Archive Monthly Archives: July 2022

How to Varnish an Acrylic Painting

How to Varnish an Acrylic Painting

Do I need to varnish my acrylic painting?”

Yes, and I’ll show you how to Varnish an Acrylic Painting. Let me show you a one-step method to varnish an acrylic portrait. No isolation coat is necessary. “Do I need to varnish my acrylic painting?” Varnishing your portrait will protect it from scuffs and give it a uniform, professional satin sheen. It will also deepen the color saturation. Once you have the right materials, and this method, you can varnish it without worry! I’ll show you how to do it.

Watch the video below to learn how to varnish your portrait and improve your portrait painting.

LEARN MORE

Read more about how to paint a portrait that you can surely be proud of!


I’d love to hear your thoughts on this video. Please share it with your friends and family. Let me know if you have any further questions. I’ll greatly help you.

If you’d like to learn more, sign up for my free email tips and video class today.

Learn How to Paint Acrylic Portraits With My Free Mini-Video Course!

Thank you so much for taking the time to read this tutorial and watch the video. That means a lot to me.  I hope you find it very helpful in your portrait painting.  

Yours for Better Portraits,

Signature_200dpi_sm.jpg

P.S. Did you find this post helpful or encouraging? If so, send it on ahead! Let others know with the share buttons below. I’d love to hear your comments. Thank you so much! Also, do you have a question on acrylic portrait painting you’d like answered? Let me know, and I’d be happy to help!

How to Adjust the Eyes in an Acrylic Portrait

I’d like to show how I adjust the eyes in an acrylic portrait.

This is a small snippet of an intensive two day workshop, where I help a student adjust the shape of the eyes in her portrait. It’s a common problem that we face as portrait artists. I hope this helps you in your portrait as well!

Learn how to adjust the eyes in an acrylic portrait and improve your portrait painting by watching the video below.

LEARN MORE

Read more about how to paint a portrait that you can surely be proud of!


I’d love to hear your thoughts on this video. Please share it with your friends and family. Let me know if you have any further questions. I’ll greatly help you.

If you’d like to learn more, sign up for my free email tips and video class today.

Learn How to Paint Acrylic Portraits With My Free Mini-Video Course!

Thank you so much for taking the time to read this tutorial and watch the video. That means a lot to me.  I hope you find it very helpful in your portrait painting.  

Yours for Better Portraits,

Signature_200dpi_sm.jpg

P.S. Did you find this post helpful or encouraging? If so, send it on ahead! Let others know with the share buttons below. I’d love to hear your comments. Thank you so much! Also, do you have a question on acrylic portrait painting you’d like answered? Let me know, and I’d be happy to help!

Painting a Portrait Outside at a Dinner

Painting a Portrait Outside at a Dinner

I’d like to demonstrate the glazing technique for you.

Earlier this week, I finished a portrait at an outside dinner event. I demonstrate how the glazing technique works to some “curious onlookers” and add some final touches to this portrait we did for the challenge earlier in the year. Then I sign it.

Watch the video below to learn how to use the glazing technique to improve your portrait painting.

LEARN MORE

Read more about how to paint a portrait that you can surely be proud of!

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this video. Please share it with your friends and family. Let me know if you have any further questions. I’ll greatly help you.

If you’d like to learn more, sign up for my free email tips and video class today.

Learn How to Paint Acrylic Portraits With My Free Mini-Video Course!

Thank you so much for taking the time to read this tutorial and watch the video. That means a lot to me.  I hope you find it very helpful in your portrait painting.  

Yours for Better Portraits,

Signature_200dpi_sm.jpg

P.S. Did you find this post helpful or encouraging? If so, send it on ahead! Let others know with the share buttons below. I’d love to hear your comments. Thank you so much! Also, do you have a question on acrylic portrait painting you’d like answered? Let me know, and I’d be happy to help!

30-Minute Acrylic Portrait: Friendly Young Man in Blue

30-Minute Acrylic Portrait: “Friendly Young Man in Blue”

Learn how to paint a portrait in 30-minute acrylic portrait. 

Learn how to paint an acrylic portrait faster! I’ll demonstrate, in real-time, an all prima portrait of a smiling young man with strong cast shadows and warm skin tones. This portrait is painted within 30 minutes. It’s a fun exercise you can do to see how efficient you can get with your color choices, mixing and brushwork. Enjoy!

Watch the video below to learn more about the 30-minute acrylic portrait and improve your painting.

LEARN MORE

Read more about how to paint a portrait that you can surely be proud of!

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this video. Please share it with your friends and family. Let me know if you have any further questions. I’ll greatly help you.

If you’d like to learn more, sign up for my free email tips and video class today.

Learn How to Paint Acrylic Portraits With My Free Mini-Video Course!

Thank you so much for taking the time to read this tutorial and watch the video. That means a lot to me.  I hope you find it very helpful in your portrait painting.  

Yours for Better Portraits,

Signature_200dpi_sm.jpg

P.S. Did you find this post helpful or encouraging? If so, send it on ahead! Let others know with the share buttons below. I’d love to hear your comments. Thank you so much! Also, do you have a question on acrylic portrait painting you’d like answered? Let me know, and I’d be happy to help!

30-Minute Acrylic Portrait:

30-Minute Acrylic Portrait: “Pensive Young Woman with Red Hair”

 Learn how to paint an acrylic portrait faster!

I’ll demonstrate, in real-time, an Alla prima portrait of a pensive young woman with red hair. I like the expression on her face and the way the light plays on her angled features. This portrait is painted within 30 minutes. It’s a fun exercise you can do to see how efficient you can get with your color choices, mixing and brushwork. Enjoy!

Watch the video below to learn more about the 30-minute acrylic portrait and improve your painting.

LEARN MORE

Read more about how to paint a portrait that you can surely be proud of!

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this video. Please share it with your friends and family. Let me know if you have any further questions. I’ll greatly help you.

If you’d like to learn more, sign up for my free email tips and video class today.

Learn How to Paint Acrylic Portraits With My Free Mini-Video Course!

Thank you so much for taking the time to read this tutorial and watch the video. That means a lot to me.  I hope you find it very helpful in your portrait painting.  

Yours for Better Portraits,

Signature_200dpi_sm.jpg

P.S. Did you find this post helpful or encouraging? If so, send it on ahead! Let others know with the share buttons below. I’d love to hear your comments. Thank you so much! Also, do you have a question on acrylic portrait painting you’d like answered? Let me know, and I’d be happy to help!

How I Painted a Wedding Portrait on Black Canvas

How I Painted a Wedding Portrait on Black Canvas

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For those of you that know me, I have long championed the technique of glazing paint onto a white canvas, so that the light reflects through the layers of paint, giving it added luminosity and depth. I still think it’s a fantastic way to paint.

But occasionally, I like to try something new.

A client from Brooklyn, who I am doing portraits of rabbis for, asked me if I ever tried painting on a black canvas. The idea is that if your painting already has a lot of black areas and dark values (which rabbi portraits do with their dark suits and hats), why not start with a black canvas and work the other way out?

So that’s what I did.

A couple of old high school friends asked me to paint a portrait of them from their wedding day–and I thought, this would be the perfect opportunity to utilize this technique.

Step 1: Toning the Background

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So with that, I bought a 16″ x 20″ canvas already primed with black acrylic gesso. The next step was to tone the background. I used my favorite portrait painting color, raw umber dark and a little bit of raw sienna and burnt sienna, thinned with acrylic medium, applied with a couple layers.


Step 2: Blocking the Forms

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I want to be transparent with my process. Although I utilize many techniques for sketching onto a canvas–from tracing, to using a grid, to freehand sketching, to even painting without a sketch, in this particular painting I used a projector to quickly establish the shapes and forms. I mixed a portrait base tone with titanium white, raw sienna, and burnt sienna and applied it with a couple layers to the canvas, following what I saw in the projection. After the final layer dried, I defined some of the details of the faces and clothing using the portrait tone mixed with burnt sienna and raw umber dark.


Step 3: Building the Foundational Colors and Values

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In the next step, I started establishing some tonal values right away with glazes of raw umber dark, and burnt sienna. On the faces, I darkened the details of the eyes, under the chin, added some depth to the faces by establishing the shadows on the sides of the head, with various mixtures of raw umber dark, burnt sienna, and napthol crimson.

Additionally, I painted in the white of the dress with pure titanium white, thinned down with a small portion of medium to give it a translucency effect of white fabric with the skin behind it.

Then I painted in her veil with a mixture of raw umber dark, white, and a tiny bit of ultramarine blue. Most of the cool tones in that veil are achieved by the mixture of the white paint with raw umber dark. Any time you add white paint, you are cooling down the temperature of the color mix, so this can be used intentionally to create that effect.

Finally, I lightened up the background with a few more glazes of raw umber dark, raw sienna, and burnt sienna. This provides more contrast so that the black value of the suit is more clearly outlined.


Step 4: Heightening the Contrast

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In this step, I continued to heighten the contrast in the painting all over. I added more glazes of raw umber dark, burnt sienna, and alizarine crimson for the shadow areas, and raw sienna, titanium white, and a tiny bit of indian yellow and organic orange for the highlights. It’s necessary to warm up these highlights with some colors that have more intensity when you mix white into the glaze. (Because I was starting with a medium-value flesh tone as the base, I glazed in reverse for the highlights, moving from that darker value to lighter.)

You can see I darkened in the eyes and added reflections to the eyeballs. That really brought the painting to a higher level, and made me feel good about how it was progressing.

Moving to the other side of the canvas, I introduced red to the boutonniere with napthol red and raw sienna which, mixed together, is very opaque.

Step 5: Adding More Nuances

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Here the painting began to really get close to the finish line. I feel like this was the reward for all the tedious work in layering initial values and colors. I kept adding nuances and tones throughout, with various mixtures of raw umber dark, burnt sienna, napthol crimson, raw sienna, titanium white and couple other colors where necessary.

I darkened the veil with some layers of ultramarine blue mixed with ivory black and white, of course, thinned down with clear acrylic matte medium. I wanted to continue to suggest some of the lace in her dress by adding some flesh tone mixture in various patterns.

Sometimes capturing realism is not found in what you put in, but what you leave out.

I could have gone crazy with adding every little texture of the lace and netted tulle openings, but that would be unnecessary. I would likely have distracted from the realism, and certainly draw your attention away from the most important thing; the bride and groom’s faces, exhibiting the joy of the moment of their wonderful day.

Last Step: Adding Final Nuances and Details

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When a painting nears completion, you have to balance a couple different factors.

How much more do I need to add to this so it looks fantastic, finished, without going overboard?

What is the deadline?

In this case, I had some wiggle room on the deadline, so that wasn’t a factor. But as a professional portrait painter, I don’t want to take my time adding details that contribute very little to the overall impact of a painting.

But I had a little more work to do. I needed to add in some important jewelry on the veil, her earrings, and define the necklace, as well as some of the buttons on the groom’s shirt. If those details were not there, we can safely say, the client would notice!

In addition to that, I worked all over the painting, adding a few final nuances–heightening the contrast of the teeth, some of those “shiny” highlights on the face that usually glisten due to sweat on the skin, and also some of the details within her dress.

Finally, I signed it and called it done!

I hope you enjoyed this little painting tutorial, and as always, have a blessed day,

LEARN MORE

Read more about how to paint a portrait that you can surely be proud of!

 

 

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If you like this post, please share and leave a comment. Thanks!

30-Minute Acrylic Portrait:

30-Minute Acrylic Portrait: “Young Woman with Black Hair”

I’ll show you how to paint a 30-minute acrylic portrait of a woman with black hair.

Learn how to paint an acrylic portrait faster! I’ll demonstrate, in real-time, an alla prima portrait of an introspective young woman with black hair. What drew me to this image was the intense expression, slight smile, three-quarters view, and strong contrast between her face and hair. This portrait is painted within 30 minutes. It’s a fun exercise you can do to see how efficient you can get with your color choices, mixing and brushwork. Enjoy!

 If you struggle with muddy skin tones and blotchiness in your portraits, download my free pdf guide called fix muddy skin tones in your acrylic portrait download here 

Watch the video below to learn more about the 30-minute acrylic portrait and improve your painting.

 

LEARN MORE

Read more about how to paint a portrait that you can surely be proud of!


I’d love to hear your thoughts on this video. Please share it with your friends and family. Let me know if you have any further questions. I’ll greatly help you.

If you’d like to learn more, sign up for my free email tips and video class today.

Learn How to Paint Acrylic Portraits With My Free Mini-Video Course!

Thank you so much for taking the time to read this tutorial and watch the video. That means a lot to me.  I hope you find it very helpful in your portrait painting.  

Yours for Better Portraits,

Signature_200dpi_sm.jpg

P.S. Did you find this post helpful or encouraging? If so, send it on ahead! Let others know with the share buttons below. I’d love to hear your comments. Thank you so much! Also, do you have a question on acrylic portrait painting you’d like answered? Let me know, and I’d be happy to help!

 

30-Minute Acrylic Portrait: Man in the Dark Brown Cap

30-Minute Acrylic Portrait: Man in the Dark Brown Cap

Learn how to paint an acrylic portrait faster!  with my 30 minute acrylic portrait painting.

 

 I’ll demonstrate, in real-time, an alla prima portrait of a man wearing a dark brown cap. This man has an inquisitive expression on his face, and sharp-angled facial features in high contrast sunlight, that makes for a fun portrait to paint. This portrait is painted within 30 minutes. It’s a fun exercise you can do to see how efficient you can get with your color choices, mixing and brushwork. Enjoy!

Watch the video below to learn more about the 30-minute acrylic portrait and improve your painting.

LEARN MORE

Read more about how to paint a portrait that you can surely be proud of!

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this video. Please share it with your friends and family. Let me know if you have any further questions. I’ll greatly help you.

If you’d like to learn more, sign up for my free email tips and video class today.

Learn How to Paint Acrylic Portraits With My Free Mini-Video Course!

Thank you so much for taking the time to read this tutorial and watch the video. That means a lot to me.  I hope you find it very helpful in your portrait painting.  

Yours for Better Portraits,

Signature_200dpi_sm.jpg

P.S. Did you find this post helpful or encouraging? If so, send it on ahead! Let others know with the share buttons below. I’d love to hear your comments. Thank you so much! Also, do you have a question on acrylic portrait painting you’d like answered? Let me know, and I’d be happy to help!

The First Few Layers of an Acrylic Painting

The First Few Layers of an Acrylic Painting

I’ll show you the first few layers of an acrylic glazing portrait I painted.

I’m back to working on the painting of Moses, Aaron and Hur in the Amalekite Battle during Ancient Israel! In this video, I’ll show you how the glazing technique works, and how you can paint over a detailed sketch, and not lose the detail.

Watch the video below to learn how to use the acrylic glazing technique to improve the realism in your painting:

LEARN MORE

Read more about how to paint a portrait that you can surely be proud of!

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this video. Please share it with your friends and family. Let me know if you have any further questions. I’ll greatly help you.

If you’d like to learn more, sign up for my free email tips and video class today.

Learn How to Paint Acrylic Portraits With My Free Mini-Video Course!

Thank you so much for taking the time to read this tutorial and watch the video. That means a lot to me.  I hope you find it very helpful in your portrait painting.  

Yours for Better Portraits,

Signature_200dpi_sm.jpg

P.S. Did you find this post helpful or encouraging? If so, send it on ahead! Let others know with the share buttons below. I’d love to hear your comments. Thank you so much! Also, do you have a question on acrylic portrait painting you’d like answered? Let me know, and I’d be happy to help!