'Wellington Coast', Seascape - Painting Process Photos and Final Art Work
I painted this in 2015 and is a seascape scene inspired by the coast of Wellington, New Zealand. I paint this art work in oils.
I will show you the process of how I created this painting.
I start my painting by preparing my canvas with a thin layer of burnt sienna, this helps with tone and warms up the painting.
I start by blocking in the sky.
I use desaturated colour for the distant headland, this will help to establish a depth dynamic within the painting.
When blocking in the painting I try not to get too bogged down in detail.
Once the blocking in process is complete I start modelling the paint and building up the detail.
I save my tonal best for last.
Wellington Coast, 8" x 12", oil on canvas.
I hope you liked this post, I have more art on my website: samuelearp.com
Thank you for sharing the process behind your beautiful work.
Thanks @opheliafu, I love sharing my painting knowledge :)
Beautifully painted. Love the whole painting but the part I find the most fascinating is the light just under the wave as it's about to curl over.
Upvoted, resteemed and following you now. 🙏🌀🙏
Thanks so much @allyspirit and thanks for the resteem :)
Pleasure is all mine. And hopefully others who will see it now as well. 🙏🌀🙏
Great painting, thank you for showing the process. (the blocking etc.) gonna try that sometime :)
Thanks @wordsword, glad you liked it, I love sharing my painting knowledge so I hope it helps :)
Astonishing work Samuel, it's perfect :) resteemed
Thanks @speckofdust and thanks for the resteem :)
This is amazing!
Thanks @xerneas :)
Wow - so nice to see how you built the picture up. Thanks for sharing this with us @samuel-earp-art
Following you now
Thanks @greenstar, I like your page too, I followed you back :)
You have a remarkable talent! I love it!
Thanks @melnesimo and thanks for the resteem :)
Nice artwork..
Thanks @kerr876 :)
This is amazing! Thanks for sharing
Thanks @saqib :)
I like your post sir, I am following you
Thanks @vhinz88, I've followed you back :)