"How to draw a gem" by Elaine Benfatto "urbanspinner" |
Although this is a drawing lesson, I figured it could also work with rocks and acrylic paints.
First, I ran through the steps using paint on paper.
My attempt at gems painted on paper |
My attempt at pearls painted on paper |
I thought the painted gems and pearls looked pretty good on paper so I tried the techniques on one of my round rocks.
I used the same acrylic paint colors for both the gems and the pearls and used the different shading methods Elaine demonstrated.
Gems painted on one side of a rock |
Pearls painted on the other side of a rock |
My thoughts on painting gems and pearls on rocks:
- A Micron pen may be better than black paint and a liner brush to outline each circle for both the gems and pearls
- When painting gems, the paint must be thinned with the correct amount of water to achieve the graduated shading referred to in the lesson (I considered using white paint but thought allowing the rock to show through would be better)
- I wasn't sure what paint color to use for the drop shadows on the rock so I chose gray
- My pearls remind me of candy
- I will keep practicing this technique -- stones painted with pearls and gems would definitely be "eye-catching" when placed in unexpected places.
Coming soon: How to paint water droplets on rocks.
Do you have tips or suggestions for painting gems and pearls on rocks? Please leave a comment.
© Cindy Thomas Painted Rocks
Very good lesson. I am going to try this. Thank you for the directions.
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear you found it helpful, grandmad1ana. Thanks for commenting.
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