Easy Watercolor Paintings with Water-Based Markers | Kolbie Blume | Skillshare
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Easy Watercolor Paintings with Water-Based Markers

teacher avatar Kolbie Blume, Artist

Watch this class and thousands more

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Intro

      1:19

    • 2.

      Materials

      5:12

    • 3.

      Watercolor vs Water-Based Markers

      5:16

    • 4.

      Watercolor Techniques

      3:58

    • 5.

      More Ways to Use the Markers

      8:31

    • 6.

      Marker Review

      15:51

    • 7.

      Project 1: Sunset Landscape

      12:52

    • 8.

      Project 2: Night Sky

      9:22

    • 9.

      Project 3: Galaxy

      12:43

    • 10.

      Project 4: Sunflower

      8:15

    • 11.

      Recap

      2:20

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About This Class

Art is all about learning to create with what you have -- and sometimes, all you have is a box of cheap markers! But don't worry -- water-based markers and a paint brush are all you need to make fun watercolor designs. 

In this class, we'll explore different ways to used water-based markers as a substitute for watercolor. Hopefully, these tips, techniques, and projects will help you think outside the box and spur your creativity to even greater heights! 

Meet Your Teacher

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Kolbie Blume

Artist

Top Teacher

 

 

If you're pretty sure you're terrible at art...

...you're in the right place, my friend. 

 

 

Hi there! My name is Kolbie, and I'm a full-time artist, writer, and online educator -- but up until a few years ago, I was working a 9-5 desk job and thought my artistic ability maxed out at poorly-drawn stick figures. 

In my early 20s, I stumbled on mesmerizing Instagram videos with luminous watercolor paintings and flourishing calligraphy pieces, and ... See full profile

Level: Beginner

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Transcripts

1. Intro: Hi, my name is Kolbie, and I'm a self-taught watercolor artist. I'm sure we've all seen watercolor that comes in a palette like this, or we've seen it that comes in a liquid jar or in tubes or in dry little cakes that you can buy at the store. But have you ever seen a watercolor that looks like this? If you're saying to yourself, but Colby, those are markers. That's because this class is all about using water-based markers as a substitute for watercolor. We are going to go into the different ways that you can use marker as a substitute for creating a watercolor effect, the different kinds of water-based watercolor markers that I have, and which ones are my favorite. Then we're going to practice using watercolor techniques and paint four different projects. That's right, four. If that sounds interesting to you, and you want to learn to paint this or this galaxy, this sunflower, this classic gradient night sky, all using a water-based marker then this is the class for you and I would love for you to join me. 2. Materials: Before we get started, I just want to go over quickly the materials that you will need for this class. First and foremost, you're going to need any type of water-based marker. In a later video, I'm going to go over all of the water-based markers that I have and talk about the pros and cons. But for you, you don't have to have all of these that I have here. You just need your own set of water-based markers. That could be Crayola, that could be Karin markers, that could be Ecoline brush pen watercolor markers, Tombows that are water-based. The important thing is that they have to be water-based because that is what will allow them to activate and be a substitute for watercolor. Any water-based marker is what we're going to use for our ink, for our color. Then the rest of the supplies are pretty much what you would use in watercolor. I have a mixing palette. Palette for using markers as watercolor is especially important so make sure that you have a mixing palette. This one is a handmade ceramic palette that I have, but you can also just use any plastic palette or even a Ziploc bag sometimes works or a plate, any dish, something that is really smooth and will allow the ink to rest on the palate and let you pick it up. Then a paintbrush. Any paintbrush will be fine. I usually use Princeton paintbrushes, I may use a larger size than this also, this is around size 6. I may also use around size 10 or a smaller size 0, depending on the projects. Then some masking tape to tape down your paper and some watercolor papers. I want to make a note about the paper. Usually, when I do watercolor classes, I use student-grade paper to practice, and I use professional-grade paper for my final project. But when I use water-based markers for projects, I don't normally use professional-grade paper ever and that's because professional-grade papers are made of 100 percent cotton and that makes it really textured, it makes it really rough and especially if you're using brush pens that you might also want to use for lettering. Using these brush pens or any marker with a felt tip on professional watercolor paper is a fast-track to ruining the tips. If you don't care at all about ruining the tips of your markers, although I will say that it will probably drive them out faster as well to use 100 percent cotton paper, then it's fine. But because I like to preserve these things, I use student-grade watercolor paper when I'm using markers as watercolor because it is a little bit smoother but still starting enough to withhold the water. That's my one note about that. I will also say though, that if you're planning to use markers as watercolor regularly, you probably shouldn't use the same ones that you use for lettering or calligraphy just because no matter if you're using watercolor or any watercolor paper at all, it's going to fray your brush pens at some point probably soon. The best paper to use for brush pens is really smooth, like Bristol paper or a laser printer paper or marker paper and any watercolor paper at all, we'll likely ruin the brush tip over time and make them less ideal for lettering. I'm probably going to go more into that as I go over the pros and cons of all of these different water-based markers that I have. But I just wanted to make a note of that while we're in this first materials video. Then also I have a white gel pen that I am going to use for one or two of the projects and two cups of water off to the side like I usually always do one to keep dirty and one to keep clean and then some paper towels off to the side as well to blot out your paintbrush just like any normal watercoloring session. With that, let's go ahead and gather all of your materials, even if you're using a water-based marker that I don't have here, that's totally fine. Just wanted to say that again. The only important thing is that it's water-based as opposed to like alcohol-based or archival. If it says archival on it, that means it's permanent, and it will not be activated by water. Let's now move right along. 3. Watercolor vs Water-Based Markers: Before we get started learning how to use water-based markers as a substitution for watercolor, I wanted to do a quick demonstration of the difference between watercolor and water-based markers. Obviously, the difference is, one one paint and one is ink. But just so that you can see how the two stack up. I'm going to use one of my favorite colors and adds a color that's potent both in watercolor and in these markers. This is Queen Rose. It's like this deep raspberry pink. When you activate watercolor, at least when I have these dried watercolor in my palette over here, I bring some water with my paintbrush and tap it into this little well and activate the pigment and make it movable and turn it into a liquid by adding the water over here, and then just painting right along with it. The magic of watercolor really is with the wet-on-wet technique, using watercolor to blend and create some soft and magical textures. Water-based markers work to do that as well, because they're also activated with water. But there are some things about water-based markers that are a little different. For example [NOISE], if I try to use this ecoline brush pen, first, I would activate it. I would draw on this palette over here just to let the ink sit on the palette, and because it's a smooth surface it's not going to like absorb into the palette or anything. Then I would take my paintbrush and with water, just dip it right into the ink and use it like my own little watercolor well, but one thing about water-based marker ink is that it dries a lot faster than watercolor does. Where with watercolor, I can wait a few seconds and go back like I did over here, extend this gradient. With water-based markers, it dries a little faster and dried paint lines happen more frequently. You do have to work a little faster or make sure that your paper stays wet longer with water-based marker ink. That's something that is important to note. Also important to note, especially if you're using a palette to activate the ink, because you have to add water to it and the ink is all ready its most potent when it's on the palette, the color that you get is going to be lighter. It's going to have a lighter value than watercolor typically. That just has to do with you use more water to activate the ink because it already has water in it when you put it on the palette, it's already wet. That's what allows you to write with it when you have it in the marker is that it's already wet, and activated with water. In order to make it possible to paint with a paintbrush, you need to add more water and that dilutes the pigment a little bit. That's another thing that's important to note as a difference between the two. Other than that, I would say that probably watercolor markers also come in much brighter colors. They don't always come in the neutral colors that are really good oftentimes for landscapes. Just know that you're probably not going to get a very dense dark pigment with watercolor markers, but that doesn't mean that you can't have fun with them and you can't paint really beautiful things with them. That's what this class is about. We're going to learn how we can use watercolor markers as a substitution for watercolors. Not an exact translation. Not like I could get rid of my watercolors today, but as an addition to your work as an artist, you can explore and expand and try other fun things as well. That's just a brief overview and side-by-side comparison of watercolor versus water-based markers. Now, let's move on to some more demos and techniques. 4. Watercolor Techniques: Now that we've talked about just the difference between watercolor and water-based markers, let's talk about using watercolor techniques with these water-based marker. The basic watercolor techniques are the wet-on-dry technique and the wet-on-wet technique. Wet-on-dry means you are painting watercolor on dry paper, and wet-on-wet means you're painting watercolor on wet paper. These two techniques look a little different. I mean, they look very similar but approaching it, you can approach them in different ways when you're using water-based markers. The first way that we're going to talk about, we've already discussed in the previous video when we activated this one of these markers, the ICO line magenta marker on this palette. The first way that you can activate water-based markers is by coloring directly on some kind of palette. Now I'm going to use some art lines sticks markers, and I'm just going to show you again. You color directly on the palette and then you take your paint brush and dip it in some water and use that water to activate the ink and help it stick to your paintbrush. Then you can paint just like you would with normal watercolors. The wet-on-dry technique is defined by these crisp clear lines, and when you use your paintbrush, it's just like you would paint with watercolor, except for the differences that we talked about in the previous video, like ink from water-based markers dries a little quicker than watercolor and so you have to move a little faster if you want to manipulate it while it's still wet. But other than that, it's mostly the same as watercolor. The other difference is that if you try to paint on top of it, glazing doesn't really work because it's water-based, not pigment based and so the ink will, if you put water on top of it, even after it's already dried, the ink will disperse because the water is going to reactivate it. That's using the wet-on-dry technique with these water-based markers drawing on a pallet. Then the wet-on-wet technique will also look pretty similar to when we normally use watercolors with our paints. If we get the paper wet first and then dip a wet paint brush into some paint here, we can paint right in this wet area and it's just like using watercolor. But with the wet-on-wet technique especially it's important to know that the ink is going to dry faster than watercolor paint would. That means with the wet-on-wet technique, if you want to maintain those blends, you need to move faster as well. That was the quick rundown of how to use these basic techniques using a mixing palette and drawing on a pallet. Basically using the markers as a direct substitution for paint just on a pallet. In the next video we're going to talk about the second way, how to us water-based markers as a substitution for watercolor. 5. More Ways to Use the Markers: Welcome back. In the previous video, we talked about using a palette to encourage and leave the ink from water-based markers so that we can use it as a substitution for watercolor. In this video, we're going talk about other ways that you can use water-based markers as watercolors. Basically, there are two ways. One is instead of transferring the ink from your marker to a palette, you can transfer directly to the page and then very quickly use your paintbrush to activate it even further. This method is great if you're trying to paint galaxies, or you're trying [NOISE] to paint skies or gradients. You want to have your color from the marker be really potent, because as we discussed before in a previous video, when you take the ink from a palette, and you need to activate it with water on the palette before even painting, adding that water is going to lighten the value of the color. It's going to make the colors not quite as bright as if you were able to paint directly on the paper. Using water-based markers in this way, to draw directly on the paper and moving very quickly, [NOISE] using your paintbrush to activate those colors together helps to keep the vibrance of the colors and still use these water-based markers as a substitution for watercolor. One thing I will note about this, and it's something I've talked about before is, ink is going to dry very quickly, it's going to dry even more quickly when you draw directly on the paper as opposed to using the ink from the palette. If you wait even just a little bit too long, you're going to see dried paint lines. I'm purposefully waiting a little bit longer, and then when I go to try to activate this, notice how it's faint, but there's still a dried paint lines on here where you can see just the paint outline of where I initially drew with the marker on this paper. I think that there are other papers you can use that help to diminish this effect, where you use the marker to draw directly on the paper and then use your paintbrush to activate it. There are different papers that alleviate that somewhat, but every paper you use, if you wait too long to activate the marker, you're still going to get this dried outline of a paint line [BACKGROUND].I've also found that sometimes is better at not leaving behind those paint lines, they are also worse for the markers. On the whole, I would still rather stick with a Canson student grade paper or like Strathmore student grade paper, but just note that you're going to have to move a little faster if you want to avoid these dried paint lines. You can also use the markers to draw directly on wet paper. I have a little wet square here, and I can use this marker to draw directly on this wet paper. It's not going to act exactly like watercolor for the most part, but you are going to get these blurry lines. The difference between watercolor is that instead of blooming outward and a nice watercolor texture, I still have this draw, this line of marker, it's still drying with the marker, but the lines are going be fuzzy. One thing to note about that is different markers are going to react differently with this effect, and we're going to talk more about that in the video where I do a demo of all of these markers that I have, and that demo video is going to help you know and decide which markers you want to use for which projects, things like that. We're going to discuss that more, but this is a way that you can use water-based markers as a substitution for watercolor. It's just forgoing the paintbrush entirely and painting directly on a wet surface. I think that the best way to do this [NOISE] is probably to do a mix. Again, with the other one, if you want a more vibrant or potent color, and you still want to have that blurry edge effect than to do both, to paint, to draw directly on a wet surface, and then use your paintbrush to manipulate it even further if that's the direction that you want to go. Finally, you can also with very few markers, this doesn't really work with a lot of them. In fact, I think it really only works with these Karin brush markers but sometimes markers are so wet and so inky that you can use the wet-on-wet technique directly in the marker stroke that you've just laid down. I've really only seen this happen with Karin markers where if you can see, I drew this blue streak right here, and then I tapped in some of this light blue that you can see. It's blended right in there. It doesn't work exactly the same or as long as actual watercolor, but it does work and is useful for blending. Those are just a few short ways that you can use water-based markers as a substitution for some techniques for the different watercolor techniques that we already know. There's another way that I want to talk about that's not so much for watercolor. I don't know that you're really going to use it for illustration that much except maybe to make gradients. It's a method you likely already know if you do lettering or work with brush markers. It's a pretty fun and easy. Basically, if you just draw right on a pallet, [NOISE] just leave some ink directly on your palette and then take a different color brush pen and basically [NOISE] lift the ink from a different color brush pen. Then you can mix those colors directly on the pen and create this natural gradient. Because water-based markers are water-based, they can lift and blend directly on the nibs. I've not really found this super useful for painting watercolor landscapes necessarily, although you could paint mini landscapes to do a little gradients like this. But I would classify this more as an illustration technique generally rather than a watercolor technique. Still it was worth mentioning that you can use this method to create gradients without needing a paintbrush or water at all. That wraps up this video on using markers and watercolor techniques, and now we're going to move right along. 6. Marker Review: Welcome back. Now let's take a look at the seven different water-based markers that I have on hand, to just see what the pros and cons are of each of them. Before we get started, I want to say that for the projects that we're going to do, after, mostly I'm going to use Karin markers because they are my favorite. If you don't feel like going over all of the rest of them and want to just know my best recommendation it would definitely be Karin markers, but let's dive into why that is and all of the other markers as well. I think when doing side-by-side comparisons, it's always most helpful if you can use the same color. I don't always have the exact same hue of all these colors and I couldn't find my purple kuretake marker. Most of these are like a typical violet purple. Some of them are more on the blue-violet and some of them are more on the red-violet end. But I thought that it would be helpful to look at mostly the same hue. Because it's important to note that even different hues within the same brand react differently depending on the situation. As you are doing your own experimenting, I would look into that as well. How different colors are either stronger, pigment-wise, or if they dry faster. Those are important things to look at. But for now, let's take a look at these seven different brands of markers and how to test their ability to replace watercolor. First, let's take a look at Karin markers. I already said that they are my favorite, but we're still going to do the four tests that I recommend you do for any of the water-based markers that you have if you're trying to determine what you should use. First, let's test the pigment strength when we draw on a pallet versus when we draw right on paper. First I'm going to transfer some of this ink to my palette and then I'm going to take my paintbrush, activate it, and just make a little gradient right underneath where I wrote the word Karin. We are making this gradient by painting with the ink first and then washing off my paintbrush and then using clean water to meet where I left the ink so that I can have this subtle shift from dark to light. This light gradient, this is the plum color Karin marker. Looks like after I have diluted it with water and activated it with a pallet so it's pretty light, pretty delicate. That's the first test. Then the second test is to create a gradient by drawing directly on the paper first. I'm going to draw, just scribbled directly on this paper about halfway, then take my paintbrush and continue it. I'm going to activate the water first and then take clean water and meet it like I did before, just so that I can spread the gradient out a little bit and see how light it can go. That is the gradient. That is the Karin marker when we draw directly on the paper and activate it on the paper. As you can see, the places where it was untouched by water and I'm even going to just add a little bit more ink to it here. It's much more vibrant and potent when you draw directly on the paper. Me at my adding ink directly to this wet spot is a technique that Karin markers do particularly well because they're so inky and so pigmented. A lot of other brands don't do this quite as well. Where I can take the marker and tap it into a wet space. We're going to test that technique with other markers as well. We first tested making a gradient by using the ink that we transferred directly from our palette and then making a gradient that we made by first drawing on the paper and then activating it. As you draw on the paper and activate it, I'm going to do this one more time. It's also important to look for whether or not your marker leaves behind a dried paint line. Typically, the best way to test that or to see you just offhand, is to see how wet your markers are, how wet the ink is and Karin markers are really wet. The more wet they are, the longer they're going to be able to stay on the paper without drying and leaving staining the paper with that dried ink line. Then finally, we're just going to test how well the marker will activate via the wet-on-wet technique if we draw directly on a wet piece of paper. This is the fourth and final test I'm going to do for all of these markers and Karin markers passes this test with flying colors. They still don't expand quite as much as if I was using real watercolor, but they bloom and blend so nicely and well right on this wet spot of the paper. That's one of the reasons why I prefer Karin markers if I'm using markers as a replacement for watercolor over just about any of the other ones. We're going to do these four tests. Making a gradient by using the ink transfer, making a gradient by using the marker and testing the dried paint line and testing the marker via the wet-on-wet technique painting directly in a wet surface. We're going to do all of these tests for all of the markers. That was Karin and now let's move on to Tombow. I hope you enjoyed that little time-lapse of how I tested all of these different markers, and now I'm going to go over the results. First, let's take a look at how light all of the markers are when we activate them with water, and what happens to them. It looks to me the lightest when activated with markers are Winsor and Newton, Ecoline and Kuretake. I think that Crayola probably in there too and Tombow. All of them are pretty light. Maybe I should do the reverse. The most vibrant I think even after using a palette, are Artline sticks and Karin markers, and then all of the other ones are definitely dampened, much lighter when you add the water. Another way to test the vibrancy is to see how dark the second gradients are, where I drew directly on the paper. I feel like this test also confirms our theory that Artline sticks and Karin are the most vibrant of the seven markers that I was using. That's important to note if you are trying to paint things that have a high vibrance or maybe a high contrast. If you're trying to paint the night sky where the top of the night sky is really dark and vibrant and pigmenty and the bottom is more much lighter, then the contrast is what makes that possible. You want a marker that will go really, really dark and vibrant as well as really, really light and airy. From the tests that we did, the limited tests keep in mind, because like I mentioned earlier, different colors react differently. But the tests that we've done so far, it looks like Karin and Artline are both more vibrant than the other ones. Other things to look for is the wet-in-wet tests that we did. I'm looking for whether the ink reacted in a really bloomy, cloudy way similar to how watercolor reacts and not very many of the markers really did. You get these more bloated textures. Tombow did a little bit but then had this weird background drying effect. Most of them just look like blurry dots that still hold the form of one. I dotted the marker, but I was expecting that and I was preparing you for it. Most of these markers don't really work very well, wet-in-wet, but they can still be activated and used as watercolor. Then the other thing that I wanted to look for was dried paint lines. Some of these gradients, I waited longer to reactivate them with water to see how and where the dried paint lines would form and most of them do. Kuretake has some pretty defined dried paint lines underneath the wash. Artline has a pretty defined dried paint line right there. Winsor and Newton does as well. Although I will say that Karin also does. I think that dried paint lines is something that is difficult to avoid when you're using water-based markers unless you're moving very fast, or you're willing to cover it up. One way to come back to the dried paint lines is to just make sure that you are covering up with darker or another layer of watercolor where the paint lines exist. We're going to talk about that as we move on to the projects as well, but I wanted to show you these four tests that I do, testing the water, testing the ink from a palette, testing the ink when you draw directly on the paper, and testing it wet on wet. If you have any other tests that you discover or experimenting with then feel free to share them with me or do your own experiments. But this is really helpful when I'm determining which marker I want to use. As these tests indicate when I'm using water-based markers as watercolor, I almost always either go with Karin or Artline because they're more vibrant and that's what I'm looking for. The thing that surprised me most about this was knowing that Ecoline and Winsor and Newton, which are both marketed as watercolor markers, are less vibrant. That doesn't mean that they're bad. It just means that if you want really vibrant potent pieces, then maybe these brands aren't what you want to go with. But these are really great for more subtle soft pieces. In conversely, I really love Winsor and Newton and Ecoline pens for lettering way more than I like Artline for lettering. I like these two. These are some of my very favorites for lettering. Karin is probably just my favorite overall. One last thing, Crayola is by far the cheapest of all of these. I want to say that it held up really well, even up against these more really expensive markers. If Crayola is the only one that you have on hand, it's pretty vibrant. It did pretty well with the wet-in-wet technique. I think that there are some dried paint lines, but not more than any of the other ones. Crayola is definitely a viable choice here, especially if you're not wanting to invest in anything more expensive. That wraps up this markers roundup video. Now, finally, let's move on to the watercolor projects. 7. Project 1: Sunset Landscape: Welcome to project number 1. In project number 1, we are going to use water-based markers, Karin markers, and a pallet to use these markers as a more traditional substitution form of watercolor. Meaning every time I use these colors, I'm going to draw directly on this palette and use my paintbrush on the palette, activating the ink with my paintbrush as opposed to drawing directly on the paper. For this piece, we are going to paint a quick little sunset mountain piece. First things first, I'm going to [NOISE] just scribble a few of the colors that I'm going to use right on my palette here. I'm using sky blue, canary yellow, rose pink, and pale orange for the sky to create a colorful cotton candy sky effect. [NOISE] There are my colors and now, I'm going to get my paper wet. This is traditionally how I start almost all of my landscape paintings regardless of what watercolor I use. I'm going to get my paper wet. Notice that I'm using student-grade paper and I taped it down with masking tape just to keep the paper as taut as possible. I'm using some clean water to get this paper wet. Now I'm going to take my brush and start with the sky blue and just paint along the top. As you can see, I'm going to paint in these jagged strokes leaving behind some white spaces so I can add more colors in later. As you can see, as we practiced with Karin markers, the ink from Karin markers is pretty vibrant so you can get some really cool and beautiful colors by using the ink from these markers. Now I'm going to take the canary yellow and start from the bottom and paint upward from the bottom. This is just to create that time of day in the sunset when the sky is still blue. If it's a sunset, it hasn't quite started yet. But it's just starting to shift colors. The bottom is going to stay this yellow color and then it's going to just bleed a little bit into the blue sky and then while this is still wet, I'm going to use the pale orange and the rose pink to create some little clouds in the white spaces that we left behind here. I'm going to start with the orange, and with orange and blue, you want to be careful not to mix them too much, that's partly why I left behind these white spaces because orange and blue are complementary colors. This is pale orange though, so it's not going to clash as much as bright orange would, still it's important to note. Then just right on top of the orange, I'm going to tap on some pink and because of the wet-on-wet technique, the colors are just going to blend together. If they don't blend together, if it looks like they've dried, that's because your paper has dried too quickly, and so it's important to move fast when you're trying to paint to the wet-on-wet technique like this. Then really quickly, I'm just going to take more pale orange and blend the two colors together in all of my clouds so that I have this nice cloudy blend instead of some stark or harsh bleeds in the clouds. I'm just tapping along and I'm moving very quickly and you'll notice that as I'm moving quickly, I'm not trying to be perfect. I'm not trying to make perfectly-formed clouds. If I did try to do that, if I tried to make my clouds shaped a little "better", the ink would dry before I got a chance to even do anything, and so here, I'm just really embracing the doesn't have to be perfect philosophy in an effort to avoid dried paint lines and to just really love this loose watercolor style that I already know is pretty cool. There are some of my clouds. Now, I'm going to let this layer dry and paint some mountains. [NOISE] To form the little mountain ridge that I'm going to paint, I want it to be pretty dark, and so I'm going to use this Karin marker. This color is usually sapphire blue, which is the darkest blue that I could find, and then I'm going to directly on my mixing palette, add some black to it. Normally, if you know anything about color theory, adding black to a color turns it into a shade of that color and that's exactly what we want because I want this to be tinted blue but darker than that. I'm going to get it really, really watery and then making sure my brush is flat so I'm getting a lot of paint on there. I'm just going to paint a jagged mountain ridge all the way across here. Then I'm going to act quickly and fill in the bottom so I don't have any dried paint lines on here. I'm trying to fill in the mountain by either painting with a wet paint brush, just with water or grabbing more ink so that I don't leave behind any dried paint lines. Then I'm going to wait for this mountain layer to dry. [NOISE] This mountain layer is dry and something interesting that happened is this mountain layer looks dark green rather than the dark blue that we painted and that's because the water-based ink has the same transparent qualities that watercolor does. By painting with the blue on top of this really vibrant yellow sky, it turned to green, and that has to do with glazing and using layers. In an earlier lesson, I talked about how some forms of glazing doesn't really work with water-based markers because it won't really always hold it shapes, some part of the ink will always reactivate, and that's true. If I were to paint this whole thing over again with water, some parts of the sky and the mountain, the pigment would lift up and blend and bleed into the sky making all this big muddy mess as opposed to if this was pigment-based watercolor, if it were completely dry, I could wash over again with some water and mostly it would stay, it would hold its form. Trying to glaze on top of already formed layers or objects in a layer underneath wouldn't always work. But if you're just trying to use the colors and the transparency underneath and in your glazing, not necessarily trying to hold some shape in a previous layer, then glazing and layering works really well. That is just a little note that I have about that, using watercolor markers as a substitution and how the differences there. We have this mountain layer. Now, I'm just going to finish off this [NOISE] painting by painting one more mountain layer only using black. I'm going to do the same thing that I did before, activating it with my paintbrush and then I'm going to do a really thin small little mountain layer right at the bottom here. Maybe have a little peak that comes up on this side. Then I'm going to take some more of the black and just to paint a few birds that are coming out of the mountain. Just to add a little bit of complexity and contrast in the sunset. There we go. That is a landscape, a sunset painting with some cotton candy sky with the pink clouds and the blue sky that we painted only using Karin markers and a watercolor palette. Let's take off the tape and see what our painting looks like. [NOISE] Here we go. We took off the tape. It caught a little bit on the top here, so it ripped off a little bit of the paper, but that has more to do with the paper than it does with the tape. If you're ever using masking tape or painter's tape or washing tape and it tears your paper, it's probably because you're using non good-quality paper, and I know that we're not this time, it's student-grade, which I did on purpose to use with these markers, so I'm fine with that. I also want to note that when you're doing these little projects, I'm doing all of them on small pieces of paper. I took a 9 by 12 inch sheet of Canson student-grade watercolor paper, and I just cut it into quarters because I knew that working with water-based markers, you have to move fast or else you're going to get some dried paint lines. Working on a small piece of paper is going to be the best way to practice that. This painting is on a small piece of paper. I think it looks pretty cool, even if it was painted using only the ink from markers, it still looks like an awesome watercolor painting. This is project number 1, and now let's move on to project number 2. 8. Project 2: Night Sky: Welcome to project number 2 in our exploring water-based markers as a substitution for a watercolor class. In this project, we're going to use our Karin markers to paint directly on the paper most of the time forgoing the pallet so that we can get a more vibrant effect. The reason I want to do it is because we are painting a night sky. This is one of my very favorite projects. One of my very favorite designs. I've done it lots of times over the years as I've taught, and it's a fan favorite. I thought that I would use this project as a way to demonstrate how to use Karin markers in their full potency by drawing directly on the paper in order to capture that kind of stunning gradient effect. First of all, I'm using my marker at an angle. These are brush markers, ultimately, so I still want to maintain the tip as much as possible. Then I'm going to go about maybe a little more than 1/3 down the paper and just put one or two layers of ink on here. Then I'm going to move quickly, and grab my paintbrush with some water and paint just directly in the pigment that I've already created. I can go right from the top and keep moving down. I'm continually adding water to my brush and washing it off. Then as I'm going down the page, in order to maintain a gradient, I'm washing off my paintbrush and using clean water to paint upward to meet this watercolor gradient that I've created. If you want to know more about my night sky techniques, I have a night sky class where I go over all of my favorite gradient techniques for creating this kind of night sky. I'd recommend checking that out if you're interested. This just uses those same techniques but with these Karin markers. It started with painting down, and then because of the wet-on-wet technique, the water helped to make the pigment lighter. It gets lighter as it goes towards the bottom. Then in order to keep the bottom as light as possible and maintain the contrast between light and dark, then I take a clean brush and paint from the bottom upward because you need to paint from light to dark so that you don't accidentally get the bottom to be too dark. Now that we have this nice-looking gradient, I'm just going to draw directly again on my page with the Karin marker to make the top slightly darker. That looks pretty good to me. I'm just going to blend that right in to the page. Now I'm going to let this gradient dry. Here's our dried gradient. It is a pretty rock and gradient for only using this sapphire blue Karin markers where I just drew directly on the paper and then used water to activate the markers ink and push it down a little bit so that I can create this nice gradient from light to dark. Now we are going to use a black Karin marker to paint directly on the paper to draw some trees. Similar to the way that I paint trees, I'm going to use very little pressure to draw out a thin line for the trunk, and I'm starting from a little below that line, I'm just going to paint some blobs on either side of this trunk to form my tree. Brush markers make it helpful to mimic my painting tree process this way because they have the flexibility to utilize the different pressures. I'm actually going to change the angle so that you can see these trees a little better. I'm back. I'm just going to paint a few trees along the horizon here. The trees are supposed to act as a contrast against the night sky and help make the night sky look even brighter. They're just silhouetted against the sky. These really inky Karin markers make for excellent watercolor brush substitutions when painting trees like this, I've found. I'm just painting little blobs on either side of the tree. I'm going to have one tree that goes all the way up here because that's my signature move to have one really tall tree and maybe have it a little thicker as well down towards the bottom, just adding more blobs on either side. I'm going to have that tree and then I think one more going into the side like this. That wraps it up for my trees. The last step to this night sky painting using Karin markers is to draw in some stars. I am using this Sakura Gelly Roll Gel Pen in white to just manually draw in my stars. If you've taken any of my other classes, usually I recommend getting some white gouache and splattering stars. You can still do that this time. You would splatter them before you paint the trees. But because we're going for non-traditional non-paint methods here, I decided to use my gel pen to draw in the stars. The trick with drawing in stars manually is that you need to draw the stars in clusters or clumps instead of just one at a time because when you draw them one at a time, you're more likely to create a pattern, I have found. If you draw them in clusters, it look slightly more realistic. I left this pen open accidentally overnight, and so some of the dots aren't coming out quite as well as I want to because some of the ink from the pen has dried along the rims. But that's okay. I'm just dotting a bunch of stars here. You can even give them some movement or rhythm. I know that some people like to draw a wave of stars just to maybe mimic the Milky Way a little bit. Either way, it's going to look the best if your stars have some semblance of chaos and randomness to them just because that's how stars look. That's why normally I like to splatter in the first place. But it is fun to test your drawing ability and just to stretch yourself in different ways even if it's something as little as drawing stars a different way than you normally do. You could also make some of the stars bigger. Or you could even draw in a little constellation. But then I'm going to finish this off. I'm just going to flick my wrist and draw a shooting star off to the corner, which is something that I usually do also, and have done for years. That completes this night sky. Let's take off the tape to see what we're dealing with. That's pretty darn good. I think that considering we didn't use any watercolor at all, this watercolor night sky looks pretty awesome. This was project number 2. Now on to project number 3. 9. Project 3: Galaxy: Welcome back. This is project number 3 of this using water-based markers as a substitute for watercolor class and we're going to paint a galaxy. We're going to paint this galaxy by drawing directly on the paper. We're also going to use a pallet to enhance the color blends that we're going to do. Let's get right into it. First, make sure you pick colors that will blend well together. Yellows and blues always blend really well together. I'm just going to take my colors and I'm going to draw directly on this piece of paper and sometimes leaving behind white space, so leaving white space in-between the colors, sometimes not. I'm just going to take these Karen markers, drawing at an angle and draw all over this paper right here. I'm trying to move quickly so that I can activate the colors in just a minute with the water. [NOISE] Now I'm going to take my paintbrush and with a bunch of water, I'm just going to in circles activate all of these colors. Note that because if you do this method where you do all the colors down at once, you are going to have some dried paint lines from the brushstrokes and that's okay because we're going to use the watercolors after on a pallet to try to hide and cover up some of those brushstrokes and make the contrast between the colors even greater. For this first step is to just get the pigment down, get the colors down, and activate them as soon as possible with water, continually washing off your paintbrush, and coming back with plenty of water. Now that we have activated all of these colors and we have our paper wet, and we have this cool blend of colors together, now I'm going to use the edges of my masking tape as a palette and draw directly on the masking tape with the colors so that I can pick them up again. While the painting is still wet. [NOISE] Use the wet-on-wet technique to add even more drop in even more color into this piece and especially if you see a place where there are dried paint lines from the brushstrokes. They're definite lines from where you originally colored on the paper, then that's where I would focus your efforts to just tap your paintbrush, tap the pigment that you're picking up along those dried paint lines so that you can cover them up. You might not be perfect at it. You might not cover up all of them. But that's okay. This is not to be perfect. This is mostly an experiment and having fun with watercolor. [NOISE] If it doesn't look exactly like normal watercolor, that's totally fine. You may have to apply some ink to the outside of your makeshift palettes here because as soon as you add water to activate them, it turns them lighter. If you want more potent colors as you're painting in here, then you're going to need to get more of the colors directly from the marker. That's just how it goes. Notice how we're all mostly putting the light colors here. I do have that dark blue. We're going to add black and dark blue in just a little bit to really turn it into that space kind of galaxy. But first, just keep adding color, re-wetting things as necessary, covering up dried paint lines where you see them. Keep going until you feel like you have a decent amount of color blending going on and then let that layer dry. Now that this layer is dry, we're going to do something that I told you not to do but it's okay because we want these colors to blend together. We're going to re-wet it completely and then once it's wet again, we're going to add even more color on top of it, and this time add more black and darker colors along the outside to complete our galaxy look. I'm just re-wetting my page with some clean water and trying to move fast. We're going to do basically the same thing we did before. But this time I'm going to start with some black and I'm going to use this palette instead of the masking tape because I ran out of room and take this black and just along the outsides here, while my painting is still wet, paint a cloudy, wet on wet border around this galaxy. I may need to see even student grade paper does this in so does watercolor marker ink. It's already dried really quickly. I want to go back in with some clean water and re-wet. Make sure to blend in this marker with the paper so I don't get tons of dried paint lines and some of that sometimes that might mean even picking up colors from before and blending it right into the black edges that you've created here so that you don't have as many dried paint lines so that you can avoid them as much as possible. I'm just going to use this palette even more to pick up some more colors [NOISE] and [NOISE] continue painting as quickly as possible. Let's pick up some yellow here and just tap it, blend it into the dark color. Over here I noticed some of the black dried into not a naturally shaped paint lines so that's where I want to add more black to cover up that paint line and keep going until I feel satisfied. The thing about watercolor galaxies is that it doesn't have to look perfect. I mean, unless you're working from a reference photo that you've taken from NASA's website or something, it doesn't have to look exactly like what you might imagine something in space to look like and that's generally my rule when it comes to painting with loose watercolor, especially when you're experimenting, like when we're experimenting with water-based markers as a substitution for watercolor. Just feel free to be loose and paint and blend as you like, and then stop at some point and have that be okay. One thing before you stop that I would recommend trying, especially if you're using Karen markers, this might not work if you're using other markers. But especially if you're using Karen markers, you can also go ahead and just use the black right on the wet paper and blend it in to the peace that way. I wouldn't do it the whole way around. I would go in pieces. I would paint right on the paper and then blend it in and then paint on the paper and blend it in because otherwise it could dry before you get a chance to blend it and you could end up with some, again dried paint lines that you don't really want. But if you just use the marker to draw right on the edge and allow the wet-on-wet technique to work its magic, you can get some really vibrant and dark results that way and it doesn't have to be on the whole thing. Even if you do it in pieces, you don't have to do all the way around necessarily. But that is a method that you can use to get some even more vibrant pigment. You don't even have to only do it with the black. [NOISE] You can also, while it's still wet paint directly on here with other colors, you just want to make sure to blend them in with your paintbrush so that you don't end up with marks that look like you have actually paint drawn in with a marker, but you wanted to blend it so it has that nice naturally cloudy look. [NOISE] I'm just going to paint with some yellow in here just to add even more contrast. That looks pretty good to me. I'm going to let that dry and then we're going to draw in the stars. [MUSIC] There we have it. I drew in some stars and I took off the tape and here is a watercolor galaxy that we painted using Karen markers. It looks pretty cool. It looks a lot like a normal watercolor galaxy would look like. I hope you enjoyed this project and let's head on over to the fourth and final project in this class. 10. Project 4: Sunflower: Welcome to the final project in this class. We're going to [NOISE] use our Karin Markers as paintbrushes once again, and we're going to paint a watercolor sunflower using no paintbrushes, using no palettes, just the markers. First, let's get started with pulling out the colors. I'm going to be using sepia and copper brown, gold, and lush green with Karin Markers. I'm going to get started with painting the center of my sunflower, which is brown, and so I'm just going to paint concentric circles, leaving behind some white space of this center. Because I want the center of the sunflower to have a little bit of texture to it so that you can see at least, see like let your mind trick you into thinking you're seeing all of the small little details that make up the center of a big sunflower. One thing to remember with sunflowers, at least, when I'm painting them, is that the brown center is almost always bigger than you think it needs to be. I'm just tapping on dots in circles around to paint this big centerpiece. Then, once I have it down, I'm going to take my gold Karin Marker, and draw using a thick, thin brushstroke, draw in a petal. I do this in three motions. One side of the petal like that, one side of the petal like this, and then just coloring it in, and making sure to have the petals stick outward. They're all coming out from the middle of this sunflower. I like to do my layers of petals in two rounds, so I'm going to do one layer where there's some space between the petals, and then another layer after that. Then I'm probably going to even add another layer of brown, but we will get there when we get there. You can also turn your paper. Notice, I didn't tape it down this time, and I did that on purpose so that I can turn my paper, I'm also not using a heavy wash, so it's not super necessary. We have this one layer of petals down. Before we move on to the next layer, take your copper brown, and I'm just going to, using the wet-on-wet technique, add just a little bit of texture from the middle into the petals, just so these petals can have just a little bit of movement in details on there. Not a lot, and it's okay if it doesn't look perfect. It's also okay if you don't really like this style. But I'm just adding a few lines onto the petals just to add a little bit of depth to those petals. Then I'm going to go again, and this time because these petals are water-based, some of them might bleed into each other and that's okay, it's not a big deal. If you can't see every individual petal, if they blend together, that is an effect that I am definitely okay with. But as I'm finishing painting these petals, I'm just going in between the ones that I've already made and forming the petals in the same way. Then I'm going to go back [NOISE] and add a few details. You don't have to add these copper-red details to all of the petals, definitely not. You can do it to just a few of them and that is okay too. Then finally, this looks more like a daisy to me. I do still want it to look like a sunflower, so I'm going to go and add in even more brown around the edges because that is the biggest difference I can see, that the center of this sunflower isn't quite as big as it should be, and so that's why I'm going around and adding even more of these brown edges. Then I can go back and add more yellow too [NOISE] if I want some spaces in between the petals and the brown. Just to add more color almost always means more texture and that is hardly ever a bad thing when it comes to watercolor. I'm just adding in more yellow, more brown, so that this sunflower actually looks more like a sunflower, with that giant brown center. That looks pretty good to me. Definitely not perfect, but perfect is not what I was shooting for. To finish this off, I'm just going to draw in a stem. Sunflower stems are pretty thick, and I'm going to use some watercolor techniques that I know, so I'm going to leave behind on purpose, some of these white streaks, just to showcase the texture of this sunflower stem, and embrace that loose watercolor style. Then I'm going to have one big leaf that is coming off of here, like this, and I'm going to leave the middle white. I'm going to leave a little white space in the middle of this leaf and just paint around it. Similar to how I would do if I were painting a leaf with a paintbrush. Then I'm going to do one more small one in the same way, leaving behind just this small white strip and coloring in around it. [NOISE] The reason why you can use Karin Markers to basically color, I essentially just drew this with markers and still have it look like a watercolor flower, it's because Karin Markers are so inky, they're so watery, and that makes them really excellent for mimicking the watercolor effect while using markers. This doesn't necessarily looked like I drew it with markers. I think it looks like I painted it with watercolor and so Karin Markers are really fun for that reason. [NOISE] That wraps up this final project, where we painted the center of this flower with petals coming out of it and drew in the stem and the leaves. This definitely looks illustrated, not super realistic, but I still think it looks really cool, and it's amazing that we were able to paint this just using these markers. Thank you so much for joining me for this class, I hope you liked it, and let's head over to finish up with some final thoughts. 11. Recap: Thank you so much for taking my class on how to use water-based markers as a substitute for watercolor. I had tons of fun creating this content for you and painting the four different projects that we created. To recap, these are what we made in this class. We made this colorful sunset, and we did this mostly using a palette and a paintbrush and lifting watercolor marker ink from the palette. We also painted this galaxy where we drew right on the paper and activated the markers with water. We ''Painted'' this sunflower where we drew right on the paper as well and we used such inky markers that it looks like watercolor. Then we painted this watercolor night sky where we did a mix of both drawing right on the paper and using a paintbrush to activate it. I hope you enjoyed this class. I hope that it helps to get you out of a creative rut maybe or think outside the box. Even better would be is if finding a way to use markers like this as a substitute for watercolor helps spur you to experiment even more with art supplies and the different ways that you can use them. If you really loved this class, one of the best things that you can do to support teachers like me, is to leave a review. I would love to see any of your feedback. I would love to see what you thought of this class. If you have suggestions for our future classes or ways I can improve on this class, I would love to hear that too. Also, if you're interested in posting your work that you've done from this class to Instagram, please tag me, my handle is @thiswritingdesk and I would love to see any of the work that you've done. Thank you once again for joining me and I will see you next time.