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Learn watercolor painting on YouTube

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The New Color Mixing Companion : Explore and Create Fresh and Vibrant Color Palettes with Paint, Collage, and Mixed Media–With Templates for Painting Your Own Color Patterns

Uncover new ideas and easy methods of working with color from artist and popular Instagrammer Josie Lewis (@josielewisart), who offers fun lessons that will help you understand color in new ways, opening fresh avenues for your own artwork.

This comprehensive guide begins with an introduction to color that includes the color wheel, basic color terminology, and essential supplies. Starter projects help you get comfortable with color while learning how to work with watercolor, acrylic paint, and collage. Next-level projects take your skills even further, with more innovative techniques.

  • Make gorgeous rainbow effects using a variety of materials and methods.
  • Work and play with scraps, shapes and swatches in an array of hues that will help build your color confidence.
  • Create beautiful texture in watercolor and acrylic paint using simple supplies and techniques.
  • Mix colors to produce shades ranging from calming neutrals to blazing brights.
  • Use color effectively to take your imagination to new heights.

Избранные страницы

Main Color Techniques
Studio Supplies
1 STARTER PROJECTS
2 NEXT STEP PROJECTS
Practical Considerations for Sharing Your Work
Templates
Thanks
Resources
About the Author

Artist Josie Lewis, whose Instagram account @josielewisart has more than 450,000 followers, has taught college-level painting, drawing, art appreciation, and two-dimensional design, and also regularly teaches workshops, leads creative retreats, and hosts exhibitions in her Minneapolis studio. She has been featured on DesignSponge, Insider, High Times, and by many other social media influencers. Josie’s work has also been exhibited widely throughout the US and can be found in the collections of many private and public institutions, including Target Corporation, General Mills, University of Arizona at Phoenix and Flagstaff, and University of Minnesota. Her current work, which explores the interaction of material, pattern, repetition, and color, spans many mediums, including sculpture, painting, mixed media, and film. A two-time grant recipient of the Minnesota State Arts Board, Josie has a BA from Bethel College in St. Paul, Minnesota, and an MFA from the University of Minnesota. Originally from the North Shore of Lake Superior in Minnesota, she lives in the Twin Cities. In addition to @josielewisart, you can also find Josie on Instagram at @petrifiedrainbow and @colorcompanion. See more of her work at josielewis.com.


Camden Public Library

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Camden , ME 04843 United States 207-236-3440

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Why can’t I wish upon a star in Boston?

This past summer, my boyfriend hosted bonfires on his parents’ farm for all our friends and coworkers to hang out at. During the final bonfire of the summer, we decided to sleep outside on his trampoline and look up at the stars. Since he lives on a property with a lot of open space, it was the most stars I’ve ever seen at once. Suddenly, right before we both dozed off, we saw a shooting star in our sleepy haze. That star has been the muse for all my shitty poetry and watercolor paintings ever since.

One of my favorite pastimes in Virginia is stargazing. With the open countryside just a stone’s throw from my house, I maintain that we have the perfect view for stargazing.

When I come home from a long night of work, the best way for me to decompress is to look at the stars for a good 10-20 minutes before heading inside to debrief with my parents. This same meditative practice also applied to rehearsals, sleepovers, and picking up my sister from dance.

There’s something about looking up and being reminded that the universe is so much bigger than us. It melts my worries and qualms away instantly. Who cares if a customer was rude or that my manager yelled at me? Nature has produced wonders far bigger and more important than all of us, and it will keep doing so for a duration so vast we can’t begin to fathom it. By the time I’ve found Big Dipper and Orion, I no longer feel that whatever I was upset about is worth occupying real estate in my brain. The problems of today won’t even exist in one hundred years. Stars are forever.

Once I came to Boston, I could no longer use this therapeutic technique. My first outing into Boston Common at night marked the moments I couldn’t find a single star, even on a clear night. Amidst the glow of buildings, car headlights, buses, and streetlights, the city’s lights polluted the night sky, making it impossible to see any constellations—let alone a shooting star.

Short of flying back home, the only times I can see the stars or the moon are when I visit my aunt in Essex, Mass.Mass.. I slept over the night of the Harvest Moon, which is dubbed for lighting the way for farmers late into the night to get their harvest, since it is the full moon closest to the autumn equinox. Even though it was too cloudy to see stars, I could see the full moon in all her divine feminine glory—and then I looked a bit southwest and saw the bright beaming morsel of Jupiter. The largest planet in the solar system is just a twinkling speck next to the bright, big, beautiful moon. Of course I know how distance works, but this juxtaposition reminded me of how I feel when I look at the stars.

Why is it that I feel smitten looking at the stars, more so than any other natural beauty? Could it be the zodiac qualities that I’ve spent years learning inside and out? It can’t possibly be that simple. It has to do with the feeling that they appear so close, and yet exist so far. Like I could reach out and touch them, dance with them, wrap myself in them, when I know I can’t. Not for many light years. And especially not when living in Boston and all its light–polluted glory.

Light emitted outdoors that casts its glow upwards or outwards reflects across the entire sky—as far as that light can stretch. When you consider the multiple skyscrapers, marquees,, and streetlights that a city like Boston has, it’s no wonder a once incandescent scene in the sky is nothing more than a dull gray, starless.

Light pollution isn’t just a concern of aesthetics. Sky glow, which refers to the appearance of the night sky after light pollution, can disrupt the circadian rhythms of humans and animals in areas with high light pollution (like big cities ). This can interfere with the body’s production of melatonin, which can result in higher levels of fatigue and anxiety. To take it one step further, researchers have found a link between lower levels of melatonin and cancer .

Light pollution disrupts animal migration patterns and habitats. According to National Geographic , animals like sea turtles and birds that are guided by moonlight can lose their way due to light pollution. Insects, though they are pests, keep our ecosystem running by being a food source for birds and other animals. With high levels of light pollution, they are drawn to light sources and killed.

As of 2020 , Massachusetts was the only state in the northeast that had yet to pass legislation combating light pollution. This light pollution map shows how light pollution affects different areas of Massachusetts. The light gray area, also known as Boston, is classified as “Sky is bright and discolored everywhere. Most people don’t look up.”

But it isn’t a hopeless case. Several politicians are pushing for legislation to curb light pollution in Boston and advocacy groups are urging the whole state to take action. Lights Out Boston is an initiative working to protect the environment from light pollution. There is a push from scientists here and everywhere to reduce light pollution in order to improve the health of the city’s inhabitants, both animals and humans.

Until then, I will go home a couple times a year and soak up the stars. I will sleep outside and point out my favorite constellations with my dad. I will take low quality pictures on my phone and think of Boston, who doesn’t yet know the power of the stars reminding you how small life is, and how big it could be.

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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