Somebody in the village approached me the other day about painting his house. Ā We had…

Orchard Lea, Hartlip
Someone in the village asked me if I’d be interested in painting her house. Ā I gave her my standard answer, which is that I don’t do commissions but that I may well sneak round at some point, take some photos of her house and paint it. Ā And that if I do, she has first refusal on it and no obligation to buy. Ā Just like an have mo obligation to paint it. Ā Deals where both sides have obligations will always end up with one party feeling that they’ve got the bum end of the deal and I prefer to just sell paintings, leaving both parties happy,
Anyway, I did take some photos of her house the other day and decided it was worth painting. Ā It’s on a junction, which has worked out well for me in the past, giving me the opportunity to cast cool shadows on the road. Ā I messed up with my drawing, though, and put everything too low on the paper, losing a lot of road and gaining sky. Ā This meant I needed to do something exciting with the sky, so I thought I’d have a go at a sunset (with the sun behind the viewer and to his right). Ā With this in mind, I chose quinacridone magenta and Indian yellow as two of my primaries. Ā For the blue, I chose Prussian blue ahead of French ultramarine for its cool temperature, which I could still use in shadows on what was left of the road. Ā So that’s a triadic left colour key.
I started with loads of masking: the roofline, the window frames, the fence, the signposts and my initials. Ā Plus a little bit of spattering. Ā Then I painted in the sky. Ā It was good at first, but when I tried to add in neutral-coloured clouds, they didn’t really work, so I did some tinkering. Ā At the end of all the tinkering, I ended up with a darker valued sky than I originally intended. Ā And my planned yellow band in the sky was more of a dulled down orange – more about that later.
Then I painted in the house and the foliage. Ā With the foliage, I was careful to make it darkest just behind the picket fence. Ā I ended up with quite a boring shaped hedge going from left to right in a horizontal line as a result of being a bit too vigorous with the sky colours. Ā So I added a bit more background foliage using cadmium yellow (for its opacity) with Prussian blue. Ā It was looking a bit too dark and, well, opaque, so I dabbed it a bit with a kitchen towel and it looked better. Ā Finally O threw some salt on the foliage as the painting at this time was just lacking in interest.
And then something weird happened. Ā This painting was intended to be set on a warm summer evening, but everything started feeling colder. Ā The dark, nighttime-looking sky, the warm colours in the windows, the cool reds and cool blues all over the house. Ā And most of all, the way the salt in the foliage stared forming icy looking patterns.
So I painted the road, pavement and drive in snowy colours. Ā I put snow on roofs, chimneys and a few other places with titanium white, almost straight from the tube. Ā Two or three coats were needed to make it really white. Ā In places in the foliage lane on the roof, I dragged a loaded brush sideways along the paper, using the texture of the paper to give the impression of little bits of snow everywhere. Ā And. Then I spattered on loads of titanium white at the end.
It’s ended up as quite a decent snow painting, especially as it wasnāt planned to be a snow painting (so I couldn’t do things like reserving whites). Ā There are some good complementary colour contrasts there too, and green at the bottom but especially between the blue/purple roof and the orange in the sky.
And it sold quickly to the lady who lives there. Ā She says the snow gives it a very rustic feel.
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