Can transparent watercolor paint be used with translucent watercolor paint?

Updated on culture 2024-02-28
8 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Watercolor paints are not translucent. "Translucent watercolor" is just a kind of watercolor pigment of very poor quality, and the color cannot be transparent after use, so it is called "translucent watercolor". Foreign gouache pigments are called opaque watercolors, and watercolor pigments can be identified from the following aspects; The transparency of the color, the purity of the color after the color is mixed (there should be no dirty feeling), whether the watercolor paint is renderable, whether the color of the picture withers after the wet watercolor painting is dried (the color is dull), and whether the watercolor can be modified on the screen with a watercolor pen dipped in water after the watercolor picture is dried (the solubility of the paint).

    If these can meet the requirements, then it can be considered a usable watercolor paint. Painting with "translucent watercolor" paints is a waste of artistic cells.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Can be used together, transparent or translucent and the amount of moisture also has a certain relationship. The transparency effect is weakened after blending, especially at the junction between thick and thin, that is, the more subtle parts of the picture.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Two kinds of almost, can be used together, some transparency is still determined by the color, there are several colors will be high transparency, in addition to the study of watercolor paint itself, I recommend that you study the technique of watercolor, watercolor is not easy to paint.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    It's about the same, and since it's about the same, you don't have to care. Colors don't have to be stereotyped. As long as there is no chemical reaction.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    If there are no special requirements in terms of technique and picture effect, why not be transparent?

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    The biggest feature of transparent watercolor is that it is not easy to grasp, and it is not easy to modify when painting, so you should be confident before painting, and I personally feel that transparent watercolor is higher in terms of expression and artistry.

    Opaque watercolors are as easy to modify as gouache and are not time-sensitive, unlike transparent watercolors, which are sometimes randomly generated. More generally, it is a manifestation of the wet painting method and the dry painting method.

    Gouache, also known as advertising color, is an opaque watercolor pigment. It can be used for thicker coloring, and when coloring large areas, there will be no uneven gouache-still life.

    Although it is also an opaque watercolor pigment, gouache is generally cheaper than acrylic; However, it is slightly inferior to acrylic in terms of coloring, quantity, behavior and preservation. It should be used selectively according to different uses.

    The watercolor has a high degree of transparency, and when the colors overlap, the colors underneath will shine through. The color vividness is not as vivid as color ink, but the coloring is darker, which is suitable for people who like quaint tones. It is not easy to change color even if it is stored for a long time.

    The so-called opaque watercolor refers to the light next to the gum watercolor paint and the advertising paint. The term "watercolor" generally refers to transparent watercolor.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Watercolor can broadly include transparent watercolor and gouache. In general, it is just transparent watercolor.

    If it is gouache, it is not transparent, but covering. (Technically speaking, it is between opaque and translucent). Because there is a powder mixed in the gouache pigment, which makes it opaque.

    If it's transparent, watercolor is transparent.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Transparent watercolor paints.

    Painting with very transparent colors can be stolen by the reflective surface of the white color of the paper. This appealing blur is ideal for capturing and depicting atmosphere, space, and light. Some transparent colors are also powerful dyeing line pigments, which can be troublesome when scraping off the colors.

    For example, French ultramarine, cobalt blue, true alizarin rose red, golden yellow, hawk green, raw ochre, penny gray.

    Dyed watercolor pigments.

    A bit of translucent color, such as alizarin crimson, is very strong in the dyeing, and they penetrate deeply into the fibers of the paper, and if they are removed in time, they will leave a trace of color. Some earthy colors, such as cadmium and modern organic pigments, are also very strong in their dyeing lines. If you need to use a knife or sponge to remove some parts of the color, remember to use non-dyeing watercolor paints as much as possible.

    Such as, Windsor red, Windsor blue, Windsor green, lake red, alizarin crimson, cadmium green, sap green, Prussian blue, orange yellow.

    Opaque watercolor paints.

    For example, all cadmium colors, Indian red, yellow ochre, ripe brown, David gray, sky blue, lemon yellow, raw brown, cadmium oxide green.

    Transparent watercolor paints can also become opaque, or translucent. When you mix them with Chinese white, you get an opaque color.

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