I appreciate for all the lessons in your you tube channel sir. We (whoever watches any lesson here)always definiteley learn something from each of your tutorials.
You probably dont give a shit but does anybody know a trick to log back into an Instagram account? I stupidly forgot my account password. I would love any tricks you can give me
Thank you! I have always thought scumbling was the scratchy motion you showed at the end, and couldn't understand why I didn't get the right effect! Now I know!
Great tip, to view it as a type of brush stroke rather than a technique causes me to understand what it is and its value and usage.. I'm not sure why I make this distinction, , maybe a type of brush stroke IS a technique...
You can scumble on both. When the paint is wet, you can easily scumble by holding the brush's belly parallel to the painting surface, using a gentle movement with the stroke.
Yes, Jeffery. Scumbling is always best done without medium, but I rarely use any medium, the exception being if I need a passage to dry more quickly. In that case, I will add a bit of Liquin.
The fat over lean rule rose up because of paint cracking on older paintings. Since oil oxidizes rather than evaporates, it is important that layers dry in the sequence that they were applied. So leaner simply means less oil which will dry faster. As long as the scumble is oily enough not to dry before the layer underneath it, there won't be a risk of cracking.
@@IntheStudioArtInstruction so I often heard people say scumbling is dry brush technique, but to comply fat over lean, seems I need to add oil to paint for scumbling, and I found add oil hard to make broken line, can you advice? Thanks
Thank you. So, what José calls “frottage” is actually “scumbling”? There is another thing. Some call vigorous rubbing in of the paint onto the canvas “scumbling”. Your opinion would be much appreciated, Dianne.
Sachie, I always try to stick to the historical labeling of technical methods. Vigorous rubbing is just that. I'm not sure there's an historical label for it. Scumbling means layering one color on top of another. Originally, it meant layering light color over a darker one.
Thats not scumble or glazing, and when you said "light on too of dark but in modern times its anything" what are you doing ? Your talking absolute garbage.