I love to sit in nature and sketch. Sometimes, I only have time for a quick hike, so I snap photos of anything I wanted to sketch on the spot, like these wild phlox in bloom.
It's often the tiniest things in nature that draw me in.
I began this sketch with a pencil drawing, then painted in the flower petals in mixtures of permanent blue violet, Phthalo blue, & permanent rose. I let the first wash of color dry before adding in shadows on the petals.
I laid in the background by painting in one big wet layer, touching in darker bits and letting the color spread.
With watercolor, you control the flow of the paint by controlling the water. Watercolor blooms and spreads within a wet area, and won't flow to dry areas of your paper unless it's very runny and dribbles.
To create the little shadowed spots behind the flowers, I let the flowers dry fully, then carefully painted the area beside the flower with clear water and touched in a dark mixture of permanent blue violet and Hooker's green.
I worked quickly to touch in other green mixtures to give the sense of foliage on a forest floor. By keeping the background indistinct and more abstract, the phlox flowers pop forward to catch our eye.
I finished the sketch by adding lines with a fine black pen with permanent ink.
Would you like to make paintings of tiny things?
Here are a few photos to practice with!








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