Grass Technique
Grass in snow is not hard if you know how to do it. Familiar isn’t it! If you know how to do something you are not pioneering new territory and generaly speaking the only difficulty is remembering exactly how it was done previously. Now I want to focus on this because its about technique. Like just about anything there is a way of doing something efficiently and effectively and a way not to do it. The way that is the latter is generally slow and poorly executed with a result that is less than hoped for.
In grass as with just about any other feature I paint I look for the tool that will best serve the purpose. Now i carry on about my pastry brush for a very good reason-it works! And not just for skies and large areas but for smaller features-like grass. See the trick is to reshape it so it can perform the function I want. Now go and look at the grass in snow and work out the mechanics of it as a subject. It is spiky, long, thin and generally brown to yellow in color. So if i reshape the flat bristle of the pastry brush so they separate and have their own individual space and are still springy they should be able to gather paint then deposit it.
Heres my brush in a refashioned shape…. ready for work!
Now if I skip it through some fresh paint it should pick it up and deposit it just as surgically on the canvas like this….
Now I repeat this whereever I want grass. Then with the little liner brush I go to work defining these individual strokes making them both darker here and there and lighter.












Hi Robert
I can’t wait til you launch your winter landscape look forward to it.Frank
by: frank holmes, May 24th at 8:11 PM
Hi Robert I am also looking fwd to viewing your winter l/scape. I tried wombats in the snow but they def lacked something!
by: Nola, May 25th at 4:40 PM