Introduction
Materials
Colour and opacity
Techniques
SEA:
The splash zone
A rising wave
A falling wave
Surf and ripples
Reflections
Beaches
Wind direction
SKY:
Selecting a vanishing point
Clouds
Moods and Sunsets
PROJECTS:
Beachcomber
The Heavens Declare
Barton Corner
After 30 years of being in finance, Dave White discovered he could paint, and embarked on a new road of painting people's animals and teaching students how to paint. He exhibits annually at Crufts Dog Show and the New Forest Show, and has done numerous commissions all over the world. Living close to the sea in Hampshire has led to his passion for capturing beautiful seascapes with drama, realism and depth, in his favourite medium, acrylics.
It's difficult for many painters to achieve realistic looking skies
and water. Dave demonstrates how to paint both so that you can
refine your skills. Simple techniques that any can follow. Take a
closer look at waves and cloud formations, I really enjoyed these
two sections. There are three step-by-step projects and examples of
finished work. Discover how to add a little drama to your acrylic
paintings.
*Karen Platt- yarnsandfabrics.co.uk*
Few artists can resist the temptation to introduce a bit of drama
when it comes to painting the sea, and Dave White is no exception.
It is, after all, a bit boring if you just paint flat calm and
there’s nothing like a good storm to get the juices flowing. Add a
nice ripe sunset and you’ll be getting through your dark greens,
rich blues and deep reds like there’s no tomorrow! It’s perhaps
unfair to start a review like that as this is one of the most
thorough and useful books on painting seascapes that I’ve seen in a
long time. Dave White is more than sound on achieving that tricky
balance between solidity and fluidity in breaking waves and I
particularly like his trick of using gulls that skim the surface
(as they do) to give scale. His clouds are similarly light, fluffy
and ethereal without looking half-hearted or like clumps of cotton
wool stuck onto a Cerulean wash. For all that, it’s the drama
that’ll strike you on a quick flick through, but you shouldn’t let
it put you off. The sea is dramatic and, as I hinted earlier, it
should be. Some of the treatments here are a bit over the top for
me but, equally, they might be just what you want. In terms of
technique and presentation, though, this one’s hard to beat.
*Artbookreview.net*
January 2016 Painting the sea is one of the greatest challenges for
the artist. Constantly in motion, it has far more substance than
other types of water that simply flow, or are completely still. To
freeze a moment in time while still maintaining that sense of
fluidity is not an easy thing to do. Almost all books on painting
the sea tend at some point to be a trifle dramatic, and this is no
exception. Dave white includes night-time scenes, sunsets and the
last rays breaking through backlit clouds, even a helicopter
rescue. On waves, spray, translucency and the rather neat trick of
including low flying gulls to provide scale, Dave is solidly sound.
There’s plenty of variety demonstrations and good solid
instruction.
*The Artist*
Living near the coast in Hampshire, Dave White finds constant
inspiration from the sea and skies around him, and in his latest
book, sea and sky in acrylics, he shares with us some of the
essential elements off of capturing a subject that is constantly
moving and changing. Using his preferred medium of acrylics he
opens the book with a brief description of the materials you will
need, then moves swiftly on to colour and the specific colours you
will need to follow the demonstrations in this book, including
colour mixes for sky, sea, rocks and beaches for example. The first
part concentrates on the sea, describing the techniques to create
the rising and falling waves, show wind direction, ripples splashes
and reflections. The middle section looks at the sky; clouds, moods
and sunsets; then the rest of the book is devoted to projects – a
beach panorama, a sunset and waves crashing on the rocks – all with
excellent step-by-step diagrams and clear photography.
*The Leisure Painter*
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