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Look inside Painting Successful Watercolours from Photographs
  • Publisher: Search Press
  • Edition: BC Paperback
  • Publication: 13 November 2014
  • ISBN 13/EAN: 9781844489985
  • Stock: 50+
  • Size: 216x280 mm
  • Illustrations: 256
  • Pages: 128
  • RRP: £14.99
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Painting Successful Watercolours from Photographs

£14.99

by Geoff Kersey (Author)

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Book Description

Artists who work from photographic source material need to learn how to adapt and improve in order to create a successful painting. Geoff Kersey is a master of this way of working, and here he shows how it is done. Reference photographs, colour charts and preparatory sketches are shown alongside all the finished paintings in this book, with full details of the adaptations and creative processes involved. There are plenty of clear tips and advice, and an illustrated glossary of all the painting terms used. Readers who want much more advice on adapting from reference sources than is provided in step by step painting books will have all they need here, and there are dozens of beautiful paintings to inform and inspire them.

About the Author

About Geoff Kersey

Geoff Kersey is an experienced watercolourist and is much in demand as a teacher and demonstrator. He lives and works in Derbyshire, where he has a studio, and he exhibits extensively. He has made many watercolour DVDs, contributes to various art publications and has written many best-selling watercolour books. He now runs highly successful online tutorials via his website www.watercolourlandscapes.co.uk

Reviews

The SAA

Full of ideas, hints and tips as well as lots of examples - landscapes, townscapes, people, buildings, water and trees, this book contains no fewer than 25 demonstrations. In each of them Geoff isn't concerned with the process of painting so much as the way a scene can be interpreted - what to put in, what to leave out or where to crop the view.


Leisure Painter, The

January 2015

In his introduction, Geoff Kersey explains that the idea for his latest book, Painting Successful Watercolours from Photographs, grew out of his classes, where he would find suitable photographs for his students to paint then show them how to go about turning the photographs into painting. Although many people choose to work from photographs many struggle to paint successfully from them. Here, Geoff shows us how to do it. Opening chapters deal with materials you'll need to get started and some basic painting techniques, before moving on to the first project - a lake in spring. Geoff shows you exactly how he extracts the information he wants from the photograph. There are 27 studies in total - all accompanied by photographs, sketches, details, diagrams and colour charts with subject ranging from a London park to Vernazza in Italy; a hillside village to a Mediterranean street cafe. The book closes with a few photographs for you to work from on your own using the skills Geoff has taught you.


Artbookreview.net

November 2014

This isnt the first book on painting from photographs, but it is certainly one of the best. In his introduction, Geoff is careful to say that it is not about photography itself and that, indeed the photos illustrated may not even be the best. They are, however, representative of the sort of thing you may find in your own collection. Some may have been taken with an idea of using them as a snapshot sketch, some are a quick record of a scene or a place taken, well, just because. Others may be wrongly lit or too complicated to make a good painting.

 

I think its also fair to say that this is not a book about how to paint, insomuch as theres an assumption that you know the basics, or have other guides. What you get is much more useful than that: a guide to how to make a successful painting from a photograph. Any photograph. What to include, what to leave out, how to change the lighting or move elements of the composition. The nearest you get to conventional instruction is a note of the palette used, which is very handy as photographs can be misleading (or even simply too dark) in this area.

 

There are twenty-five demonstrations in all, which also tells you that there are not masses of step-by-step details, just the salient points. Subjects cover landscapes, waterscapes, buildings, people, large vistas and intimate corners. Just about everything, in fact. Bit of a masterclass, actually. You can read more reviews here http://artbookreview.wordpress.com/



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