Moving in progress

 This is a quick and short update! Now that we are 3 away from the online course launch. As I am wrapping up the launch content, I'm also tackling another huge task ahead of me and my family - moving. I am moving from a over-priced 3 bedroom apartment to a decent size house. The kids will be going to a great school and my wife will have a more comfortable house to live in. The most exciting thing for me in this house though, is that the owner of the house converted half of the garage into this beautiful studio space with great lighting and lots of electric outlets!

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Deliberate Practice

 
 

 It seem like yesterday when I started to watercolor seriously about 3 years ago. 3 years to learn a craft skill is not a long time. Especially when you weren't doing it as a full time student who dedicated 8 hours a day for it. But this doesn't mean you can't speed up your improvement.


 With 3 years of deliberate practice, I was able to experience tremendous improvement.


 The key is to practice deliberately. Understand what makes a good painting is very important. This allow you to focus on specific things to improve on! While painting as much as you can is important and can be helpful, you need to intentionally pay attention to a specific element when you paint each painting. Maybe you need to work on making clean washes, maybe you need to control your edges better, or maybe you need to paint better looking shapes, and so on. 

 There was a time I had to focusing on painting clean washes. So I pay special attention to the wetness and the timing of the wash. I made sure I finish the washes in the timely manner, and left it alone when I had to. After I was quite familiar with the process of clean wash, I moved on to painting good shapes. So I slow down when I paint figures, cars and trees. After I achieved my goal, the process start over with other goal in mind.

 That's not to say you only practice the action itself. I am not asking you to start painting swatches repeatedly or paint 100 figures. Deliberate practice means you focus on achieving something when you paint. You still paint a picture from start to finish but with a specific goal. If your goal is to make clean washes, then don't worry about the shape of the car and figures. If your painting end up looking nice and clean but the car looks quirked, it is still a success. If you are focusing on getting the right value, then don't stress yourself about the color. Build your skill one step at a time and one on top of another!

 This is one of the reason why watercolor workshop can be overwhelming. The instructors can give a wonderful painting demo, but the students are struggling with their own version of the same subject. The masters has years of practice and can do a clean wash without thinking. They already know how the final painting is going to look! They no longer need to think about the basic steps of paintings. And that's what happen when someone says "they make it look so easy." Because IT IS easy for them! However, you can do it too, you just need to focus on one thing at a time.


My online course are designed around this concept. I break each element that makes a good painting down for you to see and to practice deliberately.


 There is a lot behind a successful painting: Perspective, value, color, washes, shape, composition and more. It is possible to touch on each element lightly in an one hour painting demo. However, without going in depth on each of them, you can watch the demo over and over again and get very little out of it! Start deliberate practice your painting. When you focus on one thing at a time, it'll be like having a road map to your destination. Your practice will be more fruitful. And you will learn something new with each painting!

 Be sure to check out my upcoming online course - Watercolor Essential. Which will be launch on 9/9!

Course in production - Watercolor Wednesday on pause

 The reason I am very determent to include the fundamental drawing in the course is because it is essential for producing a good painting.  It is one thing that hinders many students to be able to focus on learning to paint with watercolor. Simply put, if you are struggling with fundamental knowledge of perspective, lighting, and surface material, you can't focus on painting watercolor! Many people are frustrated that they are not able to paint the subject they are passionate about. They don't know how to approach it, where do they start, what's the essential element to it and how to simplify it.

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Frustrated with your painting? You might be entering a different stage.

 Have you ever been in a place where you done couple paintings, despite all the praise and admiration you've received, you are just not happy about them? Moreover, you are frustrated because you knew you can do better, at least you think you can. The painting in your mind looks much better than what you produced? I feel like I am in that stage right now. At first I thought I've lost my touch. But after looking back to my previous works, I realized that my works are getting better in quality. It's just that I'm entering another stage as an artist. I call this stage - The growing pain stage

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