Watercolor Painting

From Painting Wiki

Watercolor painting uses pigments suspended in a water-soluble binder (usually gum arabic), applied to paper with water as the solvent. Known for its luminous transparency, spontaneous effects, and portability, watercolor is one of the most popular and challenging painting mediums.

Characteristics

  • Transparent — light passes through paint and reflects off white paper, creating a luminous glow
  • Unpredictable — water creates beautiful accidents and organic effects
  • Portable — compact travel sets make it ideal for plein air painting
  • Unforgiving — mistakes are difficult to correct; white paper serves as the lightest value (no white paint)
  • Fast-drying — can work quickly but also means less blending time than oils

Materials

Paper

Weight Thickness Buckling Stretching Required Best For
90 lb (190 gsm) Thin Heavy buckling Yes Studies, practice
140 lb (300 gsm) Medium (most popular) Moderate Optional but recommended General painting
300 lb (640 gsm) Thick Minimal No Professional work

Surface textures:

  • Cold press (NOT) — slight texture; most versatile; best for beginners
  • Hot press — smooth; good for detail and illustration
  • Rough — heavy texture; bold, expressive effects

Paint Grades

  • Student grade: Less pigment, more filler; adequate for learning ($3-8/tube)
  • Artist grade: High pigment concentration; vibrant, lightfast, professional ($8-25+/tube)

Core Techniques

Wet-on-Wet

  • Apply paint to pre-wetted paper
  • Creates soft edges, beautiful blooms, and organic color mixing
  • Less control — embrace the unpredictability
  • Perfect for skies, water, backgrounds, and atmospheric effects

Wet-on-Dry

  • Apply paint to dry paper
  • Creates sharp, defined edges
  • More control over placement and shape
  • Best for details, foreground elements, and defined shapes

Flat Wash

  • Even, consistent color across an area
  • Tilt paper slightly; work in horizontal strokes
  • Pick up the bead of paint at the bottom of each stroke with the next

Graded Wash

  • Transitions from dark to light (or one color to another)
  • Add more water with each successive stroke
  • Used for skies and gradual color transitions

Glazing

  • Apply thin transparent layers over dried previous layers
  • Builds depth and color complexity
  • Each layer must dry completely before the next
  • Similar concept to oil painting glazes

Lifting

  • Remove paint with a damp brush, sponge, or tissue while still wet
  • Creates highlights, softens edges, corrects minor mistakes
  • Some pigments lift easily (sedimentary); others stain the paper

Masking

  • Apply masking fluid to areas that should remain white
  • Paint over masked areas freely
  • Peel off dried masking fluid to reveal white paper
  • Essential for preserving highlights in complex compositions

Basic Color Palette

A warm and cool version of each primary covers the widest range:

Color Warm Version Cool Version
Red Cadmium Red Alizarin Crimson
Yellow Cadmium Yellow Lemon Yellow
Blue Ultramarine Blue Cerulean or Phthalo Blue
Earth Burnt Sienna Raw Umber

Common Mistakes

  • Overworking — too many layers muddy the colors; watercolor thrives on freshness
  • Not enough water — produces chalky, opaque results instead of luminous washes
  • Too much water — uncontrolled runs and blooms (sometimes beautiful, sometimes not)
  • Forgetting to preserve whites — plan your light areas before painting; use masking fluid
  • Cheap paper — the paper matters more than the paint; invest in quality 140lb+ paper
  • Touching wet areas — lifting and reactivating paint before it's fully dry creates muddy patches

Frequently Asked Questions

Is watercolor harder than oil painting?

Watercolor is often considered more challenging because mistakes are difficult to correct, you must plan white areas in advance (no white paint), and the medium is unpredictable. Oil painting is more forgiving — slow drying allows corrections and adjustments. However, watercolor rewards spontaneity and produces effects impossible in any other medium. Many artists find oil technically easier to control but watercolor more satisfying when it works.

Can you fix mistakes in watercolor?

Partially. While watercolor is less forgiving than oils or acrylics, you can: lift paint with a damp brush or sponge while still wet, blot with tissue for soft corrections, scrub dried areas with a stiff wet brush (works better with non-staining pigments), or paint darker over lighter to cover errors. You cannot, however, easily go from dark back to light. Professional watercolorists embrace happy accidents and plan compositions to minimize the need for corrections.

What is the best watercolor paper for beginners?

Start with 140 lb (300 gsm) cold press paper — it's the most versatile weight and texture. Cold press has enough texture to hold washes beautifully while still allowing detail work. Popular brands include Arches (the gold standard), Fabriano Artistico, and Canson Heritage. Avoid thin paper (90 lb) as it buckles severely. Consider a watercolor block (paper glued on all sides) which prevents buckling without the need to stretch sheets.