Steve Fleming

Artist Studio

In The Studio: Work on your brushwork for trees

Bare trees are a beautiful motif but can lead to boring paintings if you don’t vary the repeats of width, direction, color, and spacing.  You also have to make sure you are using the shadows on the ground, cast, shadows on the tree, form as a consistent value and appropriate color, not just blue.

The Artist In The Studio

In the is lesson I want you to focus on the brushwork and variety of your tree forms.  Bare trees are a beautiful motif but can lead to boring paintings if you don’t vary the repeats of width, direction, color, and spacing.  You also have to make sure you are using the shadows on the ground, cast, shadows on the tree, form as a consistent value and appropriate color, not just blue.trace 7notice how the variety of values and size make for an interesting composition and how the shadows tie it all together.Spring ShadowsThe spacing of these trees is pretty good the busy left side and the nicely positioned open space and the solid trees on the right.  The shadows really work well to tell the story of bright light.Shadows early morningThere is really nice balance here between soft blended edges and crisp hard edges which gives this simple subject a lot of life and energy. Again the shadows really help tell the story of the time of day and type of light.

3 Comments on “In The Studio: Work on your brushwork for trees”

  1. Thank you for your great lesson about composition, handling of trees and their cast shadows as an important element in the composition

  2. Very helpful point; one that I often missed. Just finished a painting where trees are not working and this solves my issue. Thanks.

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