From start to finish, it has about 5 different layers of paint and took 15 hours to complete. Did I wing it? Absolutely. I looked at what I wanted to make and just started painting.
The background took the most amount of effort. It kept being almost right and I ended up painting it twice before I stopped second guessing myself (did I jump into something that was too hard?) and started to like how it was turning out.
After letting it dry overnight, I made a stencil of the next steps. I ALWAYS do these for a few reasons.
1. I hate free hand drawing on canvas - have you ever tried to erase??
2. A stencil lets you mark out squares and areas that you have to work with so my pictures don't turn out all wonky or unexpectedly travel off the end of the canvas because I didn't "measure with my eyes" correctly.
3. I re-use the stencils. If anyone asks me to paint them something (and they have) I don't have to completely start over. I already have a shape that I like working with.
At this point I only owned a pair of regular scissors, so, cutting it out was fun...
This is the photo I found on the internet:
Remember earlier when I said I only had one pair of regular scissors? I knew that was not going to work for this project because it had way too many details and I would completely mangle the stencil. I picked up a craft exacto knife and a much smaller brush so that I could paint with clean straight lines.
This is the stencil for the flower. I wanted to marry that exacto knife.
I had to paint the flower twice to prevent the black color of the canvas from showing. The whole thing took about 10 hours. It looks way less complicated that the cherry tree, but I had to paint so slow. I was terrified of shaky hands, sneezes, earthquakes...anything that would cause that irreparable smudge. I should title this painting "Tedious".
The camera doesn't pick up the actual color of the paint very well. The flower is a light lilac color.
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