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How to Use Watercolor PencilsCombine the Fun of Drawing with the Results of Watercolors
Watercolor pencils offer the ease of drawing with colored pencils but leave you with the final effect of a watercolor painting.
Watercolor pencils are fun because you can use them in different ways to produce a variety of effects. You can go outside and draw a picture using the pencils, return home, add water and end up with a new picture. What You Need
Some Guidelines for Using Watercolor Pencils
The Wet Paper TechniqueDip the wide brush in water and wet the entire page. With the watercolor pencils, draw your picture before the paper dries. The colors will blend and the edges will be soft, giving the effect of a watercolor painting. This technique quickly wears away the pencils. Draw First Technique Draw your entire picture on a dry sheet of paper as if you were drawing with regular colored pencils. Then, go back over the picture with a fine or medium brush dipped in water. Avoid painting water over the entire page or the colors will become muddy. Work on one small section at a time. The effect combines the crispness of pencil with the softness of watercolor paints. If you draw over a spot with two different color pencils, when you add water, they will blend into a new color. The Dip and Draw TechniqueDip the pencil tip in water and draw on dry paper. The effect is sharper than the wet paper technique. The Coloring Book TechniqueDraw a picture with a black pen. Color it in with the watercolor pencils. Dip your brush in the water and blend the pencil, section by section. Keep exploring ways to use your watercolor pencils, maybe by combining two techniques in one drawing. Draw different things. Try drawing a still life (set up the objects in front of you) or a landscape. Copy a picture from a magazine. Draw an image from your mind. Have fun playing with your watercolor pencils.
The copyright of the article How to Use Watercolor Pencils in Kids Paper Crafts is owned by Susan Caplan. Permission to republish How to Use Watercolor Pencils in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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