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Blue The Grey

A Greyhound called Blue It is well known that I love Greyhounds, I am lucky enough to have two of these beautiful dogs in my life at present plus one honorary grey. I fostered greyhounds for Busselton Greyhound Awareness and was a hopeless foster fail. There is something about these beautifully athletic, aesthetically pleasing,  creatures that has quite a cult following in the canine rescue world.  “Blue the Grey” was one such boy, a rescued racer who was adopted by chance by his mum, Kimberley Oxley, and who became the voice for Blue and his fellow greyhounds. He has his own Facebook page, had thousands of followers and touched many hearts. Meanwhile it seemed his heart was not well, He had a tumour in his heart that eventually saw his life end  prematurely. His followers were devastated, me included. His love of toast became a world wide thing. Toast for Blue was launched when the outpouring of grief for this beautiful boy was taking on a life of its own. A fundraiser was launched and nearly $130,000 AUD was raised in a miraculously short period of time, to help other smaller greyhound rescues. I have often reached out to people who have lost such a figurehead, and asked if they would like a  donated portrait, its my way of acknowledging something amazing. “Saving Wilma”, from New Zealand was one figurehead,  that helped many greyhounds via fundraising events.  “Maximus” the cat for the Stray Cat Rescue Team West Midlands in the UK, and Blue would be another.  This is his portrait, his Mum will now use this for fundraising items such as T shirts and bags. It’s amazing an humbling to see an image that you have put your heart and soul into, becoming a well known image and helping at the same time.  I have had hundreds of comments and “likes” as a result of this one image. Remarkable that one image can reach into the hearts of so many.  Vale Blue, you were a true champion.  

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Rumba Watercolour Finished Painting

The making of a portrait

It all starts with a good clear photo, one where the subject is not blurred, not too far away in the photo and preferably in good light, head and shoulder shots that are clear and close are great for detail, when sending me images to paint try not to reduce the size of the image, larger MB are great to work with, screen shots or thumbnails from social media posts are really difficult to work with as the image enlarges or prints really blurry, not good for detail or colouring, and I always feel it shows in a painting. I can montage several images together to form group paintings, but it is always handy to know sizes of the subject in comparison to each other. I draw from photos, I use a grid to enlarge the subjects for my paintings, ensuring accuracy in the finished portrait. I begin with by painting the backgrounds which can be tonal or multi coloured, or occasionally left blank. I let the background dry completely before beginning the subject. Watercolour portraits These take a few days to produce, longer if there is a large amount of detail to include.  I begin with the palest or white areas, when completely dry I work on the darker colourings and shadings.  The eyes are the last to be painted and take several layers to complete to get that glassy, moist look. The final steps are the white gouache and the pen work, for which I use a draftsman pen with Indian ink. Acrylic Painting Acrylic painting layers are more complex and need to dry before adding another layer. Luckily, Acrylic paint is quick drying, unlike oils which have a long curing time.  The first layer is blocking in, just covering the canvas, and getting the basics in colour and shape, the second layer is the beginning of detail, and finally the fine detail and highlights are the last to be added. On this portrait I left the light tan colouring until last, the opposite to the watercolour technique.  Sometimes I will look at a finished painting for a couple of days without touching it, just checking that nothing jumps out at me that requires altering. It takes roughly a week to 10 days curing time, longer for dark paints, for the paint to dry completely, before the varnish can be applied without causing the dark paint to smear over other the colours, when the varnish has cured for a few days, the painting is ready to be shipped or hung on the wall.

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Rainbow Bridge Watercolour by Yvonne Chapman Brooks

Where it all began

I used to avoid using watercolours, thinking they were boring and “wishy washy”, so my early portfolio consisted of Pastels and Acrylic paintings.  I used to dabble with watercolours but found the method difficult as I had never really been shown how to use them.  In my Graphic Design course, many moons ago, I had been taught the basics, the application but never how to paint with watercolour. That all changed when “Galgo’s Del Sol”, a Galgo rescue in Spain approached me and asked if I would produce an image of a generic Galgo as a condolence card, a “Rainbow Bridge” card, I decided to paint a rainbow without the usual rainbow shape, but rather how the light from the rainbow would look as it reflected on the Galgo. That was it, my first ever Rainbow watercolour! I experimented with colour, anything but the normal colours, and used the warm colours (Yellow, Orange, Yellow Green) on my highlights and cool colours (Blue, Magenta, Blue- Green and Purple) in the shading. It took a few attempts but eventually I was developing my style, my signature colouring. There were a couple of failures, and each painting gradually developed until my style was softer and more blended, but still very bright. Backgrounds Then I began to experiment with my backgrounds, nothing too bright at first, but with splashes of colour and water to create what resembled a hand dyed effect. I continued to experiment with colour in my backgrounds over the years, taking into consideration where the light would come from, and therefore how those colours would reflect on the subject, this continued to evolve until I developed the background style I use today. Challenges The biggest challenge is painting black animals, I don’t use black, I use indigo and purple then the highlights are tones of blue, purple, magenta and even greens. Occasionally highlights of yellow are used on the very bright sheen of the fur and highpoints such as eyebrows and noses. I finish with white gouache for the bright white areas and that all important dot of light in the eye. Black cat, when black isn’t black, and “Daisy” the very first pet portrait I won a First Prize with, using this style.

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