Painting in Pastel & Sketching in Watercolour

I love sketching, in fact I love sketching more than painting. There is nothing like the feeling of being outside, hopefully in pleasant weather, capturing an old buildings or lovely landscape in your sketchbook.

Stockland, Devon

Sketch of old cottage in Stockland, Devon, by Jenny Keal

Many of the sketches I make will never become paintings as most of them I do just for the pure pleasure of it, but every sketch I do teaches me something, sharpens my observation and improves my painting and drawing skills.

Sketching in watercolour is not as difficult as you might imagine, and there is a sense of liberation about painting a watercolour in a sketchbook that is absent when working on a sheet of expensive watercolour paper in the studio. You do not have to worry if it goes wrong as it is ‘just a sketch’ . You can slosh the paint around and so often I prefer the looseness of the sketch to the carefully considered finished painting, whether it is in watercolour or pastel.

exmoor

Typical Exmoor scenery, (photo)

lynmouth

Lynmouth Devon (photo)

If you would like to experience this sense of liberation you could join me in Lynmouth, Devon from 20th to 23rd May this year. We will be sketching in watercolour out of doors, and then turning these sketches into pastel paintings in the studio. You don’t have to use pastel of course, you can use whatever medium you prefer. The main emphasis will be on capturing the marvellous Devon scenery, pretty cottages, tumbling streams, woodland and even the coast.

One of the benefits of watercolour sketching is that it definitely improves your studio watercolours.

3 thoughts on “Painting in Pastel & Sketching in Watercolour

  1. I like your cottage in Devon watercolour Jenny. Is there any trick to making the white cloud stand out from the painted blue sky? I apply water to the page, but it always looks like the sky is on top of the clouds.
    Peter Deakin

    • Hi Peter. Thanks for your query. The sky of the watercolour sketch of the cottage in Devon was done wet into wet. I laid clear water over the whole sky and then dropped in Cobalt Blue in the areas that I wanted blue and avoiding the clouds. It is a simple one wash sky with no fiddling. But that is the beauty of watercolour sketches. There is a liberating sense that ‘it’s only a sketch’

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