Dec 9 2009

Spencer and Shania

I talked about Pennington Studio’s current project, Spencer and Shania, on the PS blog.  Read up about it here and comment.

When it comes to the painting process.  We made the canvas 46″ x 38″.  I put eight layers of Golden Sandable Hard Gesso and two layers of Winsor & Newton Oil Primer.  The sandable gesso allows me to smooth the gesso and prepare for even layers of oil primer.  Oil primer helps the oil paint adhere better to the canvas which gives  smoother, thicker layers of oil paint as it builds up.

Once the canvas is dry and complete, the first step to painting is the drawing.  Every painting (or portrait if you will) starts with a good drawing.  Don’t ever draw in pencil.  The graphite will over time come to the surface of your oil paint and show through.  Use colored pencil instead.  The pigment from the pencil becomes one with the paint.

The next step for the underpainting, I’m doing a combination.  I’m going to give the horse a burnt umber wash and the boy will have grisaille grey underpainting. Next week I will post the progression of the painting, and you can watch the progression.  Slow as it may be, the beginning is the most important.  The better the start, the easier the finish. No do-overs.  That’s the goal, at least for this painting.

Keep painting.


Nov 14 2009

Pennigton Studio

Art in the Garden was awesome.   Pennington Studio is officially going and John Robert and I are very excited to be pursing our passions together for the first time professionally. We’re providing endless possibilities of custom portraiture including everything from the photography, artwork, and framing.   I’ll be coming out with series of blog posts on our different but completely inclusive, combined services.   You can read and stay posted here.