Oh my! Did I just stumble across the perfect watercolor palette?
I found this wonderful new watercolor palette while out shopping this morning. The thing that I love the most about this palette is the size of the wells -- as you can see, these wells are large enough to easily accomadate a 2 inch brush.
Below is the traditional watercolor palette that I'm currently using, and as you can see it has plenty of wells but they are only really large enough to use with a one-inch brush. I mostly paint with a one-inch flat brush, and that's because larger brushes just don't fit in the wells of traditional palettes. I prefer big brushes for a couple of reasons:
1. they hold more paint and water, so I can make larger more consistant brushstokes.
2. big brushes make me look thinner, by comparison.
Well, maybe not a whole lot thinner. But they do make it easier to to paint larger paintings and keep the work fresh and vibrant.
Here's some other palettes that I have laying around the studio. These are foam food trays, and are great to have around as spares when I need extra palettes for various projects. I keep a stack of them handy in case a student forgets to bring a palatte to class, or for when I'm working on something that requires different paints that aren't in my standard everyday palette. Like butcher trays, these have the major drawback of not having wells to keep the paints seperated.
I've been thinking about placing an order for a couple of new brushes lately (my #16 round is finally worn out, after about 25 years of hard use!), and I really wanted to get some new nice large flats -- like two-inch and up -- but I haven't been able to find a good palette that works well with the larger sizes. This might be answer!
7 Comments:
Amazing. I might check the Big Lots near me for one!
Brilliant idea, Annie!!!
There is one draw back, and that is that the palette is clear. However, placing it on a white surface will make the paint colors appear as true as they do on a white palette. Even better, I can place in on a neutral grey surface and see the paint colors even truer! Hmm... So actually it's a benefit and not a drawback, now that I think about it.
Oh, and I forgot to mention -- the label states that it's made in the USA!! Whoo Hoo YEAH!!
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This would also work really well for acrylics as the lid would help keep paint from drying out.
I wonder if similar ones would be available here in Australia ?
(previous comment removed - typos missed!)
Good idea Carol! the lid seems to fit pretty tight, and the center area is perfect for placing a damp sponge. That makes it great for acrylics! I have an old Tupperware piece that I use for acrylics, and now that I think about it, it was originally and egg server, too.
Well, I can't think of any better use for kitchen implements. If I kept this kind of stuff in the kitchen, someone might get the wrong idea and expect me to cook or something!
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