BRAM your paintings and tutorials are brilliant 👏 and I hope you will return to RU-vid very soon you are greatly missed, I hope all is well with you.🇬🇧
Thank you Bram for another lovely painting ,it will give me the opportunity to attempt all the things I find hard to do trees/bushes/ grass /paths so the end result may not turn out as marvellous as yours did ,its also been cold and wet here in London ,so painting definitely helps when the weather is so awful, appreciate your videos Bram I'm learning a lot ,and look forward to your next one .🇬🇧
Love your work! I'd live inside this painting if I could! Thanks fir the wonderful videos. And . . . I appreciate finally knowing the BRI truth. I taught wet-on-wet in the mid 80s. Bob was my hero! If you love trees as much as I do, you might enjoy these two books: The Overstory by Richard Powers, Pulitzer Prize winner, the story of trees told from the tree's perspective, historical span of time from Antebellum era to the late 20th century. BEST book about trees I've ever read. The second book is American Canopy by Eric Rutkow, a historical layout of how trees played an essential part in the making of our country. It's a fascinating read.
Looks great, going to post some of my paintings to you pls tell me what you think pls started a northern lights painting the gesso took ages to dry I'm not sure it looks dusty
Love your videos. Hope you keep doing them. Love that you take your time and explain. I have one questions about this one. When it was time to put the birch trees in and I had to go into the bushes already painted, my knife was picking up the paint already there. Why? Yours didn’t seem to do that.
Can you shed some light on the artist G Whitman? He did Bob Ross style landscaping oil paintings. Pretty high level technical work but information is scarce despite his paintings being all over the place.