Hi i studied watercolour at university many years ago, but was told id be better at sculpture.and to be honest i am. However,a serious heart problem stopped me in my tracks. I had to retire from teaching and the pandemic brought me back to watercolour. I find listening to your videos was/is a good refresher course and I’m enjoying myself enormously. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
12:08 thanks Paul, I’ll go back to the drawing board to add these 3 colors to my pallet. Understanding these theories has been very hard for me to remember, so if I play around with them, I should remember better. Your lessons are terrific!
Thank you Paul, only recently found your site. Took art classes at 16... was taught by Patsey Glenday... developed a love for your favourite colors in early '60's ... disapproved of by all since I went back to painting due to lockdown... delighted you "own" them too!
Jenna Rainey suggested your videos as a must watch & that's how I'm here !! I thank you for this informative video, & you may have to thank her for your growing subscriptions 🎶👌🏽👍🏽🎶👌🏽👍🏽
Paul, you are absolutely amazing . I am a beginner watercolor hobby person. You have a gift for teaching. Please don't stop making videos. I have learned so much, just watching you. Truly thank you.
Thank you for making colour theory more understandable. I love the way you structure your videos and the gentle humour you bring to them . You keep your viewer’s attention in an enjoyable way, the sign of a good teacher .
I am so happy to have found your videos. I wake up every morning thinking about what I am going to paint today. Thank you, thank you, thank you! You have truly inspired me!
Wow!! I’ve been struggling with color theory for so long. I love your explanation, you’ve broken it down beautifully. I will keep coming back and rewatching this until I have it memorized. I will also be putting away every color I have acquired and use only use the 3 primary colors. What a great tutorial, Thank you!
So grateful to Jenna Rainey for recommending your channel! She was right!!! What an amazing artist you are! Subscribed! Only wish I could give you a thousand "LIKES"!!! Thank you so much for sharing these fantastic tutorials!
This one lesson changed my whole method of using paints and has made such a difference to the look of my paintings with the granulation. I've read about this before but it never made complete sense until now. Thank You
Hi dear Paul Actually when I bought your teaching book 15 years ago I didn't imagine could to see you one day and learn such an amazing lesson for free. You are really generous and I really proud of such a big 💓 teacher. God bless you 🙏 ❤ 🙌 ♥. Farzad from South of Iran 🇮🇷
A million thanks to you for this video 🙏🙂😊💕I always love the humor and wisdom naturally coming out from you. I love the way you teach. It is simple and understandable especially for beginners like me. You are such an inspiration and a source of good vibes. I also enjoy using the Paul Clark watercolor brushes (gold) I ordered from you. Thank you, thank you.. thank you 🙏😊💕♥️🤗
I decided to revisit my love of watercolour painting today and have just purchased your book! It's too late to start with the book so I was looking for informative tutorials and by chance I watched you! didn't know you were the author. I will hopefully enjoy my journey and loved this tutorial as a refresher. Thankyou.
I’m only two minutes and 17 seconds in and you’ve made me laugh at least three times. I’m am brand new to watercolor and I also have way too many colors. I just ordered my first set of true primary colors. As soon as those arrive, I will be participating with you in this video, but I’m still going to watch the whole thing right now. You’ve got a new subscriber. Thank you!
Holy crap, I had to pause this video just so I could comment how freaking funny this is. Literally laughing out loud and snorting like a deranged bull. I’m going to share this with everyone even if they don’t care about watercolor. It’s that funny. God bless. You are so good at this hahahahhaha!!!
Loved that tutorial, read it so many times in books, yours included and never been able to retain it. I think I am visual learner. Very clear and just the right amount of time.
I’ve been enjoying your content Paul! I work allot in textiles and use the colour wheel allot but mixing paint is a whole new game! I bought some paint recently and had a list, I decided last minute to change it up and added your three main ones.. I’m excited to get back into this and escape the world. Also awaiting the arrival of your book. Cheers from Canada! Ps it’s time to get a nice aroma bowl for those Pinot Noir you drink!! It’s like the difference between using rubush paper and good paper 😊
That was an excellent start for this lesson. A good teacher always has to create expectation about what is going to be taught. I liked the salsa music, too!
Paul, the relaxed manner in which you deliver your lessons takes away the fear of water colour painting. This tutorial is one of the best. Trying to mix the right colours is always so challenging. Getting it right can change a painting from bland and unexciting to vibrant and interesting, causing the viewer to spend more time just taking in the beauty of the scene. Your work is quite excellent, and since I don’t have time to attend classes, I am delighted to be at home being taught by your good self.
I'm new at this, well I have painted in watercolours in the past , I was a kid back then and in school. Havent painted since then but a few weeks ago when i decided to resume and realised how little I knew about it and how fascinating it is. May be because im a grown up now but i ve never perceived painting as I do now. I spend my days engrossed with it - how to achieve a certain colour,doing the mixing in my mind before I actually paint. Art is magically meditative and you , Mr. Clark are a wonderful teacher. I wish I had someone like you back when I was a child. This colour theory video is very helpful.
Thank you again for this excellent tutorial! I also appreciate you sharing your color pallet. I just received my Winsor Newton Professional 24 pan pallet for Christmas... a little late. My favorites? Everything that is extreme! Winsor Green Blue Shade, Aqua Green (probably same pigment)... Quinacridone Magenta, Phthalo Turquoise... I like to do sky, ocean & sand, florals... made my own Coral... LOVE IT! I googled the recipe! You & your crew are off in La Gomera having a wonderful time. Take care & a thank you, from a California Gramma !!! : ) HI Margot!
I am the same way. Love the bright and brilliant colors. I naturally gravitate towards Bahama, Hawaii and other tropical clear and bright scenes. Also love doing florals! It’s become a beautiful coping mechanism when life feels like yucky murky mucky colors. 😊
@@dawnsheart316 MY TRANQUILITEE IS a utube site for beaches with all your favorite colors! It's one of the best videos I've seen!!! Thank you for sharing, 😄🌴🌺🌌✨
Loved the tutorials on paper and colour mixing and paint. I am a beginner and have been saving for a Winson Newton palette, but will now start with the three primaries. I already use good paper and my brushes are not too bad either. I have been doing a lot of line and wash and finding this to be my favourite technique so I will also invest in some hot press paper as well. I’m amazed at how much I have learnt in just 2 quick tutorial. Many thanks Paul, I’m off to the Art Store and will be doing my colour wheel this arvo.
I have managed to produce some lovely work thanks to your tutorials but more importantly have learned a great deal. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. From Pickering, Ontario, Canada.
Thanks for the great explanation. Sometimes I’m overwhelmed by so many colors, but am now going to try the 3-color approach. Looking forward to watching more and learning more.
I have made my way through all your videos, thank you I'm looking forward to new ones. I'm waiting for your book to come and I ordered the colors you use. I'm in the habit of buying art supplies and I have more paint than an art store and still with all those paints I don't have anymore of the three you use. Unfortunately I spend more time buying than painting. Hoping your videos will get me going.
I am a biginner and thought the use of the three primary colors to mix any other combination was interesting. I was then confused when towards the end when he showed a pallet with tubes of many colors. Loved the video, very informative.
As a new subscriber, I am enjoying AND learning so much more from your videos, your teaching style is direct, on point, and humorous, always looking forward to the next one 👍💜😎
As a newcomer to painting.. Thank you so much for this, your tutorials are fantastic but this one in particular has cleared up a lot for me, you made it so easy to understand. Thank you, Paul 👋👋
I Heard that moon-glow is not light fast all. Any truth to the rumour? Too soon? If you have any more info Is love to hear it. Cheers and have a great day!
Thanks for this absolutely ESSENTIAL INFORMATION for any artist that wants their creation (if in color) to "stand out" or "be noticed". Harmony, balance, contrast in colors is only achieved by applying this knowledge (unless it's an accident). I've been painting for decades and I still occasionally paint with only the three primaries and a 'grey' to remind myself of how important and useful the 'color wheel' knowledge is.
When I first started painting I was inspired by the old pbs artists which used a ton of colors... but went out on my own to learn primary color mixing.. because I was BROKE lol. Paint can be expensive and its much cheaper to purchase three (or four for acrylic since you need white) nice tubes of paint than an palette full. I found later on that adding additional colors often made my life more difficult.. since when you start mixing things become more complicated as you are never quite sure exactly what is pre-mixed into them.. sometimes you wind up with mud or a completely different unexpected result in hue... It can be very frustrating. This is especially problematic in watercolor since there is so much "unintentional" mixing on the paper via the nature of the medium itself. Even if you decide to branch out I highly suggest sticking with pure pigments, they are much easier to deal with than custom shades. Watch your tones.. mixing a very cool yellow with a warm blue for example may give you combinations you do not expect and they will clash used pure. I also suggest you take the time to do a color chart with the shades you have, it can be extremely helpful and worth the effort. Simply set up a grid with each of the colors on both the side and the top and mix a sample... be sure to include the secondary and perhaps even tertiary colors if you are working with a limited pallet.
Thanks very much Mr. Paul Clark for your excellent explaination about mixing of the three Main colours namely Blue, Yellow and Red that gives you other colours as well. So we have a good idea of how to get the required colours after seeing this video of yours. Thanks a lot and God bless you.
This is a great video! Thank you so much, Paul, for breaking it down. I would love to see more videos on colour choices (best colours to buy and mix) and setting up a palette.
Thank you so much for this video. Being new to watercolor I have been wondering where to start with all of the available colors. This is exactly what I have needed.
Just found you - after extensive book research on Amazon! I am looking forward to watching more or your videos! I love Phthalo Blue and also Quin Red, but my new favourite is Moonglow (Daniel Smith).
Welcome aboard Karen! - so pleased you found me and thanks for your paint suggestion. A few others have mentioned DS Moonglow - I've not tried it so I must get myself some!
Thank you so much Paul, I love how you simplified the subject! Easy to follow and fantastic explanations, as always! What I would love to see in a future video, if at all possible, is your take on the consistency of watercolour mixes. It is something I struggle with and I find the tea-coffee-milk-cream approach not straightforward to apply in practice. Related to this, is it better to darken a colour by adding some Payne's grey to a colour, or by diluting it less. I guess it depends what one wants to achieve, but in which context one should use a particular approach would be useful. Anyway, just thought those subjects could make an interesting complementary video ☺️.
Hi Eric - thanks for that and definitely something I'll look into. I think, as you suggest both approaches can work but it shouldn't be the default method to reach for your Payne's grey to darken a colour as it won't work with every hue. Adding more paint or diluting less is probably the better route - keep in touch and we'll look intuit.
Thanks a lot Paul! Oh yes, good point, I didn't realised it wouldn't work with every hue... Thanks for looking into such a lesson, that would be awesome!
Very interesting and concise lessons. Regarding colour, I was taught that the purist form of colour were Lemon Yellow, Magenta and Cyan and you could mix any colour from these three primaries, having said that I find your three colours do blend so well together.
Well, this was just a lot like wonderful! Sometimes I'm rather shocked at what I don't know, or to be honest, maybe what I've forgotten. This video is super helpful to me... at 69, I'm just getting back to some early dreams, especially in art, creative writing & music. The "powers that be" from my youth steered me away from the "frivolous" & toward business & administration as a "wiser" choice. So, I've got some catching up to do!❤ This channel is like a lifeline to my soul! THANK YOU!
I'm so happy going through your videos and learning something new every day.My question is whether is it OK to use black paint to make other colors darker, and if the answer is no, then how should I achieve very dark colors?
Since no one else answered... I'd say it's fine to use black. I do it sometimes. I'm new to watercolor tho and don't plan on being a professional. Plus there can't be many rules to art right? Ok..There probably are but there shouldn't be.
I wish I had found your videos back in June 2020. That first summer of the Pandemic was sorely in need of color! Thank you for being there for us now! Good day my friend.
I have been having a love affair with quinacridone gold and windsor blue green shade. They make the most beautiful greens. I don't think they would work in a limited pallet. They sure are fun though.
Excellent video, Paul! Thank you so very much. Love your teaching style and humor! I'm wondering if, in a future video you might discuss the qualities of transparency, opaque, and staining? I'd like to understand how to take advantage of that quality in a particular application. For example, let's say I'm painting a Hawaiian shoreline with translucent, crashing wave. Can I use a graduated mix of Winsor Cerulean (rather opaque) and Winsor Prussian (transparent) in the wave? Would the Cerulean's opaque / chalk-like qualities mask the Prussian? Or would it be better to ditch the Cerulean altogether, head to the art store, and purchase another transparent color like Winsor Manganese Blue Hue? It would be great to get your opinion on this and the other qualities I mentioned - along with a few examples. Thank you!
Thank you I have learnt more from this video than anything else you explain everything so nicely. Maybe now I can start something. I have all kinds of paint thinking I needed them. Now I will go with the primary colours and work from there 😊. Thank you
As a beginner of 4 mths standing, or sitting down actually, I've found your Tutorials a wonderful thing and have learnt so much. I have posted a couple of pieces to the Facebook group and have just watched this Video for the second time having become a little confused by the Colour Wheel I recently purchased. As you'd expect , along with your ways of explaining 'stuff' and natural humour this has to be the best exlained and most informative one yet. I still have a lot of your video/demo drawings etc and your book to catch up with but I am pretty much house bound these days so I am finding the time gradually. Plus my wife is happy with me being so quiet....... Can't thank you enough Paul
This has been THE most important recovery time and retirement all the thanks to your videos. I am now slightly colour blind but the colour theory explanation has helped me in my painting.
I'm just a beginner painting watercolors but following one of your tutorials I have become a believer thinking I can actually do this. In the past I worked with stained glass for years, then lampwork glass, jewelry, etc. Late in life I'm trying watercolors and find it fun, relaxing and exciting at the same time. Thank you so much for sharing your talent with us. I'm a follower.😉
Find your one of the better youtube sources. Taking a paint one picture acrylic with my wife and sister in law. Got me back into interest in painting. Pulled out the water color stuff. Paint tubes stiff to hard. Two sheets of paper mounted on a board. Flat 1" brush only one worth using. Took your advice on the three brushes. Purchased Daniel Smith essential 6 color set of tubes, basically the three prime colors. I found the cell phone Lucida app is good start on a sketch of the primary feature relationships. Cadmium and Cobalt from my understanding is a heavy metal and have been less available do to toxicity.
I recently started painting with watercolor, and discovered your videos. You are outrageously talented, and very funny in your videos. Thank you, from Canada!!!