Watercolour painting of Cherries. Botanical Art : Watercolour Cherries Botanical Art : Native English Cherries The art of botanical painting. As a subject for a botanical study or sketchbook, how to paint a cherry using watercolours is a great way to develop wet-in-wet and wet-in-dry botanical watercolour techniques on a simple subject. The different approaches enable the layers to be built up fairly quickly with specific detail added for a more realistic effect. There’s a big choice on colours too, from yellow, to pink, to red, to almost black – something for everyone and a simple way to develop colour-mixing skills or colour charts. Paint cherries from the ‘Garden of England’. Botanical fruits of the countryside for painting in watercolour and tasty treats for the British birds.
British Wildlife Watercolours. British wildlife, birds and flowers are carefully painted using watercolours, based on the wildlife and botanical subjects from the garden and local woods. Wildlife such as small British woodland animals (badgers, foxes, squirrels, mice, bats, deer, otters, wild cats, stoats, weasels - even wild boar, pine martens, beavers and, one day, lynx may return to the wilds of Britain!) and UK garden birds, butterflies and bees, along with ladybirds and dragonflies, add to the joys to be found in the garden, or just beyond, all year round. Watercolours can be used to capture the beauty in the animal or plant subject using the fluidity of the paints. Everyone's favourite! A beautiful owl resting amongst the bluebells. British Wildlife Watercolours : Watercolour Owl and Bluebell British Wildlife Watercolours : Watercolour Bird Painting of a Sparrow and Worm Watercolours can be used in a variety of wildlife paintings for different effects bas...