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From YouTube: "Gnome for the Holidays": Painting with Filomena Irving
Description
Couldn't join us for our "Gnome for the Holidays" event? No problem! Now, you can paint with artist Filomena Irving from home!
To complete this gnome painting, you will need:
#12 flat or bright brush
#1 round brush
Acrylic Paint:
Cadmium Red or bright red
Black
White
Ultra Marine Blue
Sap Green
Yellow (Medium)
Canvas (we are using 8x10)
Paper Plate (palette)
Cup/Water to rinse brushes
Have fun!
A
Cadmium,
yellow
ochre's,
green
ultramarine,
blue
and
I
have
two
piles
of
titanium
white
that
I'm
going
to
be
using
for
blending
and
mixing
the
tree
colors
as
well
as
the
beard
and
the
sky
or
the
trees.
Rather
so
I'm
going
to
begin
by
wetting
my
brush,
I'm
going
to
grab
a
little
bit
of
the
mars
block.
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And
I've
got
all
my
background.
Black
done
make
sure
you
wash
your
brush.
You
want
to
clean
your
brushes.
You
don't
want
to
leave
a
brush
with
paint
on
it
sitting
idle,
it
really
ruins
the
brushes
and
you
want
them
to
last
a
long
time.
So
I've
cleaned
my
brush.
I
have
some
paper
towel
and
I'll
dry
and
my
water
is
a
little
bit
dirty
right.
A
Now,
I'm
going
to
start
off
with
the
the
bottom
of
the
gnome's
outfit
and
the
reason
I'm
starting
down
here
is
that
I
don't
oh,
I
missed
this,
but
I
just
noticed
I
missed
a
spot
right
there
too
wet
that's
what
happens
when
you
have
too
much
water
on
your
brush.
I'm
gonna
dab
that
a
little
bit
okay.
This
is
getting
ahead
of
myself.
A
Go
I
started
it
off
with
a
more
there.
We
go,
I'm
going
to
wait
for
that
to
dry
and
I'll
go
back
in
I'll
hit
it
with
some
more
black
after
okay.
Now
I'm
going
to
wash
my
brush
again,
I'm
going
to
go
to
the
cad
red,
and
I'm
going
to
pick
up
my
my
round
brush
grab
some
cad
red
and
I'm
going
to
form
the
shape
of
my
my
beard
again
using
a
negative
painting
technique.
A
If
you're
more
comfortable
using
the
flat
brush
for
this
part
again,
it's
all
about
what
works
for
you
and
also
keep
in
mind.
This
is
my
rendering
of
a
gnome.
Your
gnome
could
be
in
a
totally
different
position.
This
is
your
painting
make
it
your
painting,
I'm
just
giving
you
some
guidance
on
how
to
do
this.
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When
we
do
acrylic
painting
we
it's
a
series
of
layers,
so
you're
going
to
be
adding
more
details,
you
can
add,
shadows
or
or
highlights
as
you
go
along,
but
you
don't
want
to
do
it
all
in
the
first
go,
so
we're
just
basically
putting
down
the
ground
work
for
this
painting.
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If
my
brush
is,
if
that's
too
wet
there,
I
want,
I
want
it
thicker.
So
there
we
go,
I'm
going
to
touch
with
a
little
bit
of
the
black
we're
going
to
do
our
little
beard
and
it's
kind
of
like
a
light
gray.
But
what
I'm
doing
is
I'm
just
rubbing
the
very
tip
of
my
brush
into
a
little
bit
of
the
black.
Can
you
see
that
and
as
I
go
around
the
nose,
I
want
it
a
little
bit
darker
like
a
little.
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And
I
could
take
a
look
at
my
gnome
to
see.
Okay,
do
I
want
my
red
to
be
brighter
anywhere?
You
could
always
add
a
little
bit
of
the
yellow
to
the
red
to
brighten
it
up.
If
you
feel
that
your
red
isn't
bright
enough,
I'm
going
to
grab
some
of
the
red
right
now
and
right
where
the
band
of
the
the
hat
I'm
going
to
just.
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And
I
could
do
some
detail
work
I
could
use
the
round
brush
or
I
could
use
the
the
corner
of
my
flat
brush
whatever
you're
more
comfortable
with
I'm
going
to
grab
a
little
bit
of
white,
I
want
to
make
sure
it's
dry
that
was
still
wet,
he's
actually
a
little
dryer
and
I
can
make
some
little
designs
on
my
little
gnome
hat.
I
could
put
little
dots.
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If
you
have
a
little
detail
brush,
it
works
even
better
oops.
Oh
that
was
way
too
much,
but
that's
okay.
I
could
fix
that
after
it
dries.
Actually,
I
could
take
a
paper
towel
sorry
about
this,
because
I'm
using
the
same.
I
have
one
hand
here
on
this.
Let
me
do
this
here.
I
can
fix
that
there
we
go
okay,
redo
and
grab
a
little
bit
of
that
white
paint.
A
And
we
could
give
him
a
little
dots
here.
A
And
then
we
we
could
call
that
good
or
we
can
add
some
more
details,
but
there
you
have
a
simple,
quick,
easy,
gnome
painting
and
as
always,
when
you
sign
your
painting,
don't
sign
it
at
the
very
bottom,
because
if
you
decide
to
frame
it,
which
I
hope
you
do
you'll
want
to
make
sure
that
your
frame
doesn't
cut
off
your
gnome.
So
I'm
going
to
take
a
little
a
smaller
brush
here,
just
a
little
bit.
You
can
practice
first
on
a
piece
of
parchment
or
something
or
even
on
your
palette.