One of my blog readers wrote a wonderful and informative comment on the post The Tears of Fernad. She is an avid gardener filled with terrific ideas about how to care for tulips as a cut flower. According to her, they are the only flower that continues to grow after they are cut. To read more of her clever ideas, click on the "comment 1" … [Read more...] about Tulips 101
Margret's Blog
The Tears of Fernad
Most of us have a big misconception about tulips and their origin. Most of us know they came from Holland. Well, the truth is that Holland has made tulips famous, but they did not originate there. Now, in my sensibility, this is the most splendid and delightful flower to put on canvas. The colors and varieties are endlessly breathtakingly lovely … [Read more...] about The Tears of Fernad
And More!
And more uses for those siennas. Raw sienna used here, mixed with white, lead-tin yellow, and black makes great variations of tones for this application. Painting #9 detail. … [Read more...] about And More!
Geology Burnt Sienna, 101
Burnt sienna, also known as Caledonian brown and terra di Siena, comes in a variety of shades, depending on its source. It gets its rich dark brown coffee color from a heating process. In order to get burnt sienna, you must first heat raw sienna in a process called calcination which removes the water from the clay and turns it from a yellowish to … [Read more...] about Geology Burnt Sienna, 101
Geology Raw Sienna, 101
Limonite clay is a main ingredient in the pigment family called sienna. Raw sienna is described as a dull brownish yellow, which in spite of its dullness, is very versatile and widely used by artists. I have used it for the shady side of yellow objects, in backgrounds, and even fleshtones. It also is a perfect color, used alone, as a shadow tone … [Read more...] about Geology Raw Sienna, 101
The Sun, the Moon, and Burnt Sienna
Burnt Sienna is an extraordinarily versatile and useful pigment. In use since antiquity, the siennas sometimes are grouped into the "brown" category, but they are far from plain old brown. With their iron oxide ingredients, they range from rich earthy reds to foreboding darks. In earlier times, sienna was found in Siena, Italy and was … [Read more...] about The Sun, the Moon, and Burnt Sienna