Easy Watercolor Rose 3 Ways! (Best Techniques for Beginners)

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Easy Watercolor Rose 3 Ways! (Best Techniques for Beginners)

Monday, April 20, 2020

Learn to paint beautiful watercolor rose easily in this beginner’s tutorial and video! We will practice 3 essential techniques to paint simple watercolor flowers:  the simple brushstrokes, wet-on-wet, and wet-on-dry painting techniques.


It’s been a while since I made a watercolor flower tutorial, and I have so much to share with you! Today we will focus on how to paint a watercolor rose in 3 ways and compare the 3 popular and essential techniques in watercolor painting.


Paint beautiful watercolor rose 3 ways! Easy beginner’s tutorial & video with 3 essential watercolor flower techniques including brushstrokes & wet-on-wet!

Once you learn these watercolor painting techniques, you can combine them in your own way to paint loose watercolor flowers that are modern and fresh, or detailed botanical illustration style paintings. I will share the watercolor mixed flower tutorial soon. Stay tuned! 🙂



Favorite Watercolor Painting Materials:


( Some of the helpful resources are affiliate links. Full disclosure here. )


loose watercolor flowers painting with  paint palette and paper
Watercolor flowers tutorial coming soon!


Check out the video tutorial or skip to written tutorial below!









Technique 1:  paint a watercolor rose with simple brushstrokes


This watercolor technique is inspired by traditional Chinese ink and brush painting, and Japanese Sumi-E painting, in which the emphasis is placed on the beauty of expressive and intentional brush strokes.


paint a watercolor rose with simple brushstrokes


Keep in mind that you can even invent your own brush strokes! In this tutorial, we will use brushes with pointed tips, and a couple of simple brushstrokes to paint the watercolor flower petals and leaves.


I used the Rose Madder color in this set. The brush should be medium wet, and not drippy with wet paint. Start at the center of your watercolor rose. Paint a couple of small dots and lines as the center of the flower.


painting watercolor rose from center

As you paint the bigger petals outwards, press the pointed tip on one end, and drag the brush as you press to create
a wider center part, then lift the brush to the pointed end again to finish the
petal.


To create color variations, if you use more water and less
pigment on your brush as you paint, the petals will get lighter and lighter.  


watercolor brushstroke techniques to paint watercolor flowers and leaves

The leaves are painted with various greens and blues in this set.


You may also love: paint easy watercolor flower bouquet, and watercolor spring trees with a simple technique!


Technique 2:  wet-on-wet
loose watercolor flower painting


The wet-on-wet technique is my favorite watercolor technique!
When wet paint is applied onto wet paint, the colors start
to flow and blend, and create endless surprises and gorgeous variations of
colors and textures.


wet-on-wet loose watercolor flower painting

The brush should be pretty wet. I would start with medium
wet, because it is much harder to control the colors when it is dripping wet. There
is not a set rule, but as you observe how wet your brush is, and what kind of
effect it creates, you will become more confident and develop your own style of
painting with watercolor.


First paint the watercolor flower with
simple strokes as in the previous technique. While the paint is still wet,
paint over some of the areas with deeper or different colors.


paint wet-on-wet loose watercolor flowers


I like to use a little yellow in addition
to shades of pink. It adds richness and depth to the colors.


Here’s a helpful tip: if a color is flowing too fast, you
can use a clean dry brush to dab the spot and stop the color bleeding. As you
can see in the video, I did it where one of the leaves touch the petal.


Technique 3:  wet-on-dry watercolor rose


The wet-on-dry technique is a great watercolor technique for
beginners! When wet paint is applied onto dried paint and
paper, the colors are built up in transparent layers.


wet-on-dry watercolor technique: easy painting tutorial for beginners

First paint the watercolor flower and
leaves with simple strokes as in Technique 1.


Let the paint dry, then add more layers of
shapes and colors.


Let the paint dry, then add more layers to the watercolor flower

You can the wet-on-dry technique with the wet-on-wet technique to create endless layers and
variations!


watercolor flower for beginners

Usually in a watercolor painting, we would see all the 3 techniques in use. Now that you learned them all, have fun combining and playing with them!


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Source: apieceofrainbow.com