6 Tips on Using Color Mixtures

4 May 2009

The articles we publish in American Artist and our quarterly magazines repeat basic advice about one of the most challenging aspects of painting: selecting and mixing colors. Here’s a summary of those recommendations.

  1. Start painting with just one or two colors so you understand how they differ in opacity, temperature, and tinting strength. Most teachers recommend their students start painting with a limited palette of colors so that they become familiar with those before tackling 20 to 30 more tube colors. The experience helps them remember whether the colors are warm or cool, transparent or opaque, slow drying or fast drying, etc.

  2. Use a palette of colors recommended in a magazine article, website, book, or DVD. Many of the artists featured in American Artist, Watercolor, and Workshop magazines list the specific colors they work with; most art instruction books and DVDs offer similar information, and a few paint manufactures and retailers also offer recommendations and instruction on their websites. Sometimes the lists seem to duplicate each other, but if you look carefully you’ll note that some artists depend heavily on earth colors, whereas others eliminate them from their palettes. There are very specific reasons why one artist will use titanium white and another will rely on lead white; and why a plein air painter chooses to use heavier, more opaque colors when painting outdoors and a completely different palette in the studio. You may find it helpful to use what is already working for another artist before you buy expensive paints.
     
  3. Intermix colors to achieve harmony. Many painters pre-mix one or two colors that will dominate their pictures, and then they adjust those colors to paint smaller shapes, knowing that this is more apt to be a harmonious relationship between the various combinations. For example, they might prepare a midvalue flesh tone and then make portions of it lighter, darker, warmer, or cooler as they develop a portrait. Similarly, they might mix one dominant color to paint the largest area of a river or stream, then intermix other colors to enrich the representation of the water.

  4. Pre-mix all the basic colors you’ll need. Consider pre-mixing a full range of colors and values. Many artists feel strongly that they can work faster and more accurately if they pre-mix a full palette of colors before beginning to paint on canvas. This is especially the case with portrait painters who know their clients will only give them a limited amount of time to paint, but it is equally true of landscape and still life painters who work from life and want to be fully prepared to make the best use of their time.

  5. Note the difference between mixing colors on a palette and on the surface of the painting. It is generally true that colors become more dull and muddy if they are overworked on the surface of a painting, so most artists try to mix the correct color and value on their palette and apply it directly to the paper or canvas in one stroke. However, there are times when it does make sense to blend fresh strokes of paint into the wet surface of the developing painting to achieve greater subtlety and harmony. The key is to recognize the differences between mixtures created on the palette and those blended into the wet surface of the painting and to use that knowledge in appropriate ways.

  6. Write down the names of the tube colors that prove to be effective. Some artists make a point of writing down the color combinations they’ve used so they can repeat them. This is especially true if one is doing sketches that might become the basis of large studio paintings.

Related Posts
+ Add a comment

Comments

on 4 May 2009 4:05 AM

Pingback from  Twitted by American_Artist

brstam wrote
on 4 May 2009 9:28 AM

....and parts of this do not apply to watercolors!

Robert Raser wrote
on 5 May 2009 4:09 PM

Solid info...as  guy who takes in visuals better rather than text - wish this kind of thing could be a video next time.  Thanks for the tips!

Muna Shabab wrote
on 5 May 2009 6:21 PM

Good solid tips. It would be great to have an in depth article on the use of different colors. by the way, why would an artist use titanium white, lead white, or zinc white?

pbranch wrote
on 5 May 2009 9:15 PM

super helpful as always

ddartnell wrote
on 7 May 2009 5:27 AM

To achieve maximum color vibration in a painting, place any two colors of the same value next to each other or layered over each other by  either scumbling or by placing a transparent pigment on top of the other color.

Also in order to maintain the painting's composition and its "masses", try to keep the value of the colors within each mass, the same value or a similar value.

sdoherty wrote
on 11 May 2009 11:38 AM

Thanks for all the responses.

Muna, i should probably write a blog about the three whites, or ask others to comment. In general, each has a different color, degree of opacity, drying time, and tinting strength. Lead was used for centuries and it's the reason conservators can X-ray paintings and find out how the artist changed his/her image; but it is hard to come by because of laws against the sale of lead paints. Zinc is transparent and fluid, whereas titanium -- the most popular these days -- is thick and bluish in color. Some artists use a combination of titanium and zinc to get the best of both whites.

Muna Shabab wrote
on 12 May 2009 8:13 AM

Thank you for the response Steve, now I know why I can't find lead white. I've read in American Artist article about cover competition winner of 2008 Adrian Gottlieb that he uses lead white and I've been wanting to try it.

martin davis wrote
on 11 Jun 2009 3:55 PM

I'd also like to see mentioned the importance of the biases of colors and what they are for certain various brand names and how the mixing of these effects the dullness or brightness of the colors that are mixed.

on 15 Jun 2009 4:01 PM

Great tips.  I am always grateful for the articles in the Workshop magazine because each artist featured shares his/her knowledge, techniques, experience, tips and palette secrets.  AFter reading through many articles, I can determine why so many artists use certain colors for permanence and excellence of mixing for that certain harmony.

EdTerpening wrote
on 23 Jun 2009 7:47 AM

As an oil painter, I would add to your list above Opacity vs. Transparency (and perhaps this is a useful consideration for watercolorists, too?).

I find this an important factor in choosing my palette of colors.  Transparent oils seem to generally have a greater tinting strength, which makes them easier to use in other mixtures without creating mud.  I know the main factor in creating muddy color is mixing too many warm/cool colors together, but overly opaque colors are create mud quickly.  Cadmium Orange, as a very opaque color is very challenging to use as a way to tint a color mixture toward orange, whereas Hansa Yellow-Orange (my favorite color!) is much easier.