailed than the one before. The struggle was in judging the darkness of each layer so that the final layers would be almost black, but still contain detail. Let's look at a tree from each subsequent layer to illustrate:












In my posts on how I made 'The Insidious Whisper', I wrote about how difficult it is to paint within a very narrow band of tones. It was exactly the same in this painting; the darkest trees were a complete nightmare. Getting them to look cylindrical before I added any details took me many attempts. Then keeping the details dark enough but different enough to be visible was another headache. It was a process of trial and error: paint a bit, dry it, then modify the paint and repeat until the desired tone was reached.

Put all of these trees together and the final image is (hopefully) one that you feel able to walk into.



To return to my website where you can see a larger version of this painting, click here.


Sunday, 28 February 2016

The Process Behind 'Descent From Möbius Wood' #1


I thought it was about time that I looked at the process behind my first painting in the 'Seven Gates' series: 'Descent From Möbius Wood'.

Unlike the others in the series, this image came to my mind fully formed. I had seen a tree that looked like a spider emerging from the ground in a local wood and knew that it would make a great subject. I just had to wait for some fog. And a sunny morning. It took a while...

Eventually I got the photo that I needed. After that I worked on it in Photoshop, making the central tree even more sinister. You can see the differences in these two photos:

 Before

 After

I also added in the trees at the outer edges to frame the painting and draw the viewer into the centre.

 
Before 

 After

I decided on the slightly unorthodox composition of putting the main subject in the centre because I wanted the main tree to be straight in front of the viewer, as if being drawn directly toward it.



When children paint pictures of trees, the trunks tend to be brown. But when stood in a forest concentrating on the colours present within a tree, purples, greens, greys etc. can all be seen. There is actually very little brown evident. So when I was processing my photo of the forest, I tweaked the saturation to bring out these natural colours. This helped me enormously when it came to adding subtle colour washes to the trees when I started painting.


In the next stage, I drew the forest image on my illustration board but I changed the central tree yet again. I was trying to balance the tree looking sinister with it not being spotted straight away but I couldn't resist adding more spiky bits and talon-like branches. That was the aspect that realy appealed to me, as you can probably tell from my other paintings. But even now it surprises me how many people just can't see anything other than a pleasant fairy tale forest. 

Next time, I'll go into the painting process and how I created depth in the image.  

To return to my website, click here.