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| It
is a wonderful place to be, To view the world through the imagination of a
child, To enjoy the brilliance of a rainbow; Dew on an exquisitely woven
web; A raindrop on a flower petal; "The Fairies" (Ingold
98)
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Realistic Art Lessons Tutorials Workshops
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How to Paint a Fairy - The Sturt
Pea Fairy
Tutorial Walkthrough ©2007 Kylie InGold
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- This
painting tutorial/lesson or walkthrough is step
by step of the Sturt Pea Fairy. From my Australian
Wild Flower Fairies Series.
This is just one of the ways of may approach a painting.
- Materials
Required
»Canvas 20"
x 16"
»Brushes:
1 inch wide brush (with long hair [1"
and 1/4 long]
1/2
inch wide brush
1/4
inch wide
00
Liner Brush
Small
Round (This one is optional)
»Paint:
White,
Burnt Sienna, Burnt Umber, Cadmium Red, Cobalt
Blue.
(These
colors are in most acrylic starter sets)
(I prefer and recommend Mattisse Artists Acrylics)
-
Step
1

The inital fairy was sketched
onto paper the same size as I wanted her to be.
I then transferred the sketch onto the canvas
using transfer paper (it is like carbon paper
and you can get it from any good artist supplier.
You can get it in black and white sheets).
You could also just sketch straight onto the canvas,
I find when I do that, the canvas gets dirty when
I need to rub anything out.
So guess what I wanted to paint first? Straight
on to the wings.
Blocked in with Cadmium Red. At this stage I haven't
a clue what the background is going to be.
Generally you are supposed to paint the
background first, I'll work around this.
-
Step
2

Painted the first coat on the butterfly, Started
painting in the skin tones using the 1/2"
and 1/4" inch brush with white, burnt sienna
and cobalt blue. The paint here is mixed up to
about the consistency of ink. About three thin
layers have been painted on her skin. In this
type of acrylic painting, you only use water to
make the paint flow. A tiny amount of cobalt blue
is added to the burnt sienna and used in the shadows
on her skin. I've now also very lightly sketched
in a horizon line and a tree shape on the left,
I am starting to see where the painting may go.
-
Step
3
The Background: In the background I have used
watered down
burnt umber and a pink made up from the cadmium
Red and white. The ground is painted with horizontal
brush strokes and the back part is vertical brushstokes.
Painted with the large 1" brush.
I painted over the fairy in places, if I painted
around the wings etc., the background wouldn't
make sense and you would see those brushstrokes.
If I do get paint on her skin, I'll rub it with
my finger so there are not lumps as I like my
fairies skin to be smooth. I put the painting
on the easle to dry. I've decided now that I will
have bottle trees in the background.
-
Step
4

Woops! a few extra steps in here. I painted this
bit in the evening I so the photos didn't turn
out.
I painted the trunks of the bottle trees and a
couple of branches with burnt umber and enough
water just for the paint to flow easily on the
brush. I then painted the bottle trees in the
background with the same paint but watered down
a lot more.
Then painted over all the bottletrees just in
the background with a watered down white with
vertical brushstrokes, waited for that to dry
then gave it a second coat and added a little
pink in the middle. This gives the painting a
misty look. The pink shrubs were done then with
the 1" inch brush with the brushes ends flared
out with pink, white, and burnt umber. I double
load the brush pink on one corner and burnt umber
on the other and then dab, dab, dab, then pink
on one corner and white on the other and then
dab, dab, dab again.
Remember: You do need to paint over the fairy
when you a doing your background.
I then painted over the background again with
the watered down white solution so the whole background
looks connected.
Added some pink to the ground using the 1"
brush which is sharpened. (A sharpened brush looks
like you just bought it from the shop)
Now I painted the fairy again. Acrylic paintings
have lots of coats, they are like a sarah lea
cake "layer upon layer" Painted the
wings again, the bottletrees in the foregound,
and any skin that may have got background paint
on)
Blocked in the hair, following the contour of
the way the hair falls.
What does this mean? The hair at the top of the
head goes around the head so my brush goes around,
the hair falling down on her shouders falls down
and so on. Put some cadmium red on her dress.
-
Step
5
Added more layers of cadmium red paint to her
dress. Did about another four layers of think
paint on her skin. Added some shrubs at the front
of the bottles trees with burnt umber, white and
pink using the dab, dab, dab technieque. Put another
layer on the ground, this time the burnt umber
paint was a bit thicker and still following contour
with the brush strokes going horizontal. The grass
is done by wiping the burnt umber paint a little
thicker in a horizontal line and then flicking
the wet paint upwards. This is so much easier
to physically show someone how than to expain.
-
Step
6
Stated working on her face and hair.
She is not very pretty yet. In many of my
paintings I will work on the face and the
eyes first. The fine line work is done with
burnt umber and the 00 liner brush. More
paint on her dress. I just keep adding layers
of paint, this is called fat over lean,
which just means thick paint over thin paint.
Final

The Final picture, I've added numerous layers
to her hair, with the pink, burnt umber and
white, changed her hair around her face from
how it was in step 6. Worked on the face and
skin for a number of hours. Her face isn't exactly
what I had in mind. That's the way it goes sometimes.
Added the fairy sparkly bling (explained in
the fairy potion tutorial). Added some misty
glow to her hand and foot. This is done with
watered down white paint then rubbed with your
finger lightly to blend, and then doing it a
number of times until it looks glowy.
If you have any comments or questions regarding this
art walkthrough.
Please put them in the questbook.
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