First oriental painting inspired cloisonne.
20 x 28 inches (approx)
I was able to take pictures of the painting in various stages and here is how it was done.
As with most of my paintings, I draw everything beforehand on Manila paper. It allows me the freedom to move elements about, erasing and re-drawing several times, without fear of ruining the watercolor paper's surface.
I first map out all the major forms and design with pencil.
I would refine the drawings and ink them when once I am satisfied with the results.
Once the whole drawing has been inked, I proceed with transferring the drawing onto the watercolor paper.
Shown above, the transferred drawing with its first application of gold acrylic. While you can do the gold outlines last, I prefer to do it first because the first application is usually the messiest. There is more tendency to make mistakes. I use a ruling pen to apply thinned gold arylic and find that sometimes when the nib catches on the paper, your hand can jerk and go out of line or the paint would suddenly blot. Acrylics are correctable while still wet but are almost permanent when dry. Because I'm not worrying about watercolor paints already in place, I can erase mistakes easily by re-wetting the area with clear water and blotting with a tissue paper until the errant acrylic is erased. The succeeding applications of gold outline gets easier because the ruling pen's nib glides onto the smoother first outline application.


So that is how it is done.
Thank you for looking
Thank you for looking
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