Loose Watercolor Lavender: Monochromatic Floral Vase Painting | Brenda Jones | Skillshare

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Loose Watercolor Lavender: Monochromatic Floral Vase Painting

teacher avatar Brenda Jones, Watercolor Artist & Teacher

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.

      Welcome and Class Overview

      1:23

    • 2.

      Creating a Soft Watercolor Glass Vase

      11:06

    • 3.

      Building Loose Lavender Flowers

      11:04

    • 4.

      Final Thoughts and Next Steps

      1:48

    • 5.

      Outro

      1:48

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16

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5

Projects

About This Class

In this short and relaxing watercolor class, we’ll paint a loose monochromatic lavender arrangement in a simple glass vase using soft layers, expressive brushwork, and a single color palette.

This class is designed to feel approachable, calming, and easy to complete in one sitting. Many of my students enjoy these shorter classes because they allow you to practice watercolor without feeling overwhelmed, while still finishing with a beautiful piece you can feel proud of.

Together, we’ll explore how adjusting water and pigment strength can create depth, softness, and contrast even when working with only one primary color. This is a wonderful way to build confidence with loose watercolor techniques while also learning to let the paint move more naturally on the paper.

This class is also the first in a coordinating mini vase collection series. Upcoming classes will explore additional flowers, vase shapes, and monochromatic color palettes that can be displayed together as a beautiful matching set.

In this class, you’ll learn:

• How to create depth using one color family
• Loose lavender-inspired floral brushwork
• Simple layering techniques for soft contrast
• How to keep watercolor florals feeling airy and expressive
• Easy glass vase techniques using light values and transparency
• How to create movement without overworking the painting

This class is beginner-friendly and also works well for experienced artists who want a calm, expressive floral study.

Materials Needed:

• Watercolor paper
• Round brushes
• Purple watercolor paint
• Water container
• Paper towel
• Palette or mixing surface

By the end of class, you’ll have a finished monochromatic floral vase painting that works beautifully on its own or as part of the full coordinating collection.

If you enjoy this class, be sure to follow me here on Skillshare so you’ll know when the next vase studies in this series are published. And if you feel comfortable, I’d love for you to upload your project and leave a review. Seeing your work truly makes my day and helps other students discover these classes too.

You may also enjoy exploring these related monochromatic floral vase studies that build on the same loose watercolor techniques and help you continue practicing softness, brush control, and color harmony.

Loose Watercolor Cosmos: Monochromatic Yellow Floral Vase
https://www.skillshare.com/en/classes/loose-watercolor-cosmos-monochromatic-yellow-floral-vase/1758900279

Loose Watercolor Blue Florals: Monochromatic Vase Painting
https://www.skillshare.com/en/classes/loose-watercolor-lavender-monochromatic-floral-vase/432485500

Each class explores a different color mood while keeping the painting process calm, expressive, and approachable.

Meet Your Teacher

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Brenda Jones

Watercolor Artist & Teacher

Teacher
Level: Beginner

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Transcripts

1. Welcome and Class Overview: Hi, everyone, and welcome back to class. Today, we're going to be painting this soft monochromatic lavender arrangement in a little tiny glass phase using loose watercolor techniques and a very relaxed approach. This class is really about learning how much depth and variety we can create using just one primary color and adjusting it simply with water and pigment strength. We'll be working with a lighter and darker values of purple to create softness, contrast, and movement without needing a complicated color palette. One of the things I love about monochromatic painting is that it takes away some of the pressure of constantly choosing colors instead of allowing us to focus on flow, brush movement, layer. And letting the watercolor do the work for us. This first class is part of a mini coordinating vase collection that I'm creating is a series here on Skillshare. In the upcoming classes, we'll paint additional floral arrangements in different monochromatic color palettes and a different vase shape so that by the end, you have a beautiful little collection that works together as a set. This class is designed to feel approachable and relaxing, so don't worry about perfection. I'll walk you through the entire process step by step. Gather your supplies, relax, and let's get started painting. 2. Creating a Soft Watercolor Glass Vase: Class project, you're going to have three different vases on a PDF that you can download and print. If you print it full size, the vases will be fairly large, but you could scale that down and make them as small as you want to make them. Of course, you don't have to add in all these lines. You can simplify this as much as you want to. When I make our piece for today, I'm just going to use this very small piece of watercolor paper. This is a five by seven, and I'm just going to be making my little vase down here with some little flowers coming out of it. So I will not be tracing these or using these exactly as they are. This was just to show you that there is something there for you to copy out of if you would like to. And if you'd like to trace it, you can trace it. I'm just going to do a little quick sketch. I want my vase to probably be in the bottom quarter. If I say the half is about here, that means I want my vase to be all the way down in here, very, very tiny because then I want to have a little bit of balance area here at the bottom where I can add a little bit of a wash, and then I will put my little vase, and then above it is going to be where the stems are going to be. I don't want my vase to come up very high. I like to start my vase with a little base. The way I know about where my base is going to be, and then I'm going to figure out what my top is going to be. I'm looking at that going about like that. I want to make sure that I'm in the center. I'm going to balance it in between here and here. It doesn't have to be level, it doesn't straight. We're just sketching it. Just a quick little sketch. Then my top is going to just be this light little oval. Okay. Then this is going to, let's see, I'm going to come down slightly, make a little lip, and then I'm going to flare it out because this is going to be my round one and then I'm going to flare these out and flare it out this direction, making it round. At the closer I get to the center, then all of a sudden you have a complete oval here or a circle here. So I am making that something like that. In my book, that's going to be good enough. Where's my eraser. It's always a tricky thing to find. I'm just going to use a little eraser here on my back of my pencil because I can't find my other eraser. I'm just going to do a little quick line erasing to lighten it because after you've put down your watercolor, it's very hard to get pencil back up. The only time you can really erase it is before you go and put your watercolor on it. I know we talked about this in the last lesson where we're going to be working in a monochromatic color way. I'm going to go with a purple for this first one because the first one is going to be a lavender, a very, very soft lavender. But because we are working in that monochromatic, just because it's one color, doesn't mean there can't be some kind of variation between light and dark. So you can add more water to make your pigments lighter. So you're almost diluting the paint with more water, less paint. And that's going to make some lighter spots, and then you can use a more concentrated pigment or paint to make the centers where there is going to be darker. Although we're only going to use one color, which is going to be this purple here, I do not need to make it so that it's, um, lots of different colors because I can just create multiple colors within this by how much water I add. So we're going to just do a little quick test here. I just have a little sample paper, and I can show you that here. So this is a purple. It was a very, very, very dark purple, which I like. I'm not into the pastels, so you're going to choose your purple or maybe you're going to use blue or green. It doesn't matter whatever color you like. So that is more of a concentrated purple where it's nice and dark. Now, if I just dip my paint brush, back into water and add more water to it. I didn't rinse it off. I just added more water. I can come over here and you can see that it got lighter. If I do it again, just dip it into water and come over here. You can see that it's getting lighter and lighter and lighter and all I am doing is adding in more water. I didn't dip back into my paint, but here I have five different colors of purple. Using just one dip of my paint brush into my paint. Oh. Now, I have my paint brush all dried off. My vase is going to be a glass vase, but it's going to be a purple glass vase. What I'm going to do is I'm going to actually wet this down. I'm going to stay inside the lines. I'm going to just my clean paintbrush. In fact, I'm going to use a smaller paintbrush. This is my size six. This is a Princeton heritage, which is my favorite paintbrush. I am going to I usually use a size eight, but for this because it's so small, I went ahead and size down to a size six. I'm just going to go ahead and add water. All the way around this whole vase that I drew and add the whole thing. I'm not looking for puddles of water. I just want it to be shiny and glossy. I am trying very hard not to go outside the lines, but I'm going up to the lines so that when my paint gets on it, it will cover up the pencil marks that are on it. I'm just going around the outside edge. Remember that your paint is only going to go where the paper is wet. So if you paint outside the lines with the water, that paint will seep out outside those lines and you may not want that. So be careful with where you are putting that water. I'm going to dip into my paint. I'm going to use this medium quality paint, and I want my top to be a little bit stronger. I'm going to go ahead and put that there. Then I think I also want to have some of these outside edges to be stronger. So I'm just going to dip it in there, maybe over here as well along the bottom. Just make it a little rounded rounded bottom. Still flat because it does still have to sit on the tabletop, but it can be a little rounded. Then I am going to allow one side to just get a little darker than the other. I'm going to choose this side considering that the light is going to be coming in this way and shining through this glass vase. I'm just going to make this side just a little bit darker. Now, it is going to be a glass vase, and so we're going to show some water movement in here as well. So I'm going to rinse off my paintbrush, and then I'm going to just kind of move this around. I'm going to create a line where I think the water is. It's going to be around there, adding a little bit of water. And then I'm just going to allow this paint to move, leaving lots of white space, especially over here on my right hand side, because I want this to be kind of like the highlight. So I'm just pulling in some of it. This is a clean paintbrush. This does not have any paint on it. It is just water, and I'm just moving the paint that's already on my paper and allowing that to come in. I do want to create a little bit of a water line, but I'm going to need to wait for that to dry a little bit before I can come back in and add in that water line, which is fine. You know, it's all about experimenting and seeing what we like. I do want to add in just a little bit more color on this side. So I went right into the well and picked up some of that heavier, darker paint just to bring in some more darkness on that side. You have to experiment. Yours is going to be different because you have a different amount of paint on your brush or a different amount of water on your paper. So just because I'm doing something doesn't mean you need to or you should go back if yours is working out the way you want it to. Don't go and try to just, oh, Brenda changed hers, so now I should change mine as well. That's not necessary. Just do yours the way you want to do yours. Listen to your watercolor painting. It's really important. Maybe yours is dryer, maybe yours is wetter. Maybe you had more paint. Maybe your color is different. So allow it to just kind of speak to you and you do what you think you need to do for yours. So I'm going to let that start drying. I did add in a little bit of a water line, which is fine. Might try it again to just create like a Ooh. In be a little too dark. It's okay. You know, life happens. I'm going to just dry off my paint brush and try to pick up some of that just because it's just a little too dark. I'm just trying to create a little bit of an oval to show that it's round. We're going to be adding in some stems and such in here as well. I'm going to let that dry just a little bit. You can see that that is still pretty wet. It's pretty shiny. So I can't really add stems or they're just going to blow out and get too, cobwebby I need to wait for that to dry a little bit more. Just going to mess around with it a little bit. Okay. So now we are going to start to create some stems coming up 3. Building Loose Lavender Flowers: Want my stems to be fairly on the darker side, so I'm going to go ahead and use this paint brush again. Maybe should be using a smaller one, not sure. We're going to give it a whirl. I'm just going to make myself a little bit more room. A little stem there. Maybe we want to have another one that just branches over the edge because I like to have them sometimes branching down. I like that look. I'm going to put another one very just loosely up this direction. Feel free to move your paper around, make it comfortable. You can cross your stems. Et's do something like that. One, two, three, four, five, maybe five. Sure. Seems right. Um, maybe I'll add in a couple leaves while I'm thinking about it. Remember, our leaves are just a little stem and then just press down with your paint brush a little bit and then pick back up and draw it out. So do it again down, and then back up. Down and back up. So we're not going to put in a lot of leaves because that can get a little too overwhelming for your painting, but I do want to get a couple started in here just to make sure we have some room for some leaves. We can always add more when we get around to it. So a clean paint brush, I'm going to use this less paint more watery. And we're going to start up here at the top, and I'm going to just create these little tiny clusters right at the top. You can see I didn't even start where the stem started. I started up higher, and then I created another little stem cluster, another little cluster. Because this is the really diluted paint, this is going to dry our lightest. Then we can always add in a darker color on top of it. That's really all lavender is is just these little clusters that just get a little wider at the bottom. Using this really diluted lots and lots of water. Little clusters of dots. Cluster here, a little cluster there. Maybe it's a little circle of clusters. And we're going to be adding in more. Don't worry. We'll add in extra colors and dots so you don't have to have it be perfect the first time around. This is just our first draft. First layer. You see how it doesn't matter how high you started up above. You can start it way up here up above that stem because you're just creating a little cluster and then another little cluster. If you decide later, you need to have more STEM, you can always add more Stem in. But sometimes the stems aren't necessary and just adds more business. Decide how low you want to put it to your phase. Simple little clusters of this very light. Remember that your watercolor is going to dry lighter than what you see when it is wet. Right now it looks like it's dark. When this dries lighter, it's going to be a lighter color once it gets dried. That's what I'm trying to say. Before this dries completely, I do want to add in some stems, but you can see that that's no longer shiny. It is still raised, so it's still wet. I can still feel wetness in there. Now I'm going to take the opportunity to add in a couple stems. Just going to add in because this is a class phase so we can see into I don't need to have all the stems. I just need to say the illusion of a couple stems. Maybe I'll only add three. You can end them at different spots. They don't have to be complete. They don't have to go to the bottom. You just make your vase work because sometimes when you're looking into a vase, you can't see all the stems, which is fine. So personally, I like to have a flower leaf coming over the edge of my vase. I don't like to usually have the vase top completely showing. So I'm just going to add another stem or another leaf over the top of that one just to show the illusion of another leaf covering part of the edge of that, um, of the lip of the vase. Sorry, having a hard time concentrating and painting at the same time. Okay, so now I'm going to get a little bit darker. These are still wet. You can see that that water is still wet in there, but they're starting to dry. And so before it dries completely, I do want to add in just a few darker drops. See how that adds in that nice look where it's not covering the whole thing, but it adds that great dimension. I'm going to even go into some of the white spots where I haven't painted anything yet and add some darker dots there and just let it bleed into the lighter spots. And since they're still wet, they're bleeding, and that's perfect, exactly what I wanted to do. The way I have that dimension of the lighter spots and the darker spots. Okay, so I think what I'm going to do is add in I think I need something in this area, but I don't think I want another flower head. I think I'm going to add just like a little leaf, as if it was a stem coming up from out there. Go on, little stem and then maybe just a little leaf. Just to add a little extra variation here. Maybe another one over here. Come on. Here we go. Just to add a different texture. And now I'm going back into my darker paint, and I'm just going to drop some in here and there, just to add some extra color definition. While that's still wet. Okay. And then I want to add in a little bit of a base because I don't want my vase just sitting in space. I'm going to add in just a little bit of a wash on the bottom. So now, my paint my paintbrush has some paint in it, and it's kind of watery. So what I'm going to do is kind of lay my paint brush almost on the side. I'm going to actually hold it this direction where it's making it parallel to my paper. So that I can just carefully hold it, see how I'm holding it like this. I'm just going to carefully hold it and just kind of swipe across the tip paper, which should allow me to have almost like a sketchy, etchy feel to it because it's not going to be perfect, which is exactly what I'm going for. Very lightly. Not really touching the paper intentionally at all, very lightly glazing over that paper. Adding a little bit here and a little bit there. I do want to bring it up above the base. I don't want it to just be sitting down here at the bottom. I do want it to come up a little bit, which is why you see it coming up here and over here. So that's kind of going to anchor all of that together. And then you just add as much or as little as you want to. And then if you wanted to, you could add more. If you could go back into your darker paint that was using that really liquidy paint, and I could just touch it here and there to add in just a little bit more but I want to be very, very careful with that, not too much. Because we're working with only one color, I need to have that definition between this base and my vase. If everything was the same color, it would look really, really flat. So I'm trying to make sure that I have some definition of dark and light and dark and light throughout the whole piece. It's one of those tricks because you're working with just one color, how you can make it look okay that way. I'm just going to add a little bit more color into some of these leaves. There we go. Do you see how I move my paper around. I like to move it. You know, which direction is more comfortable for my hand. If your paper isn't anchored down with tape, you can move your paper all over the place, which is really good. You want to be comfortable when you are painting. I just have this tiny little mat. But that's just going to make the sweetest little picture. And then we're going to make other ones, and you can make a little collection of three different ones, which is gonna be a great little collection for yourself, I'm gonna dry this off and then meet you back in the next lesson. 4. Final Thoughts and Next Steps: We just finished this first piece in the Mini watercolor vase collection, and I hope that this class helped you feel a little bit more confident exploring monochromatic painting and allowing watercolor to stay soft and expressive. One thing I hope that you learned and took away from this class is that depth doesn't always come from using lots of colors, sometimes simply adjusting the amount of water, layering a few darker values, and allowing some softness in the painting to create a beautiful amount of movement and interest all on its own. Remember, your piece does not lead to look exactly like mine. Loose watercolor is very personal and often the small differences and unexpected marks are what makes the painting feel unique and expressive and personally yours. I would absolutely love to see what you created. Please upload your project to the class gallery. Even simple studies or imperfect pieces are wonderful to share because they encourage other students to keep painting too. If you enjoyed this class, I'd also really appreciate it if you left a review. Reviews truly help my class reach more students here on Skillshare, and they also help me understand what types of classes and techniques you'd like to explore more together in the future. Don't forget to follow me here on Skillshare because those next two coordinated vase classes are in the collection, will be published very soon. We'll continue building on the same relaxed, loose watercolor style while exploring different flowers, different vase shapes, and different monochromatic color palettes that all work beautifully together as a set. Thanks so much for painting with me today. I'm really glad you are here and I hope to see you again in the next class. 5. Outro: We just finished this first piece in the Mini watercolor vase collection, and I hope that this class helped you feel a little bit more confident exploring monochromatic painting and allowing watercolor to stay soft and expressive. One thing I hope that you learned and took away from this class is that depth doesn't always come from using lots of colors, sometimes simply adjusting the amount of water, layering a few darker values, and allowing some softness in the painting to create a beautiful amount of movement and interest all on its own. Remember, your piece does not lead to look exactly like mine. Loose watercolor is very personal and often the small differences and unexpected marks are what makes the painting feel unique and expressive and personally yours. I would absolutely love to see what you created. Please upload your project to the class gallery. Even simple studies or imperfect pieces are wonderful to share because they encourage other students to keep painting too. If you enjoyed this class, I'd also really appreciate it if you left a review. Reviews truly help my class reach more students here on Skillshare, and they also help me understand what types of classes and techniques you'd like to explore more together in the future. Don't forget to follow me here on Skillshare because those next two coordinated vase classes are in the collection, will be published very soon. We'll continue building on the same relaxed, loose watercolor style while exploring different flowers, different vase shapes, and different monochromatic color palettes that all work beautifully together as a set. Thanks so much for painting with me today. I'm really glad you are here and I hope to see you again in the next class.